Building a Translation Pipeline for International Contract Bidding If your company bids on international contracts, you've probably dealt with the translation bottleneck. Technical proposals need precise translation, certified documents have strict formatting requirements, and procurement deadlines don't wait for anyone. After seeing how UK public procurement translation requirements can make or
Building Translation Pipelines for Maritime Documentation — A Developer's Guide As maritime companies scale globally, they face a technical challenge that goes beyond just translating documents. Naval documentation involves complex terminology, strict regulatory requirements, and multiple stakeholders who need access to accurate, up-to-date translations across dozens of languages. If you're buil
Why your servers should die after every deployment How many times have you logged into production to "quickly fix" something, only to create a snowflake server that behaves differently than everything else? If this sounds familiar, you're dealing with configuration drift, and immutable infrastructure might be the solution you need. Immutable infrastructure follows one simple rule: never modify a
A pod gets created. It gets an IP. Then it dies. A new pod replaces it. New IP. Now imagine you have ten pods of the same app, and they restart all the time. Which IP do you call? You can't. That's the problem Services solve, and the answer is more interesting than "Kubernetes assigns a stable IP." This post walks the full picture in five parts: why Services have to exist, what happens when you cr
Twenty-four hours after I swapped Supabase Auth's default SMTP for Resend, my first real user signed up. I'll call him K. I emailed him three questions. He replied in 49 minutes: "make a better ui of admin so we can use." That sentence is now my Q2 roadmap. Three weeks into launch I have 3 users, 2 Google clicks, and zero mentions when you ask ChatGPT or Gemini for "free status page alternatives."
Jack had finally stepped into the world of Docker. It felt like magic, but Jack was never one to just believe in "magic spells." He was curious. He wanted to look under the hood and see what actually made Docker so powerful. He had one big question: How could 50 different people live in the same "apartment building" (the Host OS) without accidentally reading each other's mail or eating each other'
Go is a compiled language — the code is converted into machine‑readable form before execution. From a beginner’s perspective, this means Go catches many errors during compilation, giving you cleaner, faster, and more predictable performance at runtime. Go is widely used for: API development CLI tools Microservices architecture Backend server. DEVOPS activity So it fits perfectly with the kind of
If you've tried building an AI agent in the last six months, you've hit the same wall: there are half a dozen frameworks, each with a different philosophy, a different API surface, and a different definition of what an "agent" even is. I spent a weekend writing the same simple agent — "read a GitHub issue, classify it as bug/feature/question, and post a comment" — in six different frameworks. This