Ai Blogs

Page 6 of 7 (125 Blogs)
Brent
1/1/2026 EN

Brent

Brent — Curator of Stitcher’s Community Feed, a community-driven, hand-curated content aggregator highlighting thoughtful, high-quality writing from across the web. The feed focuses on software engineering, open source, web development, infrastructure, and the human side of building technology. Readers can browse recent picks, follow via RSS, or contribute their own suggestions.

The Pragmatic Engineer Gergely Orosz
11/29/2025 EN

The Pragmatic Engineer Gergely Orosz

PragmaticEngineer.com is the blog of Gergely Orosz, a software engineer and engineering manager known for clear, research-driven writing about the software industry. He publishes deep-dive essays on software engineering, architecture, scaling systems, engineering management, Big Tech practices, incident analysis, product delivery, and developer careers. Gergely combines experience from companies like Uber and Microsoft with interviews, data, and real examples from engineering teams around the world. His work is widely read because it explains how high-performing tech organizations actually operate, and what individual developers can learn from them. The blog is complemented by a popular weekly newsletter and books focused on practical engineering leadership.

Cassidy Williams
11/29/2025 EN

Cassidy Williams

Cassidoo.co is the personal blog of Cassidy Williams, a well known developer, speaker, and educator who writes about JavaScript, React, career growth, web development, dev tools, and learning in public. Her posts mix technical insights with approachable explanations, covering topics like UI patterns, coding tips, productivity workflows, and the human side of software engineering. Cassidy is known for her weekly newsletter, open-source work, and community involvement.

Sebastian Raschka
11/29/2025 EN

Sebastian Raschka

SebastianRaschka.com is the personal blog of Sebastian Raschka, PhD, an LLM research engineer whose work bridges academia and industry in AI and machine learning. On his blog and notes section he publishes deep, well-documented articles on topics such as LLMs (large language models), reasoning models, machine learning in Python, neural networks, data science workflows, and deep learning architecture. Recent posts explore advanced themes like “reasoning LLMs”, comparisons of modern open-weight transformer architectures, and guides for building, training, or analyzing neural networks and model internals.

Mark Erikson
11/17/2025 EN

Mark Erikson

Blog.iSquaredSoftware.com is the personal blog of Mark „acemarke” Erikson, a software engineer and core maintainer of Redux, React-Redux, and Redux Toolkit. He writes deeply informative articles about React, Redux, JavaScript, TypeScript, performance, library maintenance, and frontend architecture. Mark’s posts often take the form of long form essays where he answers questions from the React community, shows internal implementation details of Redux or React-Redux, and explains rendering, context behavior, selector optimization, package migration, and build tooling. His writing is practical, precise, and aimed at developers who want to understand how big frontend libraries and frameworks actually work beneath the surface.

John Folberth
11/15/2025 EN

John Folberth

Blog.johnfolberth.com is the technical blog of John Folberth, a cloud and DevOps engineer focused on Azure, Azure DevOps, YAML pipelines, and infrastructure as code. The site provides practical guides for people who are “figuring out DevOps in Azure”, with step by step articles on topics such as Bicep, CI/CD strategies, Azure Budgets, Key Vault automation, SQL deployment pipelines, Terraform from Azure DevOps, and Azure certifications.

Brecht Billiet
11/15/2025 EN

Brecht Billiet

Blog.brecht.io is the personal blog of Brecht Billiet, a software architect and GenAI specialist formerly focused on Angular and front-end frameworks. He now helps organizations worldwide build intelligent AI agents, modern chatbots, and scalable GenAI solutions. With a long history of writing about Angular architecture, RxJS, large-scale single-page applications, and state management, Brecht blends deep front-end expertise with his current focus on GenAI and automation. His blog includes technical tutorials on building reactive web applications, designing scalable systems, adopting best practices for Angular, and now extends to AI solution design, agent development, and strategic consulting in advanced technologies. The style of writing is practical and experience-based. Brecht draws on his work training teams, architecture design, and mentoring developers, offering insights that both mid-level and senior engineers can apply directly in real business contexts.

Code with Dan
11/15/2025 EN

Code with Dan

Blog.CodeWithDan.com is the personal blog of Dan Wahlin, Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft and a well known educator in the JavaScript and cloud ecosystem. Dan writes about JavaScript, TypeScript, Angular, Azure, Docker, Kubernetes, AI assisted development, and modern cloud architecture, always focusing on practical examples and real world scenarios. His articles explain how to build scalable applications, use Azure services effectively, and integrate AI, Realtime APIs, and tools like MCP or TypeChat into production projects. Much of the content comes from his work on courses, workshops, and developer training, which makes the writing clear, actionable, and grounded in real engineering experience.

Simon Willison
11/13/2025 EN

Simon Willison

SimonWillison.net is the long-running blog of Simon Willison, a software engineer, open-source creator, and co-author of the original Django framework. He writes about Python, Django, Datasette, AI tooling, prompt engineering, search, databases, APIs, data journalism, and practical software architecture. The blog includes detailed notes from experiments, conference talks, and real projects. Readers will find clear explanations of topics such as LLM workflows, SQL patterns, data publishing, scraping, deployment, caching, and modern developer tooling. Simon also publishes frequent micro-posts and TIL entries that document small discoveries and tricks from day-to-day engineering work. The tone is practical and research oriented, making the site a valuable resource for anyone interested in serious engineering and open data.

Daniel Krzyczkowski
11/10/2025 EN

Daniel Krzyczkowski

Daniel Krzyczkowski is a Senior Cloud Advocate at Microsoft who writes about Azure, .NET, and AI-powered applications. His blog covers hands-on guides on topics like Azure OpenAI integration, serverless computing, building secure APIs, using Microsoft Entra, and modern DevOps practices. He often combines theory with real project examples, showing how to apply Microsoft technologies efficiently in production environments. The blog is a valuable resource for developers working with the Microsoft ecosystem who want to explore practical cloud architectures and AI-driven development.

Michael Lynch
11/8/2025 EN

Michael Lynch

Michael Lynch – Developer, Indie Founder and Technical Writer Michael Lynch shares honest and detailed stories from his journey as a software engineer and indie founder. His blog covers topics like building sustainable businesses, code reviews, software craftsmanship, and lessons learned from running and selling his own startup, TinyPilot. Each post reflects a mix of engineering precision and real-world experience, written with clarity and humor. Readers can find tutorials, retrospectives, and essays that go beyond code to explore motivation, productivity, and the human side of software development. This blog is a must-read for developers, indie hackers, and anyone who enjoys thoughtful writing about technology and entrepreneurship.

Piotr Migdał
11/8/2025 EN

Piotr Migdał

Piotr Migdał – Blog of a Data Explorer and Visual Storyteller This is the personal blog of Dr. Piotr Migdał, a technologist and visual storyteller with a strong background in quantum physics, deep learning, and data visualization. He is a founding engineer at Quesma, where he uses AI to turn complex datasets into clear visual insights through ggplot2 charts and Grafana dashboards. His posts combine technology, creativity, and personal reflection. You will find articles about machine learning, interactive data visualization, and projects that bridge science and art. Beyond his technical work, Piotr writes about dance, mindfulness, and the human side of creativity. This blog is a great read for developers, data scientists, and anyone interested in how technology and art can come together to explain the world in a meaningful way.

Richard Gendal Brown
11/8/2025 EN

Richard Gendal Brown

Richard Gendal Brown is a technologist, writer, and former CTO of R3 who explores the intersection of finance, blockchain, and distributed systems on his long-running blog gendal.me. Through clear, insightful essays, he breaks down how modern financial infrastructure really works — from settlement networks and payment rails to digital assets and central bank innovation. His writing bridges the gap between software engineering and financial theory, offering readers a rare mix of technical depth and real-world context. A must-read for anyone interested in how technology is reshaping money and the global financial system.

Marius Sandbu
11/8/2025 EN

Marius Sandbu

Marius Sandbu is a Norwegian cloud architect and technology evangelist, best known for his long-running blog msandbu.org, where he’s been sharing in-depth insights on cloud infrastructure, security, and end-user computing since 2012. He currently works as a Nordics Lead Cloud Architect at Sopra Steria, helping enterprises design and secure complex multi-cloud environments across Azure, AWS, and Google Cloud. A long-time Microsoft MVP (Azure) and conference speaker, Marius is also the author of several books on topics such as Citrix NetScaler and cloud security. Through his blog, talks, and the Cloudfirst podcast, he bridges the gap between enterprise IT and real-world implementation, offering clear, experience-driven guidance for cloud professionals who value depth over hype.

Yasoob Khalid
11/7/2025 EN

Yasoob Khalid

Yasoob Khalid is a developer and writer best known for the free, open-source book Intermediate Python and his project-driven follow-up, Practical Python Projects. His articles and books have reached 5+ million readers across 189+ countries, and his blog remains a go-to place for clear, practical Python insights. By day, Yasoob works on Azure Cloud Networking at Microsoft, and by night he continues to publish tutorials, notes, and experiments that demystify real-world Python for learners at every level. He’s also the author behind the long-running Python Tips site and newsletter, where he focuses on approachable explanations and hands-on examples.