In 2026, the discourse around AI coding assistants has shifted. We are past the "adoption hype." While agents like Cursor and Devin are standard in modern workflows, the expected linear boost in productivity has collided with a new reality: The Productivity Paradox.
Developers are spending significant time "babysitting" AI—re-contextualizing, debugging, and verifying generated code. Wor...
Are you reading this right now while hunched over like a shrimp? 🥐 If your neck feels like it’s supporting a bowling ball at a 45-degree angle, you aren't alone. "Tech Neck" is the silent productivity killer for developers.
In this tutorial, we are building PostureGuard, a lightweight, real-time posture monitoring tool. We’ll leverage Computer Vision, ...
You already know how to code. Here's why that's not what's stopping you from getting your first paying client — and three things you can use today.
tags: freelance, career, webdev, beginners
You can build things. You've shipped side projects, maybe finished a bootcamp, maybe you've been writing code for years as a hobby. And you still don't have a single paying client.
That'...
Hace unos meses salió la GH-600 (GitHub Certified: Agentic AI Developer), una de las primeras certificaciones enfocadas en agentes de IA dentro del ciclo de vida del software. Me puse a estudiar con los recursos oficiales de Microsoft Learn y me choqué con lo de siempre: módulos cortos, muchos títulos y poco contenido que me sirviera de verdad. Cubren tal vez un 35 a 45% del pe...
A few years ago, I was obsessed with reduce().
Every problem looked like a reduction problem.
Need a lookup table?
users.reduce(...)
Need grouping?
...
The agent passed every test I threw at it by hand. Then a user asked it to "book the cheaper flight," it happily called book on the wrong flight ID, and nobody caught it for three days because the demo I kept running never once asked for the cheaper flight.
That is the trap. When you test an agent by running it yourself, the demo is the test — you type the happy-pa...