Episode 12: Testing and Reliability, or Why “It Worked Once” Is Not a Career Strategy
Testing is where software stops asking for …
Testing is where software stops asking for …
Why good code organization matters more than …
Episode 10: how programs read, write, save, and survive reality without tripping over files, users, formats, and their own confidence.
A witty dive into Department D, the KGB disinformation machine that turned rumor, forged memos, and global confusion into strategy.
Fifty-three artist episodes, one impossible table of contents, and the gloriously ridiculous detective story required to build it.
Some artists whisper. Barbara Kruger walks into the room, points at the wallpaper of modern life, and says, “You really going to just let that happen?” And the unnerving part is: she is usually right. Kruger is one of those artists whose work feels less like a polite museum object and more like a verbal … Read more
Jean Arp made chance, curves, and biomorphic sculpture feel alive – modern art with humor, calm, and a very elegant refusal to behave.
AI says Chuck Norris is alive. Reality disagreed. A ridiculous, affectionate tribute to the internet’s favorite impossible action hero.
Five strong essays, five days of silence. Why zero reads may still hide real value, and what the platform might be doing behind the curtain.
The moment programming stops being syntax and starts becoming machinery, where memory, mutation, and bugs finally reveal their real agenda.