Scrum vs. Kanban — Sticky Notes, Sprints, and Standups

Welcome to Episode 4 of the Software Development Methodology Series — written on location at Corsa Moto Works, where my bike is in for a tune-up. If you’re curious how to find a great motorcycle mechanic while sipping stale waiting-room coffee, check out this guide to mechanic-finding greatness. Now, let’s rev the engines on this methodology matchup. … Read more

OpenID Connect: Your Identity Passport to the Internet (Without the TSA Pat-Down)

If you’ve ever logged into a website using your Google, Facebook, or Apple account, congrats — you’ve tangoed with OIDC and lived to tell the tale. OpenID Connect (OIDC) is like the VIP pass for modern authentication. It lets users prove who they are without inventing a new password every five minutes or remembering that one account … Read more

Laravel Horizon: Wrangling Your Queues Like a Pro (With a Smile)

Imagine Laravel’s queue system as a wild pack of messages trying to get processed — some urgent, some lazy, some who just hang out hoping someone eventually notices them. Now imagine you’re the stressed-out manager trying to keep it all moving without pulling your hair out. That’s where Laravel Horizon rides in like a well-dressed cowboy with … Read more

Agile Antics — The Manifesto That Changed Everything

Ah, Agile. The rebellious teenager of software development methodologies. Born in 2001, forged in a snow-covered ski lodge in Utah (because nothing screams “software revolution” like après-ski philosophy), Agile emerged as a manifesto with just 68 words, 4 values, and 12 principles. It was concise, defiant, and possibly scribbled on the back of a snowboard … Read more

Waterfall Woes and the Era of Linear Logic

Once upon a time — before Agile sprints, kanban boards, or the phrase “move fast and break things” — there was Waterfall. The software development world’s first official method. It was neat. It was structured. It was… a little too confident. Let’s dive into the method that walked so others could run in circles. What is the Waterfall Model? … Read more

Creativity in the Cloud: The 2000s and the Age of Networked Genius

Welcome to the 21st century — a place where your toaster might talk back, your meme might start a movement, and your roommate might be a chatbot named Kevin who won’t do the dishes. In this episode, we explore the minds that transformed collaboration from something done in boardrooms to something done in pajamas, across time zones, … Read more

May Recap, June Plans, and a Little June 1 History for Dessert

Well, well, well… May, you unpredictable beast. While sales decided to nap, everything else threw a rave. Let’s start with the glow-ups. LumAIere.com saw a 63% boost in page views. Blog views rose 38%. Users? Up 70%. That’s not growth, that’s a spring awakening. The homepage reigned supreme: lumaiere.com, followed closely by the gallery at … Read more

Digital Da Vincis: The Late 1900s and the Rise of Silicon Creators

If the 1800s gave us wires and steam, the late 1900s handed us code and imagination — and a whole lot of beige plastic. This was the era when art, invention, and geekery finally stopped pretending to be separate things. Suddenly, the world’s most powerful tools didn’t look like chisels or paintbrushes — they looked like keyboards, circuit boards, … Read more

The Modernist Mischief of the 1900s

The 1900s were chaos — and the best kind. While the world blew past horses and telegrams, a mischievous band of creators gleefully disassembled art, science, and culture, then rebuilt them in shapes nobody expected. It was an era where genius didn’t whisper from ivory towers — it shouted from Paris cafés, patent offices, and war trenches. Let’s meet … Read more

Industrial Inspirations: 1800s Creators Who Wired the World

The 19th century wasn’t just puffing steam and inventing weird hats. It was a creative furnace, churning out thinkers, builders, and rule-breakers who sparked revolutions — electrical, artistic, literary, and biological. Let’s meet three visionaries whose imaginations didn’t just shape their century — they rewired the world. Thomas Edison Known for: Inventing the phonograph, the practical light bulb, and … Read more