The afternoon slump and evening second wind are not just willpower problems. They come from the push and pull between sleep pressure and the circadian alerting system.
Environment injection, direct initializer passing, and @Binding all share SwiftUI state, but they carry different meanings around ownership, coupling, and interface scope.
A collection of hard-won SwiftUI patterns for memory, async work, and Observation edge cases. Covers view model lifetime bugs, debouncing, async button actions, task ownership, reference cycles, and the tension between @Observable and actors.
This past week I shipped across code and writing at a pace that would have felt unrealistic before AI. The surprising part was that it did not feel frantic; it felt like less friction between thought and artifact. It truly feels like working at warp speed, 😜.
Look at this. This is what I have shipped so far in a single week and growing (full list here):
I wanted a thread-like place for public work notes that stayed fully mine. Threaded timeline entries let Subspace Builder capture progress in Markdown, in Git, and in whatever order the work actually happened.
A friend built a tool that lets a browser reach local TCP services over WebRTC, no open ports, no install, no public IP required. I went down the rabbit hole understanding how it actually works.
A 3am rabbit hole into Ethereum from the perspective of a markdown-based digital garden: ledgers, trust minimization, on-chain verification, and what a hybrid publishing model could look like.
I hit a bug that looked too small to be interesting: entries on my timeline page were not sorted correctly within the same day.
The page had a date, a time, and a custom Eleventy collection sort. That sounds like the whole problem space. Sort by date plus time, reverse the collection for newest first, done. Instead, April 12 was rendering in a strange order: 00:01, 10:11, 22:16, 15:49, 22:20.
A reflection on what AI might erode if we let convenience replace judgment: junior skill-building, critical thinking, and the slower human process of forming a view before outsourcing it.
A short reflection on how a few recent blog improvements, small experiments, and notes turned my site into a digital garden that feels calm, cohesive, and genuinely mine.