Frida Kahlo: Life, Pain, and Paintbrushes

You want vulnerability? Frida Kahlo invented it, bottled it, then wore it like jewelry. By Episode 3 of our Artist Series, we’re diving eyebrow-first into the world of one of art’s most iconic, misunderstood, and emotionally radioactive figures: Frida freaking Kahlo. Who was she? Frida Kahlo (1907–1954) was a Mexican painter who weaponized her paintbrush … Read more

TensorFlow: The Gym Bro of Machine Learning

TensorFlow. Just saying the name sounds like you’re about to pump some serious AI iron. Created by the brainiacs at Google Brain in 2015, this open-source library has become one of the most recognizable names in machine learning. Think of it as CrossFit for data nerds — sweaty, intense, occasionally painful, but wildly effective if you stick … Read more

Bottle: The Python Microframework with No Strings Attached

Picture this: you’re in your pajamas at 2 AM, sipping stale coffee and whispering sweet nothings to your keyboard, when suddenly, you get a million-dollar idea for an app. But you don’t want to wake the Flask monster or summon Django’s full regalia. You want something lightweight, like an API that won’t scream at you … Read more

Go: The Language That Said “Nah” to Nonsense

Let’s talk about Go. Not the board game, not the traffic signal, and definitely not that one friend who disappears every time it’s time to split the check. We’re talking about the programming language: statically typed, syntactically clean, and so opinionated it could probably host its own podcast. Built at Google by a few engineers … Read more

The Guy with the Bowler Hat: René Magritte’s Subversive Genius

René Magritte: the man who gave every philosophy undergrad a headache and made every museum-goer wonder if the pipe was a lie. Magritte didn’t paint dreams — he painted reality pretending to be dreams pretending to be reality. If you’re confused, congratulations: you’re experiencing Magritte the correct way. Born in Belgium in 1898, Magritte grew up just … Read more

The Artist Series Begins: Yves Tanguy and the Surrealism of Sentient Shadows

Welcome to the first installment of the Artist Series, where we dig into the minds of artists who made the world weirder, dreamier, and (occasionally) slightly unsettling. First up: Yves Tanguy, the surrealist who painted dreamscapes that look like your subconscious tried to build a diorama with Dali, Escher, and a pile of melted chess … Read more

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Publishing on Medium (But Were Afraid to Ask)

Let’s say you’ve just penned your magnum opus — a searing think piece on the tragic demise of Hotmail, a heartfelt letter to your childhood toaster, or an in-depth exposé on why cats ignore you until you’re busy. You hit “Publish” on Medium. And then what? Well friend, pull up a comfy chair, because I’m about to … Read more

Jinja2: The Templating Engine That Hides in Plain Sight

Ah, Jinja2. It sounds like a mystical potion or a discontinued IKEA lamp, but no — it’s the unsung hero quietly powering half the internet’s HTML. If you’ve ever used Flask or tinkered with a Python web app and thought, “Wow, this HTML practically writes itself,” you’ve probably met Jinja2. Let’s pull back the velvet curtain and … Read more

June Review: The Data, the Laughs, and the Lessons

Well, that was a wild ride, wasn’t it? If May was the warm-up act, June was the main event — with extra pyro, a fog machine, and a squirrel that somehow wandered into the spotlight and stole the show. Let’s look at what the data says, what we learned, and where we’re headed next. Spoiler: we’re not … Read more

Why Do I Always Have to Pee After 45 Minutes in the Massage Chair?

You settle into the massage chair. The lights dim. Soothing waves of relaxation ripple through your body. The mechanical rollers start working their magic up and down your spine. You’re drifting… drifting… and then — bam. Bladder alert. Why now? Why always at the 45-minute mark? What kind of massage chair sorcery is this? Let’s unravel the … Read more