The Fergy Stack

Linux at the desk, adventures on the table.

Tag: engineering-culture

  • The Best Lesson I Learned Came From Building Too Much

    The Best Lesson I Learned Came From Building Too Much

    One of the most valuable engineering lessons I learned did not come from getting something right. It came from over-engineering a solution that never needed that much engineering in the first place. At the time, it felt responsible. I built an abstraction that was clean, flexible, and technically sound. On paper, it looked like good…

  • Code Reviews Should Create Alignment, Not Just Approval

    Code Reviews Should Create Alignment, Not Just Approval

    A pull request lands at 4:42 p.m. It technically works. Tests are green. Screenshots look fine. And yet you can feel a trap humming under the floorboards. Not because the code is failing today — but because you can already see what happens next. Another developer opens the file six months from now, tries to…

  • Architecture Is Just Choosing Your Pain (On Purpose)

    Architecture Is Just Choosing Your Pain (On Purpose)

    Someone asks, “Why did you pick that stack?” and you can almost feel the room hoping you’ll say, “Because it’s popular,” so we can all move on and go back to shipping tickets. But “popular” is not an architecture strategy. It’s a vibe. And vibes don’t show up in your incident postmortem. Every technical decision…