In the previous post, I showed what you actually get from the GitHub Student Developer Pack and why it’s worth claiming if you’re learning to code.
Now let’s talk about the important part:
How do you actually get approved?
Because yes, GitHub can reject ...
Postman dominates. But it is heavy, expensive, and slow for what it does. Here are the alternatives that are worth your time in 2026.
Postman is feature-rich but bloated. The app takes seconds to start. The team workspaces require paid plans. For solo ...
X Communities shuts down May 30.
If you've been using the #buildinpublic community there to document your indie dev journey — that timeline is gone. The posts, the context, the progress log you've been building for months.
I've been in the same boat. I build things in public and I want a record of it that doesn't disappear when a platform decides to restructure, piv...
I failed my first stats class in college.
Not because the math was hard. Because every example in the textbook was about iris flowers or Boston housing prices and I couldn't figure out why anyone in real life would care. So the formulas just slid off my brain.
Years later, I'm a backend dev in Mumbai with a serious filter coffee habit and an even more serious s...
LangGraph has become the de facto standard for building complex, multi-agent workflows. Its core abstraction—the state graph—allows developers to build cyclic, stateful applications where agents can pause, resume, and pass context to one another.
But this shared state introduces a critical secu...
The first version of most operational software runs everything synchronously. User clicks a button, the server does the work, the response comes back. It works fine until it does not. And when it stops working, it stops working suddenly and visibly, usually when a customer is watching.
I learned this building