Today I started learning Python, and I explored some fundamental concepts that helped me understand how Python actually works behind the scenes. Python is a high-level, interpreted programming language. Being high-level means it is easy to read and write, as it is closer to human language and abstracts away hardware complexity. This makes it very different from low-level languages like assembly or
I wanted to figure out how people build payment systems without losing everyone's money. It turns out, my first attempt was a great way to lose a lot of it. I started with what felt like a simple Go service. One endpoint, one database table, and a third-party provider to handle the actual charging. The plan was straightforward: Decode the request. Call the provider to charge the user. Save the res
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It's 3am UTC. Someone in your Discord pastes a transaction hash and the message: "did i just get drained??" What happens next is mechanical. A moderator opens the block explorer, scrolls past gas limits and method calls and log topics, decodes the transfer, translates 0xa9059cbb into "this was an ERC20 transfer," cross-references the destination address, then types something like "looks like you s
In this guide we’ll build a Decentralized, Autonomous Vacation Booking System in Python using the Protolink library. The original post can be found on medium (Level-up-coding). The landscape of AI agents is shifting. We are moving away from monolithic scripts driven by a single giant model, towards Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) where specialized, autonomous agents collaborate to solve complex problems
CLMA vs Web Chat: Putting Iterative Verification to the Test Posted on May 6, 2026 · #CLMA #MultiAgent #CodeGeneration #EventSourcing #Comparison #Python All code is open source on GitHub: github.com/kriely/CLMA This is a companion piece to Building CLMA: A Self-Verifying Multi-Agent Framework from Scratch. In that article, I described the framework. Here, I put it to the test — head to head aga
Most agency onboarding fails before the kickoff call happens. Not because the team isn't good. Not because the client is difficult. Because nobody collected the right context upfront, and the kickoff call becomes the place where everyone discovers what they don't know yet. The intake form is the fix. Not a 3-question "tell us about your project" form. A real one. Here's the framework we use — 27 q
Every few years the industry rediscovers that programming languages are not religions. Then we immediately behave like they are religions. Someone posts a benchmark. Someone else says memory safety. Someone says developer experience. A distributed systems person appears from under a bridge and whispers “Erlang solved this in 1998.” A startup founder announces they are rewriting their CRUD app in R