Unpopular Opinion: CSS Is Enough in 2026
The debate rages on: is pure CSS sufficient for modern web development, or are frameworks like Tailwind and Bootstrap essential? We dive deep into why some developers believe CSS is enough in 2026.
The debate rages on: is pure CSS sufficient for modern web development, or are frameworks like Tailwind and Bootstrap essential? We dive deep into why some developers believe CSS is enough in 2026.
Every solo developer has been there—the client with a 'simple' app idea that's actually months of work. We break down how to handle these requests, create realistic estimates, and build service marketplace apps without burning out.
Tailwind CSS recently laid off 75% of its engineering team, raising serious questions about the framework's future. This article explores what developers need to know about maintenance, alternatives, and how to protect your projects.
In a candid interview, Tailwind CSS creator Adam Wathan revealed the framework was six months from collapse despite unprecedented AI-driven popularity. This deep dive explores the paradox of user growth versus revenue decline and what it means for open source sustainability.
Stack Overflow isn't what it used to be. The once-vibrant community shows clear signs of decline in 2026. But what does this mean for developers, and where are we finding answers now?
After five years of dismissing TypeScript as unnecessary complexity, I finally gave it a serious try. What I discovered completely changed my perspective on modern web development, especially for API integration and crypto applications.
Many developers discover that professional programming feels nothing like their hobby coding experiences. This article explores why that gap exists and offers practical strategies for finding satisfaction in your development career.
Veteran developers are hitting a wall of creative deja vu. With AI churning out code and GitHub overflowing with clones, where does genuine innovation live? This article explores moving beyond the 'end of the internet' to find meaningful work.
Every developer has that one project—the one sitting in the projects folder, 90% complete but never shipped. As we enter 2026, let's make this the year we break the cycle and get our creations out into the world.
After quitting his high-paying web development job to escape office burnout, a developer discovered the painful truth: being great at coding doesn't make you an entrepreneur. This deep dive explores why technical skills alone won't build a business and what developers actually need to succeed on their own terms.
For three decades, robots.txt served as the web's polite request system. But in 2025, AI companies are treating it as optional. This isn't just about technical compliance—it's about the fundamental relationship between content creators and the entities that profit from their work.
When a web development team gets fired because the CEO thinks AI can replace five engineers, it reveals deeper truths about 2025's tech landscape. This article explores what AI can and cannot do, and how developers can future-proof their careers.