
7 Refactor Patterns That Compound Over Years
You rarely feel the impact of a refactor in the sprint where you do it. The tickets close. CI stays green. Velocity barely moves. Then six months later, a new

You rarely feel the impact of a refactor in the sprint where you do it. The tickets close. CI stays green. Velocity barely moves. Then six months later, a new

New Justice Department records indicate Jeffrey Epstein maintained contacts with Russian technology investors who had drawn interest from U.S. intelligence officials. The documents, released in recent days, shed light on

Citadel Securities and Ark Invest have purchased ZRO, the native token of LayerZero, signaling a rare move into on-chain assets by two major finance names. The action, described as a

You have dashboards. Plural. They glow on wall-mounted TVs. They stream into Slack. They’re color-coded, real-time, and technically accurate. And yet, your last incident still surprised you. That’s the paradox

You know the feeling. Traffic doubles after a product launch. Latency crept from 80 milliseconds to 450. Dashboards turn yellow, then red. Your team stares at CPU graphs that look

You rarely wake up to architectural drift. You wake up to a sev one that makes no sense. A service that was supposed to be stateless suddenly depends on a

You usually discover you need rate limiting the same way you discover you need backups: something catches fire, you say “huh, that’s weird,” and then you spend the next 48

The Environmental Protection Agency is moving to roll back the “endangerment finding,” a core legal basis for federal regulation of greenhouse gases. The step, signaled this week in Washington, could

Lockheed Martin has introduced a new undersea drone that can latch onto friendly vessels to save power, a design that could reshape how navies scout, patrol, and defend. The Lamprey