Friday, 10 October 2025

TeochewThunder: Year Eleven (Part 1/2)

Well, look who turns 11 this year! It's not me (I wish), but it's this blog, of course. This thing here might just be a substitute for the children I'm never planning to have.

Dear God, please no.

In all seriousness though, it occurs to me that the effort taken to maintain this blog and the website has pretty much kept me sane all these years. I read somewhere about journalling with regard to mental health, and it seems that this blog is a great example of journalling. Why's it different from venting on Facebook or X, you might ask?

Well, for one, Social Media posts tend to be a lot shorter and more unfiltered. Which can be a good thing, don't get me wrong, but not necessarily so if you want a more thorough internal audit. Blog posts go through several revisions, as we examine what's going on in our heads, and why, and maybe even how it pertains to the tech space. The final result is a more measured, more self-examined output into the stratosphere. As such, I consider my blogposts of higher quality than a simple vomiting of my initial reactions on Social Media platforms.

That isn't to say I haven't said stupid shit in the past. I absolutely have. But the beauty of time is that as the years go by, I can evolve into less of s shit-talker and more of a shit-thinker. Yikes, that didn't sound better, did it?

Dedication

Also, this is a blog I'm dedicated to.

Dedication is a measure of how consistent you're willing to be in your efforts even without applause or acknowledgement. It's a measure of how much of a shit I give. And I give a lot.

Think about it. In previous years, I could at least justify the effort by the way prospective employers would look at my entire online portfolio. These days, they don't do that anymore (also, I haven't been looking in a while) because even the demos I put out are kids' stuff. I like to think some of it is really well-done, but well-done or not, it's still kids' stuff. Those are just not the things people hire senior developers for, especially not in the age of Artificial Intelligence and Vibe Coding.

So no... there are no longer practical reasons for maintaining this effort. I do these things because I like doing these things.

That's not to say I don't occasionally benefit from a break. And October is my assigned month for that break. Other than this blogpost, there will be no other visible activity. Emphasis on the word visible.

Invisible hands, invisible effort.

You see, as in most software development, the value is largely in the stuff that users don't see. The optimizations. The security fixes. The fine-tuning in the back. That's not to say there's no value in the stuff that's visible, but sometimes I feel like a lot of that is just to placate laypersons who don't know any better.

That's a controversial statement which we should reserve for another day.

To my original point, there is going to be work done. Just not visible work. Mostly prep for year-end, and 2026.

Content

As with last year, I've been making an effort to use less profanities in my writing. Not because I necessarily think the odd (or even frequent) vulgarity is a bad thing, mind you. More because I don't want to develop an over-reliance on anything, not even swearing. I don't want to have to use foul language as a crutch to express myself. It's just poor form. To that end, I am limiting myself to using it only a few times a year in this blog, usually whenever I review a Black Mirror episode. I certainly won't be using them with the same frequency during, say, 2019 to 2022, around the COVID-19 pandemic.

Speaking of which, as the horrors of the past few years fade behind us, I'll hopefully be speaking less about COVID-19 from this year forth. It was a terrible few years, and my emotion-laden rants during that period are evidence of that, but it's time to move on.

You may have noticed that the posts are getting even shorter than they used to. This is not an accident; rather it is the natural evolution of this blog. I wasn't verbally verbose before (at least I hope not) but reading other blogposts and tuning out halfway has made me realize that the lack of attention span on the internet is a very real thing. As a result, I'm going to curb any impulse I may have, to belabor whatever points I may be making.

What else? Yeah I changed the TeochewThunder logo. Talked about that already, didn't I? Hope you like it. If you don't, too fucking bad, baby. It's staying.

Surprise!

This is a tech blog, so I talked a whole lot about tech this year, as always. In particular, I talked about Artificial Intelligence. I suspect that this will be happening with alarming regularity, especially with the frequency with which laypersons feel the need to chime in. Someone's got to show 'em their place! Just kidding... kinda.

As for web tutorials, there's been a nice mix that includes NodeJS and NextJS. and D3. Along with the almost obligatory HTML, CSS, JavaScript sprinkled with the occasional PHP, of course. I started learning NodeJS, as usual, for the heck of it. It increased my understanding of what I was doing with ReactJS and NextJS, so there was value in it.

I've continued to generate images from A.I, but the pendulum has swung back somewhat and once again I've begun to see value in using stock photos.

Next

Highs, lows, hits and misses

No comments:

Post a Comment