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
You just ran a dependency scan and the report shows 133 vulnerabilities. 34 are Critical. 68 are High. The dashboard is red, the backlog is exploding, and every item looks urgent. The engineering team asks the obvious question: where do we start? This is where vulnerability remediation prioritization matters. Without a clear framework, teams either panic and chase the loudest CVE, or they ignore t
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
I started building a psychological horror game called Azirah: Don’t Let Her See You, thinking passion alone would be enough. I was wrong, and that realization changed how I approach game development. At first, I believed ideas and motivation were sufficient to create a full story-driven psychological horror game from scratch. But during development, I realized something important: Creating a comp
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