December 2025

  • How to Break Into Tech in 2025: Real Advice I Gave a First-Time Engineer

    How to Break Into Tech in 2025: Real Advice I Gave a First-Time Engineer

    Introduction Recently, a junior engineer reached out to me on LinkedIn asking for advice on how to land their first job in tech. It wasn’t a flashy question. No shortcuts. No “what’s the fastest way to get hired?” energy. Just an honest message from someone early in their journey—learning full-stack development, exploring AI, and trying

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  • What Building a Small AI App Taught Me About Fundamentals

    What Building a Small AI App Taught Me About Fundamentals

    I recently finished building a small AI-powered translation app called PollyGlot. The project came from Scrimba’s AI Engineer Path as a breakout challenge. We were given a Figma file, design assets, and a clear goal: build a working AI application. What made this project interesting wasn’t just the AI — it was the constraints. The

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  • How I Learned to Take Ownership Without a Safety Net

    How I Learned to Take Ownership Without a Safety Net

    There’s a version of engineering growth that gets talked about a lot: promotions, new titles, well-scoped projects with clear ownership and strong support. And then there’s the version that actually shapes you. This post is about the second one. It’s about what it feels like to take ownership of a production issue when the deadline

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  • How a Simple S3 Access Request Turned Into a DevOps Learning Opportunity

    How a Simple S3 Access Request Turned Into a DevOps Learning Opportunity

    Sometimes growth doesn’t come from a planned project.It comes from a small, practical need that exposes a much bigger system. This started with a debugging task. I was working on an issue involving static page articles that were being served from an S3 bucket. To properly investigate the problem, I needed direct access to the

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  • Bringing Value to a Team Without Being Asked

    Bringing Value to a Team Without Being Asked

    One of the most valuable lessons I’ve learned as an engineer is that impact isn’t limited to being “on call” or officially assigned to a problem. Sometimes, the biggest contributions come from noticing when help is needed—and stepping in without being asked. Recently, a teammate was handling a production issue during a rotation shift. The

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