Every week, another breathless headline declares software engineering dead. Another AI demo shows a chatbot building a full-stack app in 90 seconds. Another LinkedIn thought leader posts a funeral wreath emoji next to the words "traditional coding." And every week, I watch senior engineers at real companies quietly doing something that looks nothing like those demos. They're not typing code line b
An opinionated list of Python frameworks, libraries, tools, and resources
State of Software Engineering in 2026: A Reality Check Beyond the AI Hype Three and a half years ago, Matt Welsh, PhD and former Google engineer, published "The End of Programming" in Communications of the ACM and declared that classical computer science was over. The meteor had hit. Engineers were the dinosaurs. The state of software engineering in 2026, he implied, would look nothing like what
In August 2025, a user reported that Apache Kafka v3.9.0 dropped consumer throughput by 10x. Other users reproduced it. The culprit was a configuration called min.insync.replicas, and the fix was three lines of code. Sharad Garg opened a ticket titled "Consumer throughput drops by 10 times with Kafka v3.9.0 in ZK mode." Ritvik Gupta ran controlled tests and traced the issue to min.insync.replicas.