Pushing Earthly to the Limit
In every project, setting up CI pipelines in a way that is easy to build, understand, and test locally is a constant struggle. Time to test a tool that promises to solve that: Earthly.
Working on developer tooling in Rust to make developers happier and more productive.
In every project, setting up CI pipelines in a way that is easy to build, understand, and test locally is a constant struggle. Time to test a tool that promises to solve that: Earthly.
After years of building web applications across various languages and frameworks, one challenge remained constant—writing reliable end-to-end tests was always a pain. But what if we could rethink E2E testing from the ground up? In an ideal world, how would we test our web applications?
Over the past year or so, I have been tinkering with a lot of ideas involving (web) applications. This post explores some of the opinions that I developed during this time and the conclusions that I am taking from the experience.
For years, I've searched for the perfect task management system. But after countless experiments and iterations, I've decided to take matters into my own hands. Introducing my dream app: Otterdone.
It's time to set up a new home server! But before jumping into the work, let's take a moment to consider how to manage the server and what to run on it.
The past few months have made me reconsider my relationship with social media and cloud services. And I think that I'd be happier if I felt more in control over my digital life.