Tag: Jamstack

  • Revisiting Developer Portals After 90 Hackathon in Production

    Authentication turned out to be the most politically charged decision in the entire project. Every team had opinions about OAuth providers, session management strategies, and token lifetimes. We eventually settled on a pragmatic middle ground that nobody loved but everyone could live with.

    Post-mortems without action items are just storytelling. We implemented a strict follow-up process: every post-mortem produces at most three concrete action items, each assigned to a specific person with a deadline. Items that don’t get done within two sprints get escalated or explicitly deprioritized.

    Governance and Compliance

    We ran a ‘dependency audit day’ where the entire team reviewed every third-party library in our stack. We removed 30% of our dependencies, updated critical security patches in others, and documented the rationale for keeping each remaining one. The build got 25% faster and our supply chain risk dropped measurably.

    Accessibility improvements delivered unexpected business value. After making our checkout flow screen-reader compatible, we saw a 12% increase in completion rates across all users — the clearer interaction patterns helped everyone, not just assistive technology users.

    We replaced our homegrown metrics pipeline with an off-the-shelf observability platform. The team resisted initially — ‘we can build something better suited to our needs’ — but the maintenance burden of the custom solution was consuming 20% of one engineer’s time every sprint. Sometimes buying is the right engineering decision.

    The landscape will keep shifting, but the fundamentals — measure before optimizing, communicate before building, validate before scaling — remain constant. Keep those anchors and the tactical choices become much easier.

  • Replacing Gulp with Internal Tooling: An Honest Review

    We stopped doing quarterly planning and switched to six-week cycles with two-week cooldowns. The cooldowns are for tech debt, experiments, and developer-chosen projects. Team satisfaction scores jumped 30% and, counterintuitively, feature delivery actually accelerated.

    We built a custom dashboard that tracks the metrics that actually matter to our team. Vanity metrics like total page views were replaced with actionable signals: time-to-first-meaningful-interaction, error budget burn rate, and deployment frequency per team.

    We replaced our homegrown metrics pipeline with an off-the-shelf observability platform. The team resisted initially — ‘we can build something better suited to our needs’ — but the maintenance burden of the custom solution was consuming 20% of one engineer’s time every sprint. Sometimes buying is the right engineering decision.

    The hardest part of any migration is the data. Not the schema changes — those are mechanical. The real challenge is ensuring data integrity during the transition period when both old and new systems are running simultaneously and writes need to be consistent across both.

    Our initial benchmark numbers looked promising in staging but fell apart under production traffic patterns. The difference? Staging used uniform request distributions while real users exhibit bursty, correlated behavior that exposes different bottlenecks entirely.

    Cost Breakdown

    Structured logging was the single highest-ROI infrastructure investment we made all year. Moving from free-text log lines to JSON with consistent field names meant our dashboards, alerts, and incident investigations all got dramatically better overnight. The migration took one engineer two weeks.

    Monitoring Setup

    Our cost optimization effort started with the boring stuff: right-sizing instances, cleaning up orphaned resources, and switching to reserved capacity for predictable workloads. These unglamorous changes saved more than any architectural redesign would have.

    The Migration Path

    Error handling deserves as much design attention as the happy path. We created a taxonomy of error types — retryable, user-fixable, operator-fixable, and fatal — and built standard handling patterns for each. Support tickets dropped by half because users finally got actionable error messages instead of generic 500 pages.

    We started this project with a clear hypothesis: the existing approach was costing us more in maintenance time than the migration would cost upfront. Three months later, the data confirmed we were right — but the journey was far bumpier than expected.

    We’re still iterating on all of this. In six months, some of these practices will have evolved or been replaced entirely. That’s the point — the system should never feel finished.

  • The Complete Checklist for CI/CD Pipelines

    The onboarding experience for new team members improved dramatically. What used to take two weeks of tribal knowledge transfer was reduced to a two-day self-guided process with automated environment setup and curated documentation.

    Retrospectives after each sprint helped the team continuously improve. Rather than treating them as a formality, we used structured formats that surfaced actionable insights and tracked follow-through on agreed improvements.

    Let’s walk through a practical example. Suppose you have an existing application that needs to handle increasing traffic while maintaining sub-second response times across all endpoints.

    Testing strategy evolved significantly over the project lifecycle. We started with heavy unit test coverage but gradually shifted toward integration and end-to-end tests that provided higher confidence with less maintenance overhead.

    The developer experience (DX) improvements alone justified the migration. Build times dropped by 60%, hot reload became instant, and the team reported significantly higher satisfaction scores in our quarterly surveys.

    If you found this guide helpful, consider sharing it with your team. The practices described here work best when adopted collectively rather than individually.

  • The Underrated Argument for RAG Architectures in 2026

    We replaced our homegrown metrics pipeline with an off-the-shelf observability platform. The team resisted initially — ‘we can build something better suited to our needs’ — but the maintenance burden of the custom solution was consuming 20% of one engineer’s time every sprint. Sometimes buying is the right engineering decision.

    We ran a ‘dependency audit day’ where the entire team reviewed every third-party library in our stack. We removed 30% of our dependencies, updated critical security patches in others, and documented the rationale for keeping each remaining one. The build got 25% faster and our supply chain risk dropped measurably.

    Data Integrity

    We built a lightweight internal developer portal that aggregates service ownership, runbook links, API docs, and deployment status. It took one engineer three sprints to build using a static site generator, and it immediately became the first place anyone goes when an incident starts.

    The team’s relationship with technical debt changed when we started categorizing it. ‘Reckless’ debt (shortcuts we knew were wrong) gets prioritized for immediate paydown. ‘Prudent’ debt (intentional tradeoffs) gets documented and scheduled. The distinction removed the guilt and the arguments.

    Our initial benchmark numbers looked promising in staging but fell apart under production traffic patterns. The difference? Staging used uniform request distributions while real users exhibit bursty, correlated behavior that exposes different bottlenecks entirely.

    Cost Breakdown

    Error handling deserves as much design attention as the happy path. We created a taxonomy of error types — retryable, user-fixable, operator-fixable, and fatal — and built standard handling patterns for each. Support tickets dropped by half because users finally got actionable error messages instead of generic 500 pages.

    Team Dynamics

    We invested heavily in contract testing between our microservices. The upfront cost was significant, but it eliminated an entire class of integration failures that had been causing 40% of our production incidents. Consumer-driven contracts caught breaking changes before they reached staging.

    Infrastructure Decisions

    Synthetic monitoring catches problems that real-user monitoring misses: slow third-party scripts, broken OAuth flows at 3 AM, and regional CDN issues. We run synthetic checks from twelve global locations every five minutes and page the on-call engineer if any critical path degrades beyond thresholds.

    Caching is deceptively simple in concept and endlessly complex in practice. Our first implementation had cache stampede issues under load, our second had stale data bugs that took weeks to diagnose, and our third attempt finally got it right by using a combination of TTLs, background refresh, and circuit breakers.

    We’re still iterating on all of this. In six months, some of these practices will have evolved or been replaced entirely. That’s the point — the system should never feel finished.