Feature Creep: When Apps Eat Themselves Alive
Apps balloon from elegant tools into resource-hogging behemoths. Notion's sprint from notes to email client? Classic feature creep—and a warning for devs everywhere.
Apps balloon from elegant tools into resource-hogging behemoths. Notion's sprint from notes to email client? Classic feature creep—and a warning for devs everywhere.
Dashboards glow green, yet revenue forecasts flop and models crumble. Shannon entropy reveals the hidden information loss killing your pipelines — before disaster hits.
Your AI agents swap data like gossiping teens. But prove it? Good luck without crypto. air-trust just made that nightmare vanish.
Imagine your data flowing effortlessly between Airtable and Google Sheets, like a digital bloodstream syncing without a single manual click. n8n makes it real, free, and dead simple.
Product managers demand spinning border lights like it's 1999. Turns out, CSS handles it without breaking a sweat—or your sanity.
Picture this: OpenClaw agents humming along, automating your world. Then the bill hits—LLM orchestration eating your budget alive. AINL changes everything, compiling flaky agents into cheap, predictable machines.
Job boards overflow with .NET gigs. Blogs? Dead silence, while Go and Rust light up feeds. What's muting Microsoft's empire?
Arbitrum's hitting rock bottom, and that April unlock won't help. Pepeto's presale promises moonshots, but I've seen this movie before.
Everyone figured REST APIs would handle AI agents just fine. Wrong. MCP flips the script, turning fragmented tools into a smoothly orchestra for LLMs.
Your next AI inference bill? It's fattened by billions of do-nothing parameters. Time to diet these obese models before compute costs bankrupt us all.
Imagine firing up an MCP server in Common Lisp without the install hell that snares newcomers. This guide cuts through the frustration, letting real coders hack AI protocols their way.
Hiring managers don't care about your Kubernetes certs. They want uptime wins and cost cuts. Here's the resume template that delivers.
Grab that bag of frozen pasta. It's your pre-trained model. Heat it wrong, and you're eating mush. Welcome to AI's kitchen.
Staring at raw JSON from a new API? This 300-line vanilla JS beast infers TypeScript types across samples, spots optionals, and spits type guards. No more guesswork.
Picture this: Your AI spits out production code handling patient data, and the auditor demands proof of encryption. No more git blame marathons — compliance evidence maps deliver file, line, everything. Devs, your future audits just got a turbo boost.
Your Redis container vanishes when RedisInsight tries to ping it. Docker networking's default setup is a headache — here's how to make containers actually talk, browser-accessible and stable.
Tired of copy-pasting TypeScript? One dev built a form validator from scratch—and finally got it. Here's why ditching libraries might be your TS wake-up call.
Developers with ADHD aren't failing remote work—they're being crushed by its 'flexibility.' One dev's battle-tested fixes expose the scam of perfect home focus.
From Johannesburg's vibrant tech scene, full-stack dev Thabang Gideon steps into the Dev.to spotlight. Armed with React, NestJS, and a passion for clean code, he's here to share, connect, and build.
Ethereum's chugging along with real institutional cash. Pepeto? Just another presale fairy tale promising moonshots before the rug gets pulled.