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
Originally published on TechSaaS Cloud Originally published on TechSaaS Cloud An API gateway sits between clients and your backend services. It handles cross-cutting concerns so your services do not have to: authentication, rate limiting, request routing, load balancing, caching, and observability. WebMobileIoTGatewayRate LimitAuthLoad BalanceTransformCacheService AService BService CDB / Cache API
A deep, opinionated, practical guide for the engineer who has crossed the mid-level threshold — or is about to. The mental models, technical habits, ownership patterns, communication skills, and career mechanics that separate "solid senior" from "engineer the whole team builds around." Grounded in 2026 reality — AI-augmented coding, distributed async teams, post-ZIRP efficiency pressure, and a mar
One thread. Multiple AIs. Deliberation, not polling. Most people use AI like this: 🤦 Ask one model → get one answer Ask multiple models → compare results That’s not thinking. That’s polling. Not side by side. Not isolated. But in sequence — where each one reads what the previous one said before responding. Manual Council is the simplest form of that idea. No backend. No orchestration. No
This is the fourth post in my Google Cloud Next '26 (Las Vegas) recap series. You can find the previous posts here 👇 Part 1: [Google Cloud Next '26 Recap #1] Hands-On with the Agentic Hack Zone Part 2: [Google Cloud Next '26 Recap #2] Three Unique Booths I Tried at the EXPO Part 3: [Google Cloud Next '26 Recap #3] Anthropic's Vision for "After Software" This time, I'd like to share a live re
My first Cloudflare Worker deployed in 47 minutes. Three of those were spent staring at this exact error in a red GitHub Actions log: Authentication error [code: 10000]. I had the API token. I had the account ID. I had copy-pasted the workflow from the official docs. It still failed. The fix was one checkbox I never selected. That checkbox is the entire reason I'm writing this post, because every
Find a beginner-friendly issue. Fork the repo. Set up the dev environment. Read through the codebase. Start working. Then check the issue again and see a comment from 2 days ago: "Hey I'm working on this, should have a PR up soon." Two hours wasted. Every single time. The weird part? Almost every existing tool for finding open source issues - goodfirstissue.dev, up-for-grabs.net, codetriage - rely