Episode 14 — Berthe Morisot: The Breeze Behind Impressionism’s Curtain

Let’s talk about the Impressionist who painted sunlight so lightly it practically hovered: Berthe Morisot. If the movement was a band, she wasn’t the “token” anything — she was a founding member who kept showing up, kept innovating, and kept making paintings that feel like fresh air. Who is this artist? A Paris-based painter born in 1841, … Read more

How to Test Like a User: Testing Library’s Secret Superpower

Let’s be honest: most testing tools are obsessed with your code’s internals. They want you to poke into props, spy on methods, and check state like you’re a nosy neighbor peeking through blinds. Testing Library, however, takes a radical stance: stop creeping around the source code and start acting like an actual user. What is … Read more

Greek Lightning: Philosophy, Theatre, and the Birth of Science

Welcome to the 400s BCE, where sandals slapped stone streets, democracy was just getting warmed up, and every second Athenian seemed to have a toga and an opinion. This was the century ideas went viral — minus the algorithms. Let’s talk about the original thought influencers: the Greeks. The Creator of the Century: Socrates Socrates wasn’t the … Read more