Max Ernst: Frottage, Frogs, and Full-On Surrealist Weirdness

What if we told you the guy who helped invent collage as we know it also believed in painting dreams with the emotional precision of a nightmare in formalwear? Welcome to Episode 6 of the Artist Series, where we dive into the gloriously bizarre world of Max Ernst. Let’s get one thing clear: Max Ernst … Read more

The Cliché Singularity: Why AI Loves “Like a Caffeinated Swiss Army Cat”

If you’ve been writing with AI for a while, you’ve probably noticed that large language models love their metaphors like cats love cardboard boxes: excessively, irrationally, and with no regard for repetition. One minute you’re comparing an API to a LEGO set, the next you’re describing your framework as a “Swiss Army knife for developers,” … Read more

pytest — The Pythonic Swiss Army Knife

If testing frameworks were video game characters, pytest would be that unassuming fighter who shows up with a trench coat full of gadgets, drops a pun, then wipes the floor with the final boss. Not flashy, not verbose—just ridiculously effective. So why does pytest keep showing up in every serious Python shop like it owns … Read more

The State of Testing — What Are We Even Doing Here?

You write code. You test code. Then you ship broken code and swear vengeance upon your CI pipeline. Welcome to modern software testing, where frameworks outnumber species of penguins and your “green check” lies more often than your worst Tinder date. Let’s crack open this series on testing frameworks by answering the ultimate question: what … Read more

Trust Issues Part 2: So Many Questions, So Few Lawyers in Capes

Welcome back, my fiscally curious comrades. Your questions were sharper than a trustee’s pencil, and today we’re tackling them all — rapid-fire Q&A style, minus the legalese and plus a few spicy jokes. “How much would I expect to spend setting up a trust if I have a million dollars?” Not as much as you think — and definitely … Read more

Trust Issues? Good. Now Let’s Use Them to Protect Your Stuff.

So you’ve got stuff. Maybe it’s a house. Maybe it’s a vintage Pez dispenser collection worth more than your car. Maybe it’s a secret sourdough starter you guard like a dragon with yeast. The point is: you own things, and you probably want to keep them safe — even after you’ve shuffled off this mortal coil or … Read more

Werkzeug: The Python Power Tool That Thinks It’s a Swiss Army Knife

Ah, Werkzeug. It sounds like something you’d shout at a stubborn IKEA shelf, but in the Python world, it’s the unsung scaffolding behind your favorite web apps. It’s a library. A toolkit. A middleware maestro. A request-response whisperer. It’s also got a name that doubles as a language lesson: “Werkzeug” is German for “tool.” And … Read more

Gunicorn: The Web Server with the Funny Name (That Also Happens to Be Great)

Ah, Gunicorn. No, it’s not the latest Pokémon evolution or a mythical creature with a side hustle in DevOps. It’s the Green Unicorn, and it’s one of the most beloved WSGI HTTP servers for running Python web apps in the wild. Think of it as the bartender in a Django/Flask speakeasy — it quietly takes orders and … Read more

PyTorch: The Gym Rat of Deep Learning

PyTorch isn’t just a machine learning library — it’s the friend who shows up to the party with protein bars and a whiteboard and somehow convinces everyone to start lifting tensors instead of weights. What is it? PyTorch is an open-source machine learning library developed primarily by Facebook’s AI Research lab (FAIR). It’s like NumPy got swole … Read more

Episode 5: Leonora Carrington and the Art of Weird, Wild Women

Let’s talk about a woman who painted like your subconscious after two espressos and a fever dream — Leonora Carrington. While the boys of Surrealism were busy melting clocks and napping with lobsters, Carrington was off summoning mythic beasts, unbothered and feral, painting goddesses who probably cursed anyone who mispronounced her name. Born in 1917 into British … Read more