As a developer, you deal with text casing constantly - button labels, nav items, page titles, error messages, documentation headings. And at some point, someone on your team will ask: Here's the definitive answer. // Title Case — most words capitalized "The Best Free Tools for Writers and Developers" // Sentence case — only first word + proper nouns "The best free tools for writers and developer
When a financial services team decides to move data to the cloud, the conversation usually starts with infrastructure. Which cloud provider. What the cost model looks like. Whether to go lift-and-shift or re-architect from the ground up. Those are real decisions. But they are not the hard part. The hard part is walking into a room with your compliance team six months into the migration and being a
We've been there. JSON Schema gets hard to write as soon as your payload is non-trivial. Conditional logic, cross-field rules, business invariants, and at some point we stop writing contracts at all. We go code-first, generate the schema from annotations, and end up with 200 lines very few understand, and error messages referencing paths like #/properties/items/allOf/0/then/Then that map to nothin
GitHub Copilot is more than just an AI coding assistant; it's a productivity superpower for many developers, promising to streamline workflows and accelerate delivery. Yet, as a recent GitHub Community discussion vividly illustrates, the path to actually subscribing to this powerful tool can sometimes be a frustrating maze of unexpected billing hurdles and unresponsive support. At devActivity, we
Every team building an AI agent for the browser is making one architectural choice — whether they realize it or not. They're choosing how the LLM perceives the page. That choice cascades into everything else: cost per action, reliability on real-world apps, what gets banned by anti-bot systems, what kinds of tasks are even feasible. The choice currently breaks down into three approaches. They're o
Release Date: May 20, 2026 — The most anticipated WordPress release in years is almost here. Let's explore everything you need to know before it lands. WordPress powers over 43% of the web. That's not a typo. Nearly half of every website you've ever visited runs on this open-source CMS. And yet, for much of 2025, things went oddly quiet — legal battles, contributor walkouts, and a compressed relea
TL;DR Bots passed humans on the open web. IP reputation feeds stopped working for residential traffic. IPv4 prices collapsed. AI crawlers became a measurable tax on public sites. And Europe finally started writing big GDPR checks while only fining 1.3% of complaints. If you ship anything that touches the public web at scale, the IP infrastructure you set up in 2022 is doing more harm than good i
Prologue A while ago, I decided to develop a fully accessible main navigation component in React after a fruitless search through third-party component libraries, npm packages and even GitHub repositories. A complex component needs requirements around all aspects of the component, and this article begins the process of defining those requirements. Note: This article is one of a series demonstrat