Debugging Blogs

Page 7 of 8 (156 Blogs)
Michael Bahr
1/1/2026 EN

Michael Bahr

Michael Bahr — Practical software engineering articles focused on AWS serverless architecture, DynamoDB, AWS CDK, cost optimization, monitoring, and real-world cloud problem solving, with hands-on tutorials and production-tested insights shared through bahr.dev.

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.

Anthony Giretti
12/31/2025 EN

Anthony Giretti

Anthony Giretti — .NET developer and technical blogger sharing deep dives, tutorials, and the latest updates on C#, ASP.NET Core, minimal APIs, and modern .NET technologies, with a strong focus on new language features and practical backend development.

Maxence Poutord
12/19/2025 EN

Maxence Poutord

Maxence Poutord est un développeur logiciel spécialisé dans l'architecture Vue.js, les workflows Git et le développement web moderne. Découvrez des insights issus de 3 ans de maintenance d'une énorme base de code Vue.js incluant 9 leçons essentielles, décisions d'architecture pour faire évoluer de grandes applications et tests d'intégration avec Testing Library. Explorez des tutoriels Git complets incluant des cheat sheets avancées, la compréhension des mécanismes internes de git commit et l'optimisation de gitconfig personnalisé. Apprenez la migration de Gatsby.js vers Astro, l'intégration de commentaires Giscus dans les blogs Astro et 10 ans d'expérience en blogging. Suivez pour la sensibilisation à la cybersécurité sur les arnaques crypto, des projets open-source incluant docker-symfony et l'assistant IA YoutubeMate, et des insights pratiques de développement web. Accédez aux projets phares et 62+ articles de blog sur JavaScript, les tests et l'architecture logicielle.

Gunnar Morling
12/11/2025 EN

Gunnar Morling

Morling.dev is the personal blog of Michael Morling, a software engineer and architect with deep expertise in Java, Spring, JVM internals, architecture, performance, and developer tooling. His writing focuses on practical and detailed explanations of topics such as Spring framework internals, microservices design, JVM garbage collection, performance tuning, clean architecture, Gradle builds, and language features that matter in real projects. Michael often breaks down subtle behaviors of the JVM and Spring ecosystem, helping developers understand why things work the way they do and how to improve reliability and efficiency in production systems.

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.

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.

Paul Irish
11/15/2025 EN

Paul Irish

PaulIrish.com is the long running blog of Paul Irish, a front end engineer and developer advocate on the Google Chrome team. He is known for his work on HTML5 Boilerplate, Modernizr, Yeoman, jQuery tooling, and Chrome DevTools, and his writing focuses on web performance, browser internals, frontend best practices, and developer tooling. On the blog you will find deep dives into topics such as DOM and CSS performance, requestAnimationFrame, Chrome’s rendering pipeline, DevTools workflows, and practical techniques for making real world sites faster and more robust.

Daniel Janus
11/15/2025 EN

Daniel Janus

Blog.DanielJanus.pl is the personal blog of Daniel Janus, a veteran programmer from Poland who writes about Clojure, Rust, functional programming, developer culture, and personal productivity. Daniel combines deep technical insights with reflections on how code, words, and emotions interact in a developer’s life. His posts range from “Corner-cases of Comparing Clojure Numbers” to explorations of CSS compression and personal essays about ADHD and workspace clutter. The blog is bilingual (Polish and English) and features both short essays and detailed code-driven articles. With an emphasis on thinking clearly, rethinking assumptions, and learning continuously, Daniel’s writing appeals to engineers seeking both intellectual depth and human perspective.

Tomasz Łakomy
11/15/2025 EN

Tomasz Łakomy

Tlakomy.com is the personal blog of Tomasz Łakomy, a Senior Frontend Engineer, tech speaker, and egghead.io instructor who is currently working on Cloudash, a serverless monitoring tool. On his blog he shares notes and deep dives about AWS, serverless architectures, AWS CDK, Lambda, DynamoDB, AppSync, GraphQL, TypeScript, and frontend development, always with a practical and friendly tone.

Joel Spolsky
11/13/2025 EN

Joel Spolsky

JoelOnSoftware.com is the personal blog of Joel Spolsky, a software engineer, entrepreneur and writer. He is known for founding companies like Fog Creek Software and co-founding Stack Overflow. His blog features influential essays on software development, management, architecture, user interface design, productivity, and hiring. Joel’s writing blends technical insight with business-savvy, covering topics such as the "Joel Test" for evaluating software teams, handling legacy codebases, and building software organizations that work well. Over the years his archives have become essential reading for software professionals who care about building quality systems and thriving teams.