If this is useful, a ❤️ helps others find it. All tests run on an 8-year-old MacBook Air. Every Rust tutorial covers Result and ?. Few cover what to actually do when you have 5 different error types flying around a real application. Here's what I settled on after shipping multiple Tauri apps. A PDF processing command might fail due to: IO error (file not found) lopdf parse error (malformed PDF) En
This is Part 1 of a two-part series. Part 2 (coming soon): Connecting to spoke clusters from a controller using multicluster-runtime, driven by ClusterProfile. The Cluster Inventory API (multicluster.x-k8s.io) is driven by SIG-Multicluster and centered on the ClusterProfile resource. It only delivers value when something produces those ClusterProfiles. That something is a cluster manager. Today, t
Greetings, Dev Community! 👋 We’ve officially crossed into mid-2026, and if you look at your IDE today compared to two years ago, the change is staggering. We aren't just "writing" code anymore; we are orchestrating logic. The era of manual syntax grinding is fading, making way for a much more powerful identity for developers: the Software Architect. Here is a deep dive into how AI has fundamental
--- title: "The Perfectionism Trap: When Your Developer Brain Fights Your Founder Brain" published: true description: "A practical framework for managing the tension between code quality and MVP velocity — treat your founder transition like a system design problem." tags: architecture, devops, performance, testing canonical_url: https://blog.mvpfactory.co/the-perfectionism-trap-dev-brain-vs-founde
At the beginning of this series, the problem seemed simple. There were a lot of rocks in the yard. Some were small. Some were large. A few were firmly in what I’ve been calling Engine Block Class. The original idea was straightforward: catalog them, maybe sell a few, and build a small system around the process. Along the way, the project grew. What We Built Across the previous posts, the Backyard
When developers travel, we usually prepare the obvious things. Laptop charger. But there is one dependency that is easy to underestimate until it breaks: mobile internet. A trip to China makes this especially obvious. Not because China is hard to travel in, but because so many basic interactions are mobile-first: navigation, translation, ride-hailing, hotel communication, ticket confirmations, pay
A defaced website is a curious problem. It's loud — anyone visiting the page can see something is wrong. But it's also quiet from a server's perspective: HTTP returns 200, your uptime monitor is happy, your TLS cert hasn't moved, and the CMS logs show a "successful" content update from a legitimate-looking session. The signal is on the rendered page, not in the metrics. I run a site at hi3ris.blue
As developers, we often have a problematic relationship with primitives. We use a string for an email, a float for a price, and an int for a status. This is what we call Primitive Obsession—and it’s one of the common reasons why PHP codebases gradually become hard to maintain. If you’ve been following my series on Refactoring & Patterns, you know I’m a fan of the Introduce Parameter Object pattern