Code Like a Girl
You belong here. Your brain just forgot to tell you.
♦
Qualified, Capable, and Still Feeling Like an Imposter. Let’s Fix That
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
♦
Qualified, Capable, and Still Feeling Like an Imposter. Let’s Fix That
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Questions for the table
Where are we now?
Who are we now?
What if you just accept what is happening?
What does it mean to be tenacious , ambitious, to use your natural born skills?
How do you know if it matters?
Does it matter if what you make is good? (How would you know? Who would tell you? On what grounds would this judgement be made?)
What instinct shall you follow?
What are your priorities, and how are they expressed, through what means?
(Why do you write?) Why do you do what you do?
What do you hope for?
Are there things you want to learn?
Are you done here?
What are you carrying?
Are you well enough to continue?
What would it be about instead?
Where does it hurt? When? How?
What gives you relief?
xo, Carrie
PS This is one of my circle poems, but I will also use each question as a prompt for a future journal entry, to get beyond “what’s on your mind?” A few of the questions are yes/no, but even those can work as prompts, urging an explanation, depending on the tone you’re hearing the questioner speak in.
Can you imagine a dinner party where you’d go around the table asking everyone to respond to one of these questions? Which one would you choose to ask? (Today, I’d like to know, What are you carrying?)
“Capacity building” is a phrase that shows up everywhere in the nonprofit sector — in grant guidelines, strategic plans, job postings, and sector conversations. Yet it is often used so broadly that it can lose its meaning. Here at Capacity Canada, we think of capacity building as intentional work to strengthen how an organization functions — not just what it delivers.
This post explains capacity building in plain language, offers concrete examples across human resources, finance, and fundraising, and shows how boards and staff can think about capacity building as an ongoing practice rather than a one-time project.
What Is Capacity Building?Capacity building refers to the work nonprofits do to strengthen their ability to fulfill their mission over time. It focuses on the internal conditions that make effective programs, strong leadership, and sustainable impact possible — including people, systems, structures, and ways of working. In brief, organizational capacity is about the effective combination of:
knowledge, capabilities, resources
to achieve:
goals, strategy, mission.
Capacity building is not necessarily about doing more. It is about being better equipped to do what matters most.
Why Capacity Building Matters for NonprofitsEffective capacity building helps organizations reduce burnout, make better decisions with limited resources, strengthen accountability and governance, and improve resilience during periods of change. When internal capacity is weak, even the strongest mission and most dedicated people can struggle.
Capacity Building Is Not One ThingRather than a single initiative, capacity building is best understood as a set of intentional investments across key areas of organizational life. These areas are often interconnected — progress in one domain can unlock momentum in others.
Capacity Building in Human ResourcesExamples include:
Examples include:
Examples include:
One practical way to approach capacity building is through organizational assessment. At Capacity Canada, our Organizational Assessment and Scorecard explore multiple domains of organizational health — such as governance, leadership, people practices, financial management, strategy, fundraising, operations, and culture.
Rather than producing a simple pass/fail result, this kind of assessment creates a heat map of organizational capacity. The heat map helps boards and staff see:
This approach helps shift conversations away from blame or urgency and toward shared understanding and informed decision-making. It also supports sequencing — recognizing that not everything needs to be fixed at once, and that some capacity investments naturally come before others.
In this way, assessment becomes a tool for learning and prioritization, not judgment.
If You’re on a Nonprofit BoardFrom a governance perspective, capacity building is a stewardship responsibility. Boards play a key role in ensuring that the organization has the internal strength needed to achieve its mission over the long term — including sound oversight, sustainable leadership, and healthy systems. You should be considering how you might invest in capacity building to ensure the long term sustainability of your organization.
If You’re an ED, CEO, or Senior Staff MemberFor nonprofit leaders, capacity building can be a path out of constant urgency. Investing in internal systems, clarity, and shared ways of working helps leaders move from reacting to pressures toward setting priorities and building healthier organizational rhythms.
Common MisconceptionsCapacity building is often misunderstood when it is:
A useful question for boards and staff alike is:
What is currently limiting our ability to do our best work, even when our mission is clear?
Final ThoughtCapacity building is about making thoughtful investments that support people, strengthen systems, and sustain mission over time.
At Capacity Canada, this work is guided by our mission: bringing together the ideas, people, and resources that fuel social innovation. Through organizational assessment, strategic planning, governance development, and practical back-office supports, we help nonprofits understand where they are, identify meaningful opportunities for growth, and build the capacity needed to create lasting impact.
Written By:
♦Scott Williams
Executive in Residence, Capacity Canada
Email: scottwilliams@capacitycanada.ca
♦Ian McDonald
Executive in Residence, Capacity Canada
Email: ian@capacitycanada.ca
The post What is Capacity Building for Nonprofit Organizations? appeared first on Capacity Canada.
It's not just the fact that they've already lied to them, stolen their water contrary to a written agreement and passed a formal motion permitting new water taking from their Township which is already facing lower water elevations and private well dysfunctions. On top of that they have advised that despite more water being pumped from Wilmot for the benefit of other municipalities, Wilmot Township will not have any extra water allocated to themselves with Kitchener getting 51.1 %, Waterloo 24%, Woolwich 14.8% and Cambridge 10.1 %. It is the reason given for Wilmot getting nothing that I find shocking. It is stated in today's K-W Record article by Joe McGuinty that "...virtually no extra water will be allocated to the township as it declined an invitation to participate in a working group." Following that apparent punitive comment, insult is added to injury when the reporter then adds that "Wilmot will get 0.01 % of new water allocation, or enough for one person." It's Wilmot's water and the Region aren't satisfied with taking it without permission but they also have to throw insults at the Township that is carrying the rest of the Region on their backs through this water crisis?
On the front page of the Record in a different article by Luisa D'Amato there is a quote from a news release by the Waterloo Region Home Builders' Association which states "This is a catastrophic failure of mismanagement by the region at the worst possible time,". That's a minor exaggeration as but for the federal government finally cracking down on the massive, infrastructurally unprepared for influx of foreign students, it could have been much worse. Last year Waterloo Region only grew by a miniscule 90 persons compared to thousands and thousands per year prior far outstripping housing, jobs, medical, water and wastewater abilities to handle.
The Region have listed their suggested plans and timelines and I see nothing that will please anyone in them. Literally as I speak right now regional councillors are hearing from local citizens and builders and developers at regional council and I expect that it will get loud and raucous.
Lydia's Law aims to increase accountability in the handling of sexual assault cases and protect survivors. Last week, survivors and advocates attended the Queen's Park debate, and some shared their experiences of Ontario's broken justice system in this video.
"The current justice system is more akin to rape and IPV than people would like to admit. It tramples over our bodies, our freedoms, our rights. It creates illnesses in our brains and also our bodies, all while demanding compliance while stripping us bare. A system which mimics the acts which it has sworn to condemn is not just."
"Lydia's Law is very important to me because it demands accountability. It demands proper oversight. It demands true justice, and it demands that survivors are taken care of - all things that we have gone without."
Stacey
Rape and IPV / Attempted murder survivor
♦
It doesn’t feel like failure. It just feels like another ordinary day. That’s exactly what makes career stagnation so easy to miss.
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
Hildur Knútsdóttir’s 2025 Dead Weight is a stand-alone psychological horror novel (or possibly novella) in which nothing bad happens to the cat or the kitten. The 2026 English translation is by Mary Robinette Kowal.
Reykjavík resident Unnur leads a happy life. Her career is going well, thanks to a well-timed critical illness on a superior’s part. She has a doting boyfriend who will certainly leave his beautiful wife of many years as soon as the moment is right. She even has a plan to dispose of a dead body should she ever need to.
Convenient, given the corpse she is dismembering.
…
Jason Paul describes how he set up a backup BigBlueButton webconferencing server on AWS. Matteo Golin discusses the use of free software in high-powered rocketry. See kwlug.org/node/1470 for additional information, slides and other auxiliary materials. Note that this audio has had silences clipped.
In this episode of The Cordial Catholic, I'm joined by author, speaker, and Catholic convert Shemaiah Gonzalez to share the remarkable story of her journey into the Catholic Church.
From the profound beginnings of her life, through some wild ups and downs and everything in between, Shemaiah's story is a fantastic tale of following Jesus where he leads – through heartbreak and joy – with utter abandonment. And, when Shemaiah begins to grow close to a long-time friend of hers and realizes that he's Catholic, her story takes a thrilling turn!
Shemaiah is a fantastic storyteller and I hope you enjoy her story!
For more from Shemaiah visit her website or follow her on X.
Her book, Undaunted Joy: The Revolutionary Act of Cultivating Joy is available everywhere books are found.
Send your feedback to cordialcatholic@gmail.com.
Sign up for our newsletter for my reflections on episodes, behind-the-scenes content, and exclusive contests.
To watch this and other episodes please visit (and subscribe to!) our YouTube channel.
Please consider financially supporting this show!
For more information visit the Patreon page. All patrons receive access to exclusive content and if you can give $5/mo or more you'll also be entered into monthly draws for fantastic books hand-picked by me.
If you'd like to give a one-time donation to The Cordial Catholic, you can visit the PayPal page.
Thank you to those already supporting the show!
A very special thanks to our Patreon co-producers who make this show possible: Amanda, Elli and Tom, Fr. Larry, Gina, Heather, James, Jorg, Michelle, Noah, Robert, Shelby, Susanne and Victor, and William.
A very special thanks to our Patreon co-producers who make this show possible: Amanda, Elli and Tom, Fr. Larry, Gina, Heather, James, Jorg, Michelle, Noah, Robert, Shelby, Susanne and Victor, and William.
Beyond The BeaconListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
Beyond The BeaconListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
Support the show
Find and follow The Cordial Catholic on social media:
Instagram: @cordialcatholic
Twitter: @cordialcatholic
YouTube: /thecordialcatholic
Facebook: The Cordial Catholic
TikTok: @cordialcatholic
Pricing your home is one of the most important decisions you will make when preparing to sell.
It is also one of the easiest decisions to get wrong.
Many sellers assume that starting high gives them room to negotiate. On the surface, that logic makes sense. If buyers want the home, they can always make an offer, right?
In reality, that is not usually how the market works.
In today’s Waterloo Region real estate market, buyers are informed, selective, and highly aware of value. They are comparing homes in real time across Waterloo, Kitchener, Cambridge, and the surrounding townships. If a property feels overpriced, most buyers do not rush in with a lower offer. They move on.
That is why pricing is not just about what you hope to get. It is about how your home is positioned from day 1.
When a home is priced correctly, it attracts more attention, creates stronger buyer interest, and gives the seller more leverage. When a home is overpriced, it can lose momentum quickly.
Why Sellers Overprice Their HomesOverpricing is rarely done carelessly. Most sellers have a reason for the number they have in mind.
For many homeowners, their property represents years of memories, renovations, financial investment, and pride of ownership. It is natural to feel emotionally connected to the home and to see value in details that may not always translate directly to market value.
There are also outside influences. Online estimates, a neighbour’s sale from 2 years ago, opinions from friends and family, and memories of the peak market can all shape expectations.
The problem is that buyers are not pricing your home based on your emotional connection to it. They are comparing it against what else is available right now.
That distinction matters.
A home may be beautifully maintained, thoughtfully updated, and located in a desirable neighbourhood, but if the price does not align with current buyer expectations, it can still struggle to gain traction.
The Waterloo Region Market Has ChangedThe market today is not the same market we saw a few years ago.
Inventory levels have improved from the extremely tight conditions of the past, and buyers generally have more options to choose from. Homes are also taking longer to sell in many price points and neighbourhoods, which means buyers feel less pressure to act immediately unless the home is clearly priced well.
That shift has changed buyer behaviour.
Today’s buyers are comparing homes more carefully. They are looking at condition, location, updates, layout, lot size, neighbourhood, and overall value. If 2 homes appear similar but one is priced more competitively, that home is usually going to receive more attention.
This is especially important in established Waterloo neighbourhoods such as Colonial Acres, Upper Beechwood, Laurelwood, Eastbridge, Conservation Meadows, and Carriage Crossing, where buyers may be comparing several properties within a similar price range.
When buyers have choices, pricing becomes one of the biggest deciding factors.
Overpricing does not just delay the sale. It changes how buyers perceive the property.
That is where the psychology comes in.
A home that launches too high often starts with weaker activity. Fewer showings, fewer inquiries, and less urgency from buyers. Once that happens, the listing can begin to lose momentum, even if the home itself is a strong property.
You Miss the Strongest Window of ExposureThe first 1 to 2 weeks on the market are usually the most important.
This is when your listing is fresh. Buyers who have been actively watching the market see it right away. Agents send it to their clients. Online traffic is typically at its highest.
If the home is overpriced during that window, serious buyers may dismiss it before ever booking a showing.
That is one of the biggest risks of overpricing. You do not always get a second chance with the most motivated buyers.
By the time a price reduction happens, those buyers may have already purchased another property, shifted their focus, or lost interest.
Fewer Buyers See the ListingMost buyers search within specific price ranges.
If your home is priced above where it should be, it may fall into a different search bracket and miss the buyers who are actually the best fit for the property.
For example, a buyer searching up to $1,000,000 may never see a home listed at $1,049,900, even if that home would have been a strong match for them. That small pricing gap can reduce exposure in a very real way.
Less exposure usually means fewer showings. Fewer showings mean fewer opportunities to generate an offer.
The Listing Starts to Feel StaleOnce a home has been sitting on the market for a while, buyer perception starts to shift.
Instead of thinking, “This could be the one,” buyers start asking, “Why has this not sold?”
That question can create hesitation.
Even if there is nothing wrong with the home, longer days on market can make buyers more cautious. They may wonder if there is an issue with the property, the price, the condition, or the neighbourhood.
This is where overpricing can become expensive. Once a listing feels stale, it often attracts more aggressive offers and heavier negotiation.
A price reduction can help, but it does not always fully reset buyer perception.
By the time the price is adjusted, the listing has already been exposed to the market. Buyers may have seen it once and moved on. Some may come back, but often with a different mindset.
Instead of seeing the home as a fresh opportunity, they may see it as a property that has been sitting. That can affect how they negotiate.
This is when sellers may start to see:
That is why the first price is so important.
The goal is not to “test the market.” The goal is to enter the market with a strategy that gives your home the strongest chance of success from the beginning.
Correct Pricing Creates Better ResultsPricing correctly does not mean underpricing your home. It means positioning it properly based on the current market, recent comparable sales, buyer behaviour, and the specific strengths of the property.
When a home is priced well from day 1, it is more likely to generate attention from qualified buyers. It can also create urgency, especially if buyers recognize that the home offers strong value compared to others in the same range.
Correct pricing can lead to:
Even in a more balanced market, multiple offers can still happen. But they usually happen when the home is priced strategically, marketed properly, and positioned in a way that makes buyers feel confident taking action.
The Long-Term Cost of OverpricingThe biggest misconception about overpricing is that there is no downside.
Many sellers think, “We can always reduce the price later.”
Technically, yes. But the market remembers.
When a home sits for too long, it can lose the early energy that often leads to the strongest results. Buyers become more hesitant. Agents may be less excited to show it. The listing may require more adjustments before the right offer comes together.
In many cases, an overpriced home ends up selling for less than it may have achieved with the right pricing strategy from the start.
That is the part sellers need to understand. Overpricing does not protect your value. It can actually weaken it.
How to Price Your Home Correctly in Waterloo RegionThe right price should be based on strategy, not guesswork.
A strong pricing strategy looks at:
It is also important to look at your specific neighbourhood, not just the broader Waterloo Region market.
A detached home in Colonial Acres will not be priced the same way as a newer home in Carriage Crossing. A property in Laurelwood may attract a different buyer pool than a home in Eastbridge. A large mature lot in Upper Beechwood may require a different strategy than a newer subdivision home with similar square footage.
Local context matters.
That is why accurate pricing requires more than an online estimate. It requires understanding how buyers are actually behaving in your specific segment of the market.
Final ThoughtsThe psychology of overpricing is understandable. Sellers want to maximize their return, and it is natural to want the highest possible price for your home.
But in today’s Waterloo Region real estate market, pricing too high can work against you quickly.
The strongest results usually come from a thoughtful strategy, strong presentation, targeted marketing, and a price that makes sense to buyers from the moment the home hits the market.
If you are thinking about selling, the question is not, “What is the highest number we can try?”
The better question is, “What price will position this home to attract the right buyers and create the strongest result?”
That is where strategy matters.
Your home may be overpriced if it is receiving fewer showings than similar properties, sitting on the market longer than expected, or getting consistent feedback that the price feels high compared to condition, location, or recent sales.
Why do overpriced homes take longer to sell?Overpriced homes often miss the strongest buyer activity in the first 1 to 2 weeks. Buyers may skip the listing if they feel the price does not align with value, which leads to fewer showings and less momentum.
Can I price high and reduce later?You can, but it can weaken your position. Once a listing sits on the market, buyers may become more cautious and negotiate more aggressively. A price reduction does not always recreate the momentum of a strong launch.
Do homes in Waterloo Region still get multiple offers?Yes, multiple offers can still happen when a home is priced strategically, marketed well, and positioned properly against competing listings. Pricing is one of the biggest factors in creating that kind of buyer urgency.
What is the best way to price a home in Waterloo Region?The best approach is to work with a local real estate team that understands how to price your home based on what is happening in the market right now. The Deutschmann Team can help you determine the right pricing strategy by reviewing recent comparable sales, active competing listings, neighbourhood demand, property condition, buyer behaviour, and current market trends.
A strong pricing strategy should reflect what buyers are willing to pay today, not what the market looked like in the past. Contact us for a custom selling strategy.
The post The Psychology of Overpricing Your Home in Waterloo Region appeared first on Kitchener Waterloo Real Estate Agent - The Deutschmann Team.
The post Pride Socials appeared first on Grand River Rocks Climbing Gym.
Share your ideas to help improve the HydroGeoSphere user experience. Your feedback plays an important role in guiding future development— whether it’s new commands, workflow enhancements, or usability improvements that support more efficient integrated hydrologic modelling.
The HydroGeoSphere June 2026 release is now available for download.
This month’s update focuses on improving parallel performance, reducing memory usage, enhancing error checking, and expanding visualization and output options. Together, these updates improve model efficiency, simplify debugging, and provide new ways to export and visualize simulation results in HydroGeoSphere (HGS).
New boundary condition output command
New command csv output generates nodal flux output as a CSV file at each output time.
These CSV outputs can be readily parsed and visualized in tools such as ParaView.
New Tecplot export command
New command chosen faces to tecplot exports the current face selection to a Tecplot ASCII file.
This simplifies visualization and debugging of selected face sets.
Improved unsaturated table error checking
Enhanced error and bounds checking when reading unsaturated tables for the porous medium, dual continuum, and discrete fracture domains.
This provides more robust validation of input data and helps identify issues earlier in the model setup process.
Improved performance and memory efficiency
Refactored hgs2vtu to prevent identical warning messages from repeatedly filling the log file. Warnings are now reported once on first occurrence and then suppressed.
Refactored grok and HGS parallelization to improve parallel efficiency and reduce unnecessary memory usage.
Refactored preconditioner construction to improve memory efficiency and strengthen error checking.
Fix for boundary condition diagnostic output
Resolved a formatting issue in the diagnostic output generated by the boundary condition commands bound time-file table and bound time-file table to surface elevation offset.
This ensures clearer and more consistent reporting when using these boundary condition options.
Fix for interpolated observation points
Corrected a bug in the interpolated observation point commands that could result in values being interpolated at an incorrect z-coordinate.
This improves the accuracy of interpolated observation point outputs.
You can find details about these new features in the HydroGeoSphere Reference Manual. And as always, we are committed to the continued improvement of the user experience. Do you have suggestions for new commands or improvements to the user experience? Send your ideas to support@aquanty.com!
Coreutils for Windows: Installer & Packaging
Rust 2.2k Updated Jun 3
One of the most common phrases I hear from early-career engineers at the end of meetings is
“No questions.”
It sounds harmless. Polite, even.
But in many situations, it is a missed opportunity.
The problem isn’t that you don’t have questions. The problem is that you’re treating questions as a tool for clearing confusion rather than a tool for creating value.
As engineers grow in their careers, the quality of their questions often becomes a stronger differentiator than the quality of their answers.
Well, I know, “No Questions” Feels SafeThere are several reasons people default to it:
On the surface, these seem reasonable.
But experienced engineers rarely use meetings only to receive information. They use meetings to improve decisions.
That mindset changes everything.
The Real Purpose of QuestionsMany engineers think questions exist to fill knowledge gaps.
Senior engineers often use questions to expose decision gaps.
Notice the difference.
Junior mindset“I understand the requirement.”Senior mindset
“What could go wrong with this requirement?”
The second approach frequently produces more value.
Three Types of Questions That Matter1. Clarifying QuestionsThese help you understand.
Example:
“When the customer says real-time updates, what latency target are we aiming for?”
These are useful, but they’re only the starting point.
2. Assumption-Testing QuestionsThese uncover hidden risks.
Example:
“We’re assuming all users will be online during synchronization. What happens if they’re offline for several days?”
This type of question often prevents future production incidents.
3. Decision-Improving QuestionsThese help the entire team.
Example:
“If both approaches satisfy the requirement, what factor is driving the final choice — cost, timeline, or maintainability?”
Now you’re contributing to decision quality rather than merely consuming information.
A Better Meeting HabitInstead of asking yourself:
“Do I have any questions?”
Ask:
“Is there any uncertainty, assumption, trade-off, or risk that hasn’t been discussed? ”
This subtle shift dramatically improves the quality of your participation.
Many valuable questions emerge only when you think about the system rather than your own understanding.
The Cost of Saying NothingImagine a meeting discussing a new feature rollout.
Everyone appears aligned.
You have no questions because the plan seems straightforward.
Two weeks later:
Often, these failures were visible during the meeting.
Nobody asked the question.
The engineer who asks thoughtful questions isn’t slowing the team down.
They’re reducing future rework.
Questions Create VisibilityEarly-career engineers often believe visibility comes from speaking more.
In reality, visibility comes from improving outcomes.
Managers remember engineers who consistently ask questions like:
These questions demonstrate ownership, systems thinking, and judgment.
Three traits that organizations reward.
When “No Questions” Is Actually FineNot every meeting requires a question.
Forcing questions can be just as unhelpful as asking none.
If:
Then silence is perfectly acceptable.
The goal is not to ask more questions.
The goal is to ask better questions.
First Principle ThinkingQuestions are not evidence that you don’t understand. They’re evidence that you’re thinking beyond your own understanding.
The fastest way to grow from an engineer who receives decisions to an engineer who shapes decisions is to learn how to ask questions that improve the outcome.
♦Why Junior Engineers Should Never Say “No Questions” at the End of a Meeting was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
This is the land where major cleanup issues are never resolved, they simply disappear and die. From DNAPLS to Stroh Drain, Optimization to refusal to hydraulically contain all aquifers on the Lanxess site to other industrial sources present in Elmira and ignored for decades to the gross coverup for decades of the Varnicolor Chemical site; it's been one series of lies and deceptions after another.
Another huge issue is why Varnicolor a recycler of used solvents supposedly never had any chlorobenzene on their site. Who are they kidding? Chlorobenzene is a major solvent used both as an intermediary in many chemical reactions as well as a primary solvent involved with paints and dyes yet we are to believe that absolutely zero was found in and under the soils of Varnicolor's Union St. site.
Other unanswered questions include why the groundwater cleanup at Motiveair on First St. was kept hidden from the public as well as from CPAC and UPAC. Yes the cleanup was caused by Varnicolor's negligence and poor solvent handling but clearly the MECP and others did not want the public or myself to find out about that. There are also a number of unanswered questions to this day about Varnicolor's property on Union St. as well as the one (called TriUnion years agio) located on Howard Ave. Finally where did the only recently admitted free phase DNAPL located by the Howard St. Water Tower and OW57-32R come from? Who was the source: Varnicolor, Borg Textiles, Uniroyal Chemical?
These unanswered questions are why Woolwich Township, Lanxess, the MECP and others have frozen me out as much as possible from cleanup participation and discussions. Packs of liars congregate together.
P.S. Tell us about other known spills in and around Elmira, Ontario over the decades and not just the garages and service stations.
On the first Tuesday of every month, we’ll announce a new Fearless Female, including a video interview of them sharing their business story. Want to be featured as a Fearless Female?
Contact Memberships for more details. The Fearless Female Program would not be possible without our Title Sponsor, Scotiabank.
To learn a little more about the Scotiabank Women Initiative, and why they’ve chosen to sponsor this program, see the video below.
♦
The Fearless Female we’re featuring for the month of June is Amy Denstedt, Founder, Tailored Transitions.
Amy Denstedt is the founder of Tailored Transitions, a senior move management company serving Waterloo Region and surrounding communities. With over 20 years of experience in customer service and a background in human resources, Amy brings a thoughtful, people-first approach to helping seniors and their families navigate one of life’s most emotional transitions.
Through Tailored Transitions, Amy provides full-service support—including planning, packing, moving coordination, and settling in—ensuring each client feels respected, supported, and understood throughout the process. Her work goes beyond logistics; she acts as a steady, compassionate presence for families facing complex and often overwhelming decisions.
Amy is deeply committed to her community and has built strong relationships with local businesses, realtors, and senior living providers to better support her clients. Known for her warmth, attention to detail, and ability to bring calm to challenging situations, she is passionate about creating a more supportive and dignified moving experience for seniors.
Outside of her work, Amy enjoys spending time with her family, relaxing outdoors, and unwinding with a good book.
To learn more about Amy’s journey as a Fearless Female, watch the interview below (or read the written format).
Tell us more about your company and your role in it
So, we support seniors that are moving from their long-term homes into retirement residence or long-term care residences. We like to help them with full service, so we do the initial consultation, we do the planning, packing, any downsizing or decluttering. We organize movers and then we help the family set up their new retirement residence at the end so that when the senior moves in everything is set up and ready to go.
What inspired you to start this business?
I was lucky I had six grandparents that most of them lived well into their 90s so we moved them quite a few times, so I did have some experience with that, with helping to facilitate their moves into their new retirement residences so that was part of it.
I’ve been in the Waterloo region for a long time, so I knew that there, we have some well-established neighborhoods in Waterloo Region. People live in their homes for a long time in in Waterloo Region but we’re also really lucky to have over 50 retirement and long-term care residences in the community so I knew that there was a gap from people that had been in their homes for a long time and we’re looking to transition into retirement care so there was an opportunity there and from my experience with my family and trying to help them move I knew that there was an opportunity to help people through that transition and support them with that, so I thought I would take that on and I’ve always had a background in customer service too and customer support so for me that helped lead into it is I like to help people through it and it’s especially when they’re dealing with something that’s a little bit more challenging you have to think outside of the box that sort of fit what I like to do to start with.
Tell us more about your educational background
So, education wise I had a background in human resources. I had a certificate from Conestoga College in human resources and then when I was working I have always been in customer service so I have 20 plus years of customer service experience in different organizations and different roles but I’ve always been forward-facing to the customer it was always really important to me to be sometimes even the middleman to support people through whatever it is that they were looking for whatever challenges they had I always like to do that I always like to help people so it was a sort of natural progression from the customer service side and customer support to just move into continuing to support people and be there when they need help.
What are some of the accomplishments of your career so far?
Highlights are always when I’m able to help somebody right so any of the clients that I’ve moved to date that’s always that always becomes a highlight reel for me is being able to support my clients.
When you have families that come back and you can see how much they appreciate the support that we’re able to provide and how much we can help them that that always is a highlight reel for me in the long run.
Some other highlights I think are just the emotional side of it it’s being able to take that stress away for other people and be able to help them through their journey and through their transition because it’s moving is a lot it’s always a lot to manage I mean it’s a lot for us but when you’re a senior and you’ve got you know you might have mobility challenges you’re not sure what next steps are, you don’t know how to arrange necessarily all the components of the moving whether it’s the movers to begin with the coordinating of the retirement residents at the other side it can be overwhelming.
I find it very rewarding to be able to help people with that and to help families and just see that sort of that stress melt away that they know that they can entrust me to take care of those pieces and that becomes you know a highlight for me to and the business to work through that with them.
What are some of the challenges that you have faced so far?
Some of the challenges are probably sheer logistics like I mentioned moving is always you know different there’s different components there’s different coordination of things that you have to take care of so that can be a challenge. I mean just trying to run a business as a solopreneur is also difficult right you have to manage when you’re out taking care of things for clients but then you’ve also got things that you need to be doing at your desk and at the office and so trying to find that balance is always challenging. Obviously too as being a solopreneur but then having a family as well is can be challenging, so again trying to find the balance and making sure that you’re making time for your family time for yourself is really important and try to make sure that I’m cutting that time out and making sure that I’m making space for that is important just for my own mental health and well-being as well so I try to focus on that as much as I can.
If you could go back in time is there anything you’d do differently?
I think maybe the only thing that I would do differently currently was that I maybe would have started a little bit sooner you know I had the idea in the back of my mind for a while and waited for the opportunity to sort of present itself and I maybe would have started a little bit sooner to get at it, but you know I like to do things methodically so it was important to me to make sure that I had all my ducks lined up before I you know took the business on and got going with it and then it was really important to me that all the pieces were in place before I presented the business to my clients and to the outside world so that was important to me.
I think maybe I would have started a little bit sooner or had more trust in myself to get going which is important obviously I went and had a conversation with friends and family and you know put the idea out there and wanted to get some other you know some feedback on how other people thought that it would go but I think if I had put a little bit more trust in myself from the get-go which I think we’re all guilty of sometimes right but I think if I had done that I maybe would have got started a little bit more.
What methods and resources have you used to improve your career?
I try to work on the networking component of it, that’s huge for myself and for my business a lot of my business comes from referrals and networking and events like that, so I try to focus on that.
I also try to work on professional development always being curious always trying to learn more I mean it’s that age-old adage where it’s always learn something new every day right and when I’m out and working with my clients and things like that there’s always something that maybe triggers and I think I’m going to go back and look into that find out what that means so I think it’s you know it keeps you young and keeps you moving if you’re always curious and always reaching out to learn more so that’s important to me too and making connections with the right people right and learning how to build your team or your networking or just your crew behind you that people that you know you can depend on and count on or just go to if you’ve got questions especially as a new business and a new business owner it’s important for me to have those people in place that I can trust and that I can go to for questions to support my business as it grows.
How do you personally define success?
For me success is making sure that clients are happy and feeling less stress and feeling connected with their new space. Success for me is making sure that families are still connected right because there can be a lot of stress and a lot of overwhelm and family dynamics are tough right – it’s hard when you’re taking on a big project like moving especially for someone who’s been in their home for a long time it could be the family home there’s a lot of dynamics involved in that so success for me is coming out at the other side where the client is in their new suite and they’re feeling comfortable and they’re relaxed and they’re happy and you see that family unit sort of come back together and there’s not as much stress as there was before and they’re feeling relieved that things are taken care of and that they’re feeling good, so for me that’s a big part of the success.
Alternatively as well, success for me is referrals you know getting people reaching out and saying that they heard from somebody else about my business and they’re interested to learn more and bringing opportunities to me to support people so for me that’s a way to determine success as well because if people are reaching out and you are getting referrals then I think you’re doing something right and that’s important.
Tell us more about your clientele
Every client is different and every scenario is different, every story is different, so part of that initial consultation is to get to know the family get to know the client you know learn all the ins and outs of what they’re dealing with what the circumstances are because you don’t want to just go charging in and take a hold of everything and because that can add to the chaos that may be already there so it’s important to get in and get to know my clients and understand what their goals are what their timelines are what they’re working towards right so that we can figure out how best to help them through the situation and help them with their move, so for me that’s really important and for like I said for every family it’s different so you have to sort of reset after each one so that when you’re going in you don’t have these expectations and you don’t have these assumed biases because you’ve done another project before that you can’t assume you know it’s going to be the same.
But, when you’re actually working when I’m actually working with clients I really try to pay attention to how they’re handling things what they’re feeling like checking in with them on a regular basis right and providing constant feedback and going back and forth with them because they want to be involved in the process and especially if they’ve been in their homes for a long time they have a lot of questions they want to make sure that their belongings are being handled appropriately and taken care of so I would like to include them in the process as much as possible, so having those regular check-ins and just you know keeping them updated and letting them know how things are going that’s important to me I mean that’s and that’s just good customer service and customer support is making sure that you’re providing that feedback and giving them you know updates on how things are going that helps.
People only start to get caught up in themselves and caught up in questions and concerns when they don’t know what’s going on right and they don’t and that’s just that’s human nature that’s how we are that’s we get you know worried and upset when we can’t see what’s coming down the tunnel right so but if you can try to reduce that as much as possible then that helps to make them feel more comfortable and make the whole process smoother.
What are some of the core values that you have integrated into your business?
Compassion and respect, number 1, I mean in both of those cases they play huge roles in my business right. I mentioned before people are you know worried about what’s coming in the future they’re worried about their belongings they want to make sure everything’s taken care of there’s lots of family dynamics going on so I think being compassionate about what people are going through, what changes are coming for them and how they’re managing that is key. Making sure that you’re compassionate about understanding those components is important and then respect is huge right and again it comes back to human nature and just who we are as people everybody wants to be respected you know and my clients don’t want to be treated like children they want to be treated with the respect that they deserve and so if you go in and you treat people with respect and show them that you’re you care and you value their time and their belongings and everything else then I think everything just runs more smoothly and it builds that trust right it builds trust and that consideration that they want to have with you that you know develops the relationship for both sides.
What methods do you use to grow your team and recruit talent?
Well we’re a small team right now a team of one on most days, but yeah I think again it comes back to working with people that have the same values and morals right working with bringing on team members to support tailored transitions that you know understand respect and understand compassion, and really like what they do really like being involved in what we’re doing which is supporting people right and if they have that already in their background then that certainly helps right.
But, I think you have to have those core values of respect and compassion and wanting to support people because that’s really what we’re doing all the time is helping other people right and you have to sort of have that in your bones if you don’t if you’re not empathetic or you know can’t get past some things that might come up then that’s going to be a challenge you need to be willing to work with people and understand how they’re processing things and processing the transition that they’re going through.
Do you have a moving team?
So I bring in contracted team packers to help my team so they come in and we do all the packing and things but then I also contract movers and they’re contracted for me so that’s really important because they’re a representation of me and of the business right so it’s important that they have the same sort of guidelines because they’re coming into people’s homes and they’re representing the business and myself so it’s important that you know we build that relationship as well so I try to build that relationship with the movers that I use so that they’re comfortable, I’m comfortable, everybody’s comfortable with working together and making sure that the move goes smoothly.
What advantages have you seen establishing your business in Waterloo Region?
One of the advantages is that I’m local so I’ve been here for a long time so I know the area I know the community – it’s familiar for me so that’s I mean that’s a benefit for myself and for my clients is because I know the area well so I can speak to different locations, I can speak to different retirement homes, I’m building relationships with retirement homes and long-term care homes as well so I can speak to that with my clients and give them that direction.
I had a client that was moving from Elmira to Waterloo they were concerned about keeping their car and driving with roundabouts and we had a conversation about whether that was a smart idea but I because I knew where they were going and because I used to live on that side of town I knew exactly which roundabout they were talking about whether or not that was a smart way to go so it helps build again back to trust it builds that relationship with a client because if you’re familiar with your surroundings then you know they trust that you know what you’re talking about and the nice thing about Waterloo Region is it’s while we’re growing, it still has that small community feel right everybody’s really closely knit I find and the networking opportunities around Waterloo Region are huge because everybody seems to know everybody else and if you don’t you’re somehow connected and things like that so I think that’s great it’s nice to be working in a large region, but at the same time have it feel like a small community.
What inspires you?
I think I’m inspired by the opportunity to help people it’s something different every day. I just had a conversation with somebody about that today actually that you know my work is something different every day it’s there’s always something new going on and so it’s exciting because I wake up and there’s something different than what was happening yesterday right so even if I’m still working on the same project with a client it’s going to be a different day right there’s going to be something else going on that day so it’s exciting that way I’m inspired because my business provides me an opportunity that it might be something I can hand down to my kids in the future so that keeps me motivated you know it allows me to include them in the conversation to let them know they can see how I’m working they can see how the business is running I include them in those conversations you know as they grow there will be an opportunity that maybe they can help me with different parts of the business as well so that keeps me motivated and inspired to keep progressing and keep things moving is the opportunity to build the business and to potentially bring them on if they want to do that.
So hopefully we’ll see how that goes but being able to include my family in it is important to me as well.
What advice would you give to other female professionals and entrepreneurs?
For other women that are looking at you know entrepreneurship or starting some sort of business on their on their own or getting out there it’s you know I think it’s important to do the research you know do the market research is there a demand for the business, do you see a need that exists out there I think that’s important is to make sure that you’ve as a woman as a female we have a lot on the go between you know raising families and taking care of ourselves and taking care of our homes and you know just trying to get through life on the day-to-day you don’t want to waste your efforts right, so I think it’s important to make sure that you’ve that you’re doing your research and you’re putting your all your efforts in to make sure that it’s a viable opportunity.
I think making sure that you have a support system in place that you have those individuals that you can go to that you trust that you can ask questions of whether that be your network, whether it be family, whether it be friends, whether it’s a complete stranger but somebody that happens to show an interest then I think that’s important as well but you know having that that network of support around you is important especially as you’re working through the stages of starting your own business because there’s a lot, it’s a lot to do and when you’re trying to manage all things at all times it can be a lot so I think it’s important to have those people with you but yeah it’s exciting right and then the other thing is I think you know make sure to share your wins and put yourself out there because you never know who else is going to be able to want be able to support your business or want to support you and the business.
What are some of your future goals?
Obviously to continue to expand the business and bring on more clients that’s always the goal it’s you know big audacious goals are fun bringing on a team I’d love to be able to hire locally and you know support stay in in the region and but bring on teams that are that are available to help and potentially have you know more than one team on the road would be amazing you know growth is what I think most people want is to be able to expand, but also be make it manageable right I also want to make sure that I still have be able to deliver the service that we that our clients expect and that they deserve right so you know growth is great but if it gets out of hand and then the quality slips that’s not great so that’s important to me is making sure that we’re still delivering the best customer service that we can for our clients and that people are still you know appreciative and in the long run of the services that we’re providing so that’s important. I would love to expand the business, bring on the family and see where things go from there.
Where can viewers find out more about you?
They can visit my website at TailoredTransitions.com. They can also check us out on social media Facebook and Instagram.
The post Fearless Female (June): Amy Denstedt appeared first on Greater KW Chamber of Commerce.
Nimr, O. A., Marttila, H., Batelaan, O., Partington, D., & Ala-Aho, P. (2026). How Does Rewetting Propagate Through Restored Peatlands? An Integrated Surface–subsurface Modelling Analysis of Water–table Dynamics. Elsevier BV. doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.6265631
CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE.
“To address these knowledge gaps, we developed and calibrated fully integrated, physically based surface subsurface hydrological models of a boreal fen-type peatland, explicitly representing both drained and restored states, using HydroGeoSphere.”— Nimr, O. et al., 2026 ♦
Fig. 2. Three-dimensional HydroGeoSphere model structure for the Matorova catchment. (a) Two-dimensional computational mesh of the model domain showing catchment stream outlets and the monitoring network; wells installed pre-restoration are labeled in blue, and wells installed post-restoration are labeled in black. (b) model stratigraphy shown as a vertically stacked three-dimensional conceptualization: the assembled 3D catchment domain at the base, overlain by bottom (i), middle (ii), and upper (iii) till layers, and capped by layer (iv), which combines three vertical peat sublayers into a single peat unit. (c) Cross-section A–B through the model domain for both drained and restored setups, showing the discretized stratigraphy and assigned material defintions.
We’re pleased to highlight this publication, which investigates how peatland restoration alters groundwater table dynamics across drained boreal peatlands using fully integrated hydrologic modelling. This study leverages HydroGeoSphere (HGS) to simulate coupled surface–subsurface flow processes and evaluate spatial patterns of groundwater response following ditch blocking and rewetting interventions, addressing long-standing challenges in predicting restoration outcomes across heterogeneous peatland landscapes.
Peatland restoration assessments often rely on localized monitoring wells or simplified hydrologic indicators that cannot fully capture catchment-scale groundwater responses. While these approaches provide useful point-scale insights, they frequently overlook the spatial variability of restoration impacts controlled by peat thickness, geomorphology, and subsurface stratigraphy. By applying a three-dimensional HydroGeoSphere model forced with daily climatic inputs— including rainfall, snowmelt, and evapotranspiration— this research provides a physically consistent framework for simulating groundwater table evolution across both drained and restored peatland configurations.
The study applied the HGS model to the Matorovasuo peatland catchment using calibrated simulations constrained by groundwater observations from multiple monitoring wells and eddy covariance measurements of evapotranspiration. Results showed that restoration shifted catchment hydrology from an efficient drainage-dominated system toward a retention-dominated regime, producing spatially variable rises in groundwater table depth that depended strongly on peat thickness, slope, and distance from the peat–mineral interface. Simulated groundwater responses increased toward peatland interiors and stabilized beyond approximately 150 m from peat margins, highlighting the importance of geomorphological controls on restoration effectiveness.
“Climatic forcing was applied at a daily time step, and spatially distributed outputs for all relevant HydroGeoSphere flow variables, primarily including groundwater elevation, water-table depth, and surface saturation, were generated at daily intervals. Initial conditions for these simulations were obtained from approximately two-year spin-up runs (January 2021 to October 2022), each initialized from steady-state conditions.”— Nimr, O. et al., 2026
Key findings demonstrated that restoration-induced groundwater recovery is highly heterogeneous across peatland landscapes and cannot be reliably inferred from local measurements alone. Instead, spatially distributed simulations revealed systematic relationships between groundwater table rise and peatland structural properties, providing new insight into how restoration strategies influence hydrologic functioning at the catchment scale.
HydroGeoSphere proved essential in enabling this work due to its ability to simulate fully integrated groundwater–surface water interactions within a three-dimensional stratified peatland system while incorporating climate-driven boundary conditions and spatially distributed evapotranspiration processes. This capability allowed the researchers to evaluate restoration impacts across multiple land-cover types and hydrologic zones within a single physically based modelling framework .
This research provides critical insights for peatland restoration planning and climate mitigation strategies, demonstrating that advanced modelling approaches like HydroGeoSphere can improve predictions of groundwater recovery following rewetting interventions. By linking restoration outcomes to peatland geomorphology and hydrologic structure, the study supports more effective management of carbon-rich peatland ecosystems under changing environmental conditions.
Abstract:
Peatland restoration, through drainage suppression, is widely implemented to recover ecological function, yet the driving hydrological mechanisms controlling groundwater responses across spatial and temporal scales remain poorly quantified, limiting defensible restoration plans. Here, we use calibrated, fully integrated 3D physics-based modeling to explicitly resolve how rewetting interventions, including ditch infilling and damming, restructure catchment-scale groundwater dynamics across a boreal fen. Simulated restoration actions elevated water tables by ~23 cm, with comparable gains in nominally undisturbed areas, demonstrating far-field impacts of drainage legacy and the re-establishment of lateral hydrological connectivity as a restoration outcome. Variogram analysis revealed that hundreds of meters of previously fragmented, drainage-controlled peatlands were transformed into hydraulically connected systems, enhancing spatial correlation and damping extreme drawdowns. Additionally, findings revealed that lateral propagation of water table recovery depended on restoration structure type and its hydraulic properties, with low-permeability peat infillings producing strong local responses with steep exponential decay (~70% within ~40 m), whereas dams generated broader plateauing effects (~100 m radius). Geomorphic context further modulated outcomes, with water table recovery following exponential growth away from peat–mineral margins, and intermediate-thickness peatlands defining a tipping-point regime that maximizes recovery magnitude and variability. Seasonal dynamics amplified restoration efficiency, with wet periods nearly doubling water-table rise relative to dry winters, yet elevated efficiency persisted during dry intervals between spring melts and autumn rains. Collectively, these findings reveal how restoration effects propagate laterally, interact with seasonal hydroclimatic forcing, and are shaped by geomorphic context, providing a transferable, mechanistic framework for prioritizing and designing restoration plans that maximize peatland hydrological recovery.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE.
C. J. Cherryh’s 1989 Rimrunners is the fifth stand-alone novel in the Company Wars sequence, which takes place in Cherryh’s Alliance/Union science fiction universe.
Elizabeth ‘Bet’ Yeager spends her days in the futile hope that some ship putting in at backwater Thule Station will need crew. Ships are rare and luck scarcer.
Thule was not an ideal place to leave her previous employer. Bet had no choice. Bet is something of a war criminal.
…
♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.♦
Read full story for latest details.The title of one of the water articles in last Saturday's K-W Record is "Water crisis costing major dollars ". Both developers and municipalities allegedly are losing money with delays from the water crisis. Frankly I may feel badly for the construction workers who may or may not be currently losing employment but I'm less sure of feeling badly for the municipalities. They and their politicians are and always have been part of the problem. Also I thought our brain trusts had finally admitted that growth does not pay for itself and never has. That growth is subsidized year after year by higher taxes from long suffering residents .
Parts of Waterloo Region can still build and develop as usual such as most of Cambridge , North Dumphries, Baden and New Hamburg. Also developments and buildings that do not require additional water demand are exempt from the current hold on development. Supposedly municipalities are losing out on Development Charges (DCs) as they are being greatly delayed. Again my understanding is that Development Charges may offset the costs of extending sewers or water lines etc. but that they do not cover 100% of the costs of growth which eventually include greater snow plowing, fire service and police service not to mention health care, hospitals etc. All in all I don't feel that citizens are remotely getting the full and honest versions of the negative sides of growth which of course also include environmental costs. Just ask residents of beautiful neighbourhoods whose vacant lots and wooded areas are under constant pressure from developers nibbling at the edges or worse.
My advice to the Region of Waterloo is stay the course, get your water infrastructure improved and don't be harassed into premature lessening of the current development restrictions until everybody's water supply is stabilized and improved.
♦
Being a parent is both a pure blessing and, sometimes, a complete nightmare — especially when you take your little one to the store.
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
♦
The Glow-Up Guide to an AI-Era Career, Jobs You Should Search for
Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »
Here are the best stories from Code Like a Girl for May. They have been selected from everything we’ve published on Medium and Substack.
We use each platform differently.
Medium is where we publish more widely.
Substack is where we concentrate our strongest work. Only three stories a week, thoughtfully chosen and actively amplified.
Most of our Substack stories come from writers who don’t publish on Medium, so there’s very little overlap between the two.
If you’re only reading us here, you’re missing part of it.
Subscribe to Code Like A Girl on Substack.
From Our Substack CommunityThe Girlbossification of AI Has a Friendly-Fire Problemby AI Meets Girlboss
Reese Witherspoon gets pile-oned for saying women should learn AI. A designer loses subscribers for experimenting with it in her own work. A Claude Code learning session runs 27 people, three women. The discourse says adopt AI or get left behind. The comment section says resist. Both are wrong. The obstacle isn’t only the tech industry. It’s closer than that.
Taste Is Not a “New” Core Skillby Sarah Gibbons and Kate Moran
Tech bros didn’t discover taste. They discovered that AI made execution cheap. Sarah Gibbons and Kate Moran show why judgment, context, articulation, and pattern literacy have always been core skills. And why the people who’ve been forced to justify their work for years may be the ones best equipped for what comes next.
Facebook Fired Me for a Holiday I Didn’t Take.by Louise Deason
Louise Deason was fired from Facebook for taking a holiday she never took. The access logs, travel records, and performance reviews could have proved it in minutes. Nobody checked. This is a sharp, necessary story about how tech firings really work, and why the official reason is often just the cover story.
From Our Medium CommunityThe Lies Engineers Tell PMsby Tiffany Bayton
“Shouldn’t be too bad” is not an estimate. It’s an engineer silently watching a dependency graph appear behind their eyes. Tiffany Bayton captures the hidden complexity inside every “small” product request. And why the most useful answer in tech is sometimes: let me investigate first.
I Thought Dark Mode Was Just a Toggle. It Turned Into a Full-System Refactorby Marsha Teo
Marsha Teo thought dark mode would be a toggle. It turned into a full-system refactor. Hardcoded colors, typography defaults, code highlighting, SVGs, images, and rendering timing all had opinions. A smart, practical reminder that “small” UI features are only small until they touch the whole system.
Leading Leaders? Shift Your 1:1s from Status to Strategyby Sivan Hermon
A 1:1 with a leader shouldn’t be a status meeting in disguise. Sivan Hermon shows how to use that time to talk about feedback, people, priorities, and the systems quietly shaping the team. It’s a smart, practical template for turning manager 1:1s into a place where leadership actually gets sharper.
♦Best of Code Like A Girl: May 2026 was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
♦
KITCHENER - A rough day at the office for the Kitchener Panthers.
Seven different Hamilton batters had home runs, as the Cardinals took down Kitchener 15-6 at Jack Couch Park Sunday afternoon.
While the offence was buzzing for the Cards, the Panthers had a tough time solving starter Freisis Adames.
Adames struck out 10 in 5.1 innings of work. He gave up three runs on three hits and issued two walks for the win.
Ben Hewitt got the nod for Kitchener, giving up five runs on five hits in three innings.
Rafael Gross continued to swing a hot bat. He went two-for-five with a home run, his third in four games.
Yosuke Fujie also hit his first home run of the season in the loss.
Kitchener will get a chance for revenge on Thursday, as Hamilton heads back to the Jack at 7:05 p.m.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW and #PackTheJack!
BOXSCORESometimes, when you are running Wireguard VPN, you encounter issues on your laptop/desktop, where loading certain websites that are on another server on the same private VPN network.
The symptoms are very slow loading, because of there are lots of errors and retries.
Sometimes, the site would not load at all.
But when you try from an Android phone, everything loads normally.
That points to an MTU issue.
Arthur C. Clarke’s 1955 Earthlight is a tale of interplanetary espionage.
What dragged Bertram Sadler to the Moon on the eve of his wedding anniversary was officially an audit of certain lunar facilities. The hidden official purpose? Counter-espionage.
♦
GUELPH - The heart of the Kitchener Panthers order combined for 10 of the team's 16 hits, en route to a 10-8 win over the Guelph Royals Saturday afternoon at Hastings Stadium.
It was a back-and-forth game early, as Guelph climbed out of a 3-0 hole.
Kitchener nabbed six runs in the sixth inning, batting around the order in the process.
But that seven-run lead nearly evaporated, as Guelph clawed back with five runs and even had the tying run at the plate in the ninth.
Yosvani Penalver had four hits, while Petey Kiefer and Malik Williams had three hits.
Yunior Ibarra drove in three runs as part of the win.
Raffi Gross and Charlie Towers both had triples in the large ballpark.
Samuel Quintana pitched four innings in the start, just 36 hours after pitching in a loss against London. He gave up three runs on four hits and struck out three.
Guelph's Alfred Vega gave up four runs on nine hits in 5.1 innings, striking out five and walking five in the start.
Kitchener improves to 5-3 on the season, while Guelph falls to 0-5.
The Panthers are home to Hamilton Sunday afternoon at 2:05 p.m.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOWand #PackTheJack! Wear your Kitchener Rangers jersey to get FREE ADMISSION to the game, and take in some baseball before walking across the parking lot to watch the Rangers in the Memorial Cup final on the big screen at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium!
BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY PT 1 GAME REPLAY PT 2
You almost have to think that when everybody are unhappy with the Region's water decisions that maybe they really are all trying to get the boot this fall. Don't they know that they can simply say "I've had enough of the good times and am uninterested in the bad times so goodbye. "?
Firstly they are about to take 15 litres per second more water from Wilmot wells. This item should not even be on the table until AFTER they have committed to drilling old wells deeper or new wells for Wilmot residents whose wells are no longer reliably providing water. This "commitment" does not mean either verbally or in writing because they are proven liars and deceivers. This "commitment" means the cheque or cash is in the hands of the residents desperately needing them for immediate construction of new or deeper wells.
How clear has it become that the developers and builders are the tail wagging the dog? Man we've recently seen Woolwich Township cut and run from a single wealthy individual whose wants, not needs, for an enclosed, full size, full amenities ice rink on his property buffaloed them. Now over and over again we publicly see developers and builders telling the Region what to do and the difference between us and them is that the Region says O.K. to them.
Basically the developers and builders have given the Region of Waterloo a deadline and it is June 3/26. That is this coming Wednesday and presumably will occur at the regional council meeting. That is when those in charge will find out if their specific projects have been allocated enough water to go ahead and start building, essentially after the cities give them the building permits and or other required documentation. Make no doubt any failure by the Region to do so this Wednesday will likely result in legal action by those far more entitled than you or I to continue making millions of dollars building homes, apartments, townhouses etc. for the Region's no longer grossly expanding population. Federal government policies finally stopping mass unneeded immigration have been enacted. That said allegedly there were only 90 new residents in Waterloo Region last year which seems unbelievable in the opposite direction of what we've had for the last twenty to fourty years.
Politicians as well as those in charge may have gone too far this time as many of us have lost all trust in those who run the Region of Waterloo. Today's K-W Record have several water articles keeping us informed as to the latest nonsense going on.
I’ll be straight with you -I’ve spent an embarrassing amount of time inside AI builders this year. Not just clicking around for demos. Actually trying to take things to production. And that’s where every comparison I read online failed me, because they all stopped at the fun part.
Nobody talks about what happens six weeks later.
So I did it myself. I put Replit, Lovable, and 8080.ai through the full arc — from weekend prototype to something that could actually survive real users, real traffic, and real errors. Here’s what I found.
The Test Nobody RunsMost comparisons show you a landing page built in 30 seconds. That’s easy. What I actually needed to know was:
Those are the real questions. So that’s what I tested.
💜 Lovable — Beautiful. Until It’s Not.Lovable genuinely impressed me in the first hour. The React code it generates is clean, the TypeScript is well-typed, and the UI looks professional enough to start taking payments. I built a SaaS landing page with pricing tiers, testimonials, and a sign-up flow in under 30 minutes.
Then it asked me to “connect Supabase.”
That’s where things got complicated for me. Lovable’s entire backend model is Supabase-dependent. And when I started thinking about production — real production — I hit a wall. There’s no Kubernetes deployment. No containerized microservices. No multi-environment staging pipeline. The path from Lovable’s hosting model to production-grade infrastructure means you’re building that infrastructure yourself, outside the platform entirely.
To be fair — Lovable was designed for rapid prototyping. It’s excellent at that. My mistake was expecting it to be more. The marketing doesn’t always make that distinction clear, and I learned it the hard way.
My verdict: Use Lovable when you’re validating an idea or need a demo fast. Don’t use it when you’re planning to scale.
🟢Replit — The Developer’s Comfort ZoneReplit felt more like home. Terminal access, direct file editing, 50+ language support, GitHub integration — this is closer to a real IDE. The AI agent can act on your codebase in ways that feel genuinely useful if you already know how to code.
And that’s also the catch.
Replit is fast if you have programming experience. For a less technical builder, the setup time increases quickly as you navigate an IDE environment and external documentation. I also noticed that when I started pushing toward production-grade complexity — multiple microservices, consistent deployment patterns, scaling configurations — I had to set those things up explicitly myself. The AI helped, but it didn’t think ahead about production infrastructure.
It’s a great path to a shareable prototype. It’s not a path to production infrastructure.
My verdict: Solid for developers learning or building side projects. Not the right bet if production readiness is your goal from day one.
🔵 8080.ai — The One Built for What Comes After the DemoThis is where my experience genuinely shifted.
8080.ai doesn’t just generate an app — it designs a multi-tier microservice architecture from your natural language description. It produces database schemas, API contracts, and component diagrams before the code is written. The infrastructure it outputs is Kubernetes-native from the start: stage and production cluster deployments out of the box, Docker containerization, direct Kubernetes dashboard access, and a deployment pipeline you never have to leave the platform to manage.
What hit me most was this: the infrastructure pattern AI applications are moving toward microservices, Kubernetes, horizontal scaling, persistent storage is exactly what 8080.ai produces as its default output.
That’s not a small thing. Every other tool produces something you’ll need to migrate later. 8080.ai produces something that’s already where you’re going.
The built-in task decomposition, sprint tracking, and AI-driven browser testing with visual verification made it feel less like a builder and more like an actual engineering team working alongside me.
My verdict: This is the tool for when you’re serious about production. Not just a demo — a real, scalable product.
🎯 The Framework I Wish I’d Had EarlierAfter all this testing, here’s how I’d map it now:
StageTool to UseLearning / ExploringReplit or LovableValidating an idea fastLovableBuilding for production 8080.ai
The tools aren’t competing with each other — they’re serving different moments in the journey. My mistake for too long was using prototype tools at the production stage.
Once I understood what each tool was actually built for, the decision became obvious.
If you’re still choosing, ask yourself one question: Are you building a demo, or are you building a product?
The answer tells you everything.
♦Everyone’s praising Replit and Lovable. I used both and I’m done. was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Are you trying to network on LinkedIn and via email, but finding your response rate disappointingly low? You’re not alone. Effective networking is about building relationships, not just diving in with a request to be considered for a job. It’s about establishing rapport and trust, and this takes time and patience.
I had mixed feelings about networking when I first started attending events. The thought of walking into a room full of strangers, trying to infiltrate various little groups, and instigating a conversation made my stomach turn.
I needed to shift my perspective; otherwise, networking was going to be a source of anxiety and trepidation. I recognised the value, I knew networking was impactful for knowledge sharing, industry expertise, contacts and opportunities, but that initial walking in the door bit was like a roadblock to me. I needed to pivot my mindset away from expecting to walk away with new business and consider how I could offer value to others in a non-reciprocal way. This helped in removing a weighted expectation from my shoulders. By changing my focus, I removed the fear of failure and what felt like a forced transactional encounter. This created a space for more authentic conversations. When new connections walked away feeling informed, supported, or inspired, I became someone they returned to. The key was to give without expecting anything in return.
As well as this mindset change, I also brought a friend or colleague with me to help alleviate the solo nerves, and it also helped to have a few conversation icebreakers in my back pocket. Check these out for some helpful inspiration: 30 Brilliant Networking Conversation Starters and 17 Great Conversation Starters to Help Break the Ice at Networking Events.
Here are some tips to enhance your networking efforts:
By implementing these strategies, you’ll build stronger, more meaningful connections and enhance your networking success.
If you have any networking strategies that you feel have been successful for you, please share them in the comments section to help others.
Elizabeth Lenihan is an award-winning Career Strategist and Talent Consultant with over 18 years of experience helping professionals find clarity, build confidence, and move forward with intention. Based in Ireland, she works with clients internationally.
Explore more at elizabethlenihan.com or connect on LinkedIn.
Originally published at www.elizabethlenihan.com on June 13, 2026.
♦The Art of Networking was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Register by June 15 and receive 3x entries to win a Chilly Moose cooler filled with you favorite summer beverages.
Join us for our inaugural summer bonspiel, KW Icebreaker 2026.
Loads of curling, prizes, food, live entertainment and of course fun!
Sign up now!
kwgranite.com/index.php/club-events/event-registrations/175-kw-icebreaker-2026/individual-registration
♦
Our inaugural summer bonspiel, KW Icebreaker!
Join us for a BEACH PARTY themed event on August 7 - 9, 2026 at KW Granite Club.
Live music Friday and Saturday evenings!
♦
Friday night pizza and late night snacks and Saturday lunch and dinner included.
Three (3) game guarantee. All games will be 6 ends.
Good times on and off the ice to get the new season started right!
Price is $500.00 plus HST per team with up to 6 players allowed per team.
Register here:
kwgranite.com/index.php/club-events/event-registrations/175-kw-icebreaker-2026/individual-registration
♦
CHATHAM-KENT - Evan Elliott struck out seven in six innings of one-run-baseball as the Kitchener Panthers beat the Chatham-Kent Barnstormers 5-1 Friday night at Fergie Jenkins Field.
He gave up six hits and walked two batters to register the win.
The Panthers used the long ball to do most of the damage.
Mateo Zeppieri opened the scoring with a solo blast in the third, his first of the season.
Raffi Gross then went yard for the second time in two games, a two-run shot in the fourth to extend the lead.
Josh Williams hit his first home run as a Panther, a no doubter to lead off the seventh inning.
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Kitchener Panthers (@cbl_panthers)
Petey Kiefer went three-for-five and drove in the lone run where the ball stayed in the ballpark, later in the seventh.
Samuele Bruno was two-for-four in his first start of the year as catcher, as Yunior Ibarra got the night off.
Jake Liberta got a scoreless inning of work, while Bawin Colon shut down the Barnstormers in the final two innings.
Kitchener improves to 4-3 on the season, while Chatham-Kent drops to 1-3.
The Panthers continue a busy four-game stretch Saturday in Guelph. First pitch is 2:05 p.m. from Hastings Stadium.
Kitchener returns home Sunday afternoon for a matchup against the Hamilton Cardinals, also at 2:05 p.m.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW and #PackTheJack! Wear your Kitchener Rangers jersey to get FREE ADMISSION to the game, and take in some baseball before walking across the parking lot to watch the Rangers in the Memorial Cup final on the big screen at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium!
BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY