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Kitchener-Waterloo Real Estate Blog

Waterloo Region Real Estate Market Update: May 2026

The Waterloo Region real estate market continued to show signs of stabilization in April 2026 as we moved further into the spring market. While overall activity remains steady, the pace of the market has changed. Buyers are still active, but they are being more selective, taking more time to compare options, and placing a stronger focus on value.

This is not a slow market. It is a more selective one.

For homeowners thinking about selling in Kitchener, Waterloo, Cambridge, or the surrounding area, the key takeaway is simple: the opportunity is still there, but strategy matters more than ever.

What’s Happening in the Waterloo Region Real Estate Market Right Now?

April brought a modest shift in overall market activity. Sales were down 7.6% year-over-year, while new listings remained relatively flat, down just 0.9%. Inventory also decreased 5.0% compared to April 2025, leaving the market with 3.6 months of supply.

While 3.6 months of inventory is in line with this time last year, it is still higher than what we have historically seen in more competitive seller’s markets. This means buyers have more choice than they did during the high-pressure markets of previous years, but demand has not disappeared.

From a pricing perspective, values remain modestly lower year-over-year, but there are signs of improved stability month-over-month. Prices have shown modest gains across several property types as the spring market has progressed, including single-family homes, townhomes, and condos.

Across Kitchener-Waterloo and Cambridge, prices remain down approximately 4% to 7% year-over-year, but the month-over-month improvement suggests the market is continuing to find its footing.

Key Waterloo Region Real Estate Stats for April 2026

In April 2026, Waterloo Region saw:

  • 561 homes sold, down 7.6% year-over-year
  • Average sale price of $754,877, down 3.8% year-over-year
  • 1,386 new listings, down 0.9% year-over-year
  • 3.6 months of inventory, in line with last year
  • Average days on market of 25 days, up 4.2%

These numbers point to a more balanced real estate market in Waterloo Region. Homes are still selling, but buyers are no longer rushing into offers with the same level of urgency we saw in previous years.

Source: Cornerstone Association of REALTORS®

What the Data is Telling Us

While the year-over-year numbers still reflect softer pricing and slightly longer selling times, the more important takeaway is how the market is functioning today.

Inventory levels have improved, which gives buyers more options. Buyers remain active, but they are taking more time to compare homes, review pricing, and make decisions. Well-priced homes are still selling, but the market is more measured and price-sensitive.

We are also continuing to see strong showing activity and buyer engagement across Waterloo Region. However, offers are becoming more value-driven. Buyers are doing their homework, watching comparable sales closely, and responding more cautiously to homes they feel are overpriced.
This means pricing is playing a major role in how a home performs.

A home that is priced accurately from the beginning can still attract strong interest. A home that is priced too high may sit longer, require a price adjustment, or lose momentum during its most important first few weeks on the market.

Source: Cornerstone Association of REALTORS®

Single-Family Homes vs. Townhomes and Condos

One of the clearest trends in the April 2026 Waterloo Region housing market is the difference between property types.

Single-family homes have remained relatively stable, with sales holding flat month-over-month and only moderate price adjustments. Detached homes in strong neighbourhoods continue to attract serious buyer interest, especially when they are well-prepared, well-marketed, and priced in line with current market conditions.

Townhomes and condos, however, are experiencing softer demand. Sales in this segment are down 18.7% year-over-year, with longer days on market and higher inventory levels.

This divide matters.

While the overall Waterloo Region market remains active, not every property type is performing the same way. Condo and townhome sellers may need to be more strategic with pricing and presentation, especially as buyers compare more options and take longer to make decisions.

Homes are taking slightly longer to sell overall, particularly in the condo segment, but timelines remain reasonable when properties are positioned properly.

What This Means for Sellers in Waterloo Region

For sellers, the April 2026 market is not a “list it and wait for multiple offers” environment. The market has shifted, and buyers have become more careful.

That does not mean sellers are out of luck. It means the right strategy is essential.

Buyers are more informed. They are comparing neighbourhoods, property condition, recent sales, and asking prices before making a move. Overpriced homes are sitting longer, while well-prepared and well-positioned homes are still attracting strong interest.

With more inventory available, sellers are facing more competition. That makes pricing, presentation, and exposure more important than ever.
Before listing your home, it is important to understand:

  • How your property compares to similar active listings
  • What has recently sold in your neighbourhood
  • How buyers are responding to your price point
  • Whether your home is positioned properly for current demand
  • How your marketing will help your property stand out

In this type of market, success comes down to more than simply putting a sign on the lawn. Sellers need a clear pricing strategy, strong listing preparation, professional marketing, and an understanding of how buyers are behaving right now.

♦ The Bottom Line

Waterloo Region is in a more balanced spring real estate market.

This is not the high-pressure, multiple-offer market of past years, but it is still an active market where the right homes are selling. Buyers are out there, but they are more selective, more cautious, and more focused on value.

For sellers, that means the homes getting the strongest results are the ones that are priced accurately, presented well, and marketed strategically from day 1.

The opportunity is still there, but the margin for error is smaller.

Additional Market Context

Broader housing trends across Ontario and Canada continue to influence buyer behaviour in Waterloo Region.

The Bank of Canada has held its overnight rate steady at 2.25%, which has helped create a more stable borrowing environment for buyers. At the same time, elevated bond yields continue to place upward pressure on fixed mortgage rates. This is influencing how buyers approach affordability, monthly payments, and timing.

Affordability has improved slightly compared to last year, which is helping support ongoing buyer activity. However, buyers are still being careful. Many are watching rates, comparing options, and waiting for the right home at the right price.

Despite broader market uncertainty, Waterloo Region continues to show relative stability. The region remains supported by consistent demand, strong local employment, respected post-secondary institutions, and long-term buyer interest in communities such as Kitchener, Waterloo, and Cambridge.

What This Means

Compared to many surrounding markets, Waterloo Region continues to perform steadily.

Buyers now have more choice and more negotiating power, but the market remains active, especially for well-priced homes in strong neighbourhoods. The biggest difference from previous years is buyer urgency.

Instead of rushing into offers, buyers are moving more thoughtfully. They are looking for value, reviewing comparable sales, and taking time to make confident decisions.

For sellers, this means your pricing and marketing strategy need to reflect the market we are in today, not the market we saw 2 or 3 years ago.

Final Thoughts

The Waterloo Region real estate market is continuing to find its footing as we move through the spring season. Conditions have become more balanced, and there are clear differences in how various property types are performing.

Single-family homes remain relatively steady, while condos and townhomes are facing more pressure from softer demand, longer timelines, and increased competition.

Buyers remain active, but they are approaching decisions more thoughtfully. They are focused on value, options, and whether a home is priced appropriately for today’s market.

The key takeaway is this: in today’s Waterloo Region real estate market, success comes down to a tailored approach. Understanding the competition, reading buyer behaviour in real time, and positioning your home strategically can directly impact your result.

If you are considering making a move this year, we would be happy to walk you through what these numbers mean for your home, your goals, and your specific situation.

The post Waterloo Region Real Estate Market Update: May 2026 appeared first on Kitchener Waterloo Real Estate Agent - The Deutschmann Team.


Andrew Coppolino

Ottawa and Canada’s 100 Best Restaurants

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Recently dropped was the list of Canada’s 100 Best restaurants and best bars. It’s a sparkling annual compilation that has appeared for about a decade, and the selections from across Canada are presented with an informative and engaging elan — plus it’s really fun just to dip in and, vicariously, “explore” some excellent restaurants from coast to coast.

Previous to the new May list being announced, I wrote a short introduction to Antheia, on Somerset West in Ottawa, for the C100B magazine: that story is here (available for purchase).

Otherwise, Pearl Morrisette, in Jordan Station, is numero uno on the list, while the inimitable Langdon Hall (which I recently very happily visited) checked in at 18: both are simply superb.

After only a few month open, and after quite a significant time as a work-in-progress for chef-owner Briana Kim, Antheia took its spot as C100B #76. Congrats to the staff and best wishes with what is probably one of Canada’s most unique venues.

And … it was terrific to also see a couple of other Ottawa restaurants make the list: Atelier (on my list to visit) registered #54, while Arlo Wine Bar — an absolute favourite spot of mine — took #77.

Photo/Jamie Kronick

Check out my latest post Ottawa and Canada’s 100 Best Restaurants from AndrewCoppolino.com.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Pro Alerts for Business

Dynamic Threshold Alerts & Demand Mitigation

Protect your facility from costly peak demand charges and operational irregularities with our pro-tier Threshold-Based Alerting System.

This proactive monitoring tool allows you to establish precise Consumption and Demand Guardrails for any sensor or equipment group in your operation.

When energy draw or demand levels exceed your predefined limits, the system triggers instant notifications, enabling your team to intervene before a surge impacts your utility bill or compromises equipment integrity.

By automating the oversight of your load profile, you can maintain strict adherence to your energy budget and sustainability targets while gaining the peace of mind that comes from 24/7 digital surveillance of your entire electrical infrastructure.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Pro Asset Intelligence

Centralized Asset Performance Intelligence

Optimize your operational oversight with a Customizable Command Center designed to transform complex machine data into a streamlined workflow.

This pro-tier interface features a User-Configurable Asset Dashboard, allowing you to convert raw run-state data into high-impact, presentation-ready formats that align with your specific management goals.

To provide total site visibility, the Aggregated Asset Intelligence panel compiles critical KPIs from every monitored unit on your machine floor into a single, centralized summary.

This ecosystem is powered by Interactive Operational Mapping, enabling you to pivot seamlessly from a high-level Asset List to granular State Graphs—allowing your team to instantly distinguish between active, idle, or distressed equipment and respond with precision.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Reports for Business

Strategic Reporting & Data Distribution

Empower your stakeholders with actionable intelligence through a reporting suite built for professional agility.

With Tailored Reporting Profiles, you can manage and store your specific data preferences, ensuring one-click access to the KPIs most critical to your operational goals.

Our Flexible Scheduling & Archiving tools allow you to seamlessly toggle between automated, recurring reports and on-demand snapshots, providing the versatility needed to review long-term historical performance or capture immediate energy footprints.

To ensure your insights reach the right people at the right time, utilize our Seamless Data Distribution tools to instantly print summaries, email reports to key stakeholders, or export raw datasets in .CSV format for advanced external analysis and integration.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Data Export

Precision Data Export & Custom Resolution

Streamline your energy forensics with a robust export engine designed for granular, asset-specific analysis.

This module allows you to extract high-fidelity data for specified devices or custom display groups, ensuring you only process the information relevant to your current objective.

By utilizing customizable periods and resolutions, you can define the exact timeframe and data density required—whether you need high-resolution minute-by-minute logs for troubleshooting equipment startup sequences or hourly aggregates for monthly load-profile modeling.

This flexibility turns raw electrical signals into structured, professional-grade datasets ready for immediate integration into your internal audits, engineering reviews, or specialized energy management software.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Net Meter Plugin

Integrated Net-Zero Monitoring

Master your facility’s energy ecosystem and accelerate your ESG goals with Holistic Energy Visualization.

The Net Graph provides a high-impact, color-coded view of on-site generation (solar, wind, or co-gen) versus facility demand, offering an instant snapshot of your carbon footprint and grid independence.

Dive into Precision Net Analytics with interactive pie charts that reveal your self-consumption ratios, while Live Generation & Demand Tracking allows you to monitor instantaneous power production against current load.

Note: This comprehensive view requires dual-device monitoring of both generation and total consumption to map your facility’s net energy flow.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Compare Plugin

Quantify ROI with Performance Benchmarking

Validate your capital investments and sustainability initiatives with Dynamic Performance Benchmarking.

Utilize side-by-side Comparison Graphs to visualize consumption across different display groups or facilities, making it easy to identify best practices and operational outliers.

For rigorous Post-Event Analysis, our Integrated Math Operations automatically calculate and graph the relationship between data sets—perfect for proving the ROI of a machine overhaul or a high-efficiency motor installation.

This data-driven approach allows you to confirm energy savings and uncover hidden operational issues with mathematical certainty.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Consumption Plugin

Interval-Based Consumption Analytics

Eliminate the complexity of multi-sensor oversight with Customizable Usage Intervals.

Tailor your Consumption Graph to break down energy data by the hour, shift, day, or month for every individual sensor or equipment group in your operation.

To streamline your analysis, Integrated Performance Metrics serve as a data hub, identifying high-demand assets at a glance.

Facilitate rapid reporting with Instant Statistical Overviews that automatically calculate core KPIs for your current view, allowing you to move from raw data to executive summary in seconds.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Demand Plugin

Granular Forensics for Facility Management

Transform months of raw data into a narrative of efficiency with tools built for Precision Deep-Dives.

Use the Master Timeline to scan a full week of aggregate facility data, then click any point of interest to instantly populate a Detailed Timeline Graph for granular, sensor-level forensics.

This allows sustainability teams to isolate specific events—such as a rooftop unit cycling incorrectly or a midnight base-load spike—while the Centralized Insights Grid acts as a real-time scoreboard, providing the metadata and value changes needed to contextualize every trend.


Eyedro

MyEyedro Highlights Plugin

Optimize Your Operational Baseline

Drive operational excellence by maintaining a real-time pulse on your facility’s vital signs.

By visualizing key metrics against historical averages, operations managers can instantly detect load anomalies that signal equipment inefficiency or peak demand risks.

This view benchmarks your total consumption against projected daily usage, providing the foresight needed to adjust schedules before exceeding targets.

Integrated with estimated spend and Min/Max thresholds, this module serves as a critical financial guardrail for proactive budget management and load-shedding decisions.


Elmira Advocate

I PROPOSE AN ANNUAL AWARD NAMED THE ROBERT REILLY DULY MEMORABLE BASTION OF ARTICULATE SOUL SEEKERS - 1ST RECIPIENT JUSTICE CRAIG PARRY

 

Justice Parry through his recent, courageous and forward seeking decision to put 48 female whiners and complainers in their place can only be given the due he deserves. With full knowledge that all the lefties, some righties, men and women of all shapes and colours would find fault with his independent, long thought out and incredibly humourous exaggerations that he used in order to calm the ever complaining masses. This award has of course been named after another giant of jurisprudence, Robert Reilly, who pioneered the advanced technique of dismissing witness credibility based upon zero evidence presented on the matter. Now of course Robert Reilly was a mere piker compared to Justice Craig Parry but innovators sometimes have to begin small. Both gentlemen have surmounted the tightly constrained and impeded bounds of logic, fact and reason with their obviously male talent of foresight, psychic vision and mind reading capabilities far in advance of their peers, their critics, and humanity in general.

This award known as the RR DUMBASS could easily have been mistaken for the name of their joint pleasure yacht the SS DUMBASS but for the foresight of  Mr. Reilly's parents' naming abilities. It is rumoured that they too were giants in their fields as well. Clearly the apple does not fall far from the tree and Mr. Reilly's legal exploits are as equally balanced as his bicycle riding we are advised. Further praise and public recognition may be forthcoming for both gentlemen at the planned festivities outside the Elmira Waste Water Treatment Plant this Saturday at 11 am.  All are welcome although sore losers and complainers will be met with Waterloo Region's finest batons and pepper spray.


Cordial Catholic, K Albert Little

Mary's Role in Prophecy and the Messiah's Return #shorts

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James Davis Nicoll

Locked Inside My Memory / Darksight Dare (Penric &amp; Desdemona, volume 16) By Lois McMaster Bujold

2026’s Darksight Dare is the sixteenth (!) Penric &Desdemona secondary universe fantasy novella from Lois McMaster Bujold.

Learned Penric, faced with two sad situations—a dying woman and a blinded man—decides to use what in our universe would be called the Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup solution. Satisfying two goals at once.


Cordial Catholic, K Albert Little

Jesus Fulfilled These 63 Messianic Prophecies (AND MORE!) (w/ Gary Michuta)

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KWSQA

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 – The Moving Target of Software Quality

Register: Online at our KWality Talk Page, the attendance link will be included in an email the day of the event.

Location: Online. Please ensure that your onscreen name matches your registration name.

Time: The meeting starts between 11:55 am and 12:00 pm, a waiting room might be enabled if you arrive prior to this time. Meeting ends at approximately 1:00 pm.

Speaker: Tina Fletcher

Topic:

When I started my career twenty years ago, software quality basically meant “no bugs,” and testing meant executing a finite set of cases. Since then, I’ve watched the concept evolve alongside significant shifts in technology and industry practices. Because these changes have been largely additive, we face an ever-expanding horizon of what “good” software looks like.

In this talk, I offer a definition of modern software quality that incorporates the many expectations accumulated from technological and process trends such as Agile, automated testing, cloud hosting, DevOps, and AI. Drawing on my own painful experiences with neglecting or misunderstanding the evolving dimensions of quality, I’ll share examples of what I’ve learned from them and what effective practices can look like.

To help organize and categorize this laundry list of quality-related things to be responsible for, we will break them down into four key pillars:

  • User Value: Building the Right Thing (strategic alignment, risk assessment, measurable impact)
  • Product Health: Testing the Things We Can Predict (enabling and executing solid testing strategies)
  • Operational Health: Dealing with the Unexpected (observability, recovery, non-derministic behaviour)
  • Sustainability: Holistic Stewardship (security, cost, performance, accessibility, maintainability)

We’ll cover a series of questions to help you explore and audit your team’s practices in each area, followed by a set of prompts to help you determine where the next quality evolution is likely to come from in your context.

While the field may have been simpler when I began, the constant transformation is what has kept it exciting. Fortunately, today it’s easier than ever to learn a new skill that can bring more value to your users and your business. As a final thought, I hope to leave you with the realization that the most important software quality strategy is the willingness to adapt, evolve, and stay curious in an ever-changing landscape.

Bio: 

Tina Fletcher is an Engineering leader who brings a software quality-focused mindset to the teams and projects she leads. She’s also a Director on the KWSQA Board, an occasional conference speaker, and a bit obsessed with her vegetable garden. Find her online at tinafletcher.ca.

Github: Brent Litner

brentlintner pushed vim-settings

♦ brentlintner pushed to master in brentlintner/vim-settings · May 6, 2026 23:35 1 commit to master
  • 0b7f62e
    Should be using smart case insensitive searching

The Backing Bookworm

The Forgotten Midwife


Set in Ireland with dual timelines with resilient women at its heart, I was thrilled to read this book as I travelled across Ireland two weeks ago - our train even passing through the town where the book is set (Thurles, County Tipperary).
The story follows two women: 1950's - Margaret Lannigan is forced by her family and her priest to abandon her future plans to become a nun at a convent with secrets of its own. 
Present-day - Riley is a young woman who is searching for answers and her family's history and unearths more than she could ever imagine. 
This is my first book by Irish author Laura Anthony, and it won't be my last. Her story, which is inspired by real events, pulled me immediately into the Irish setting, Irish history and lives of these two women.
I appreciate how Anthony doesn't shy away from emotional elements: the few choices granted women of the time, the suppression and outright denial of women's rights, the power of the Church and the greed of those who were meant to help and lead others. While there could be a sense of hopelessness with this heavy subject matter, Anthony gives readers characters they will cheer on; those who go against the greater power with subterfuge and determination to make the lives of others better. There are also characters you'll love to hate (I hold a serious grudge, so I wish they suffered worse fates).
Poignant, powerful and thought-provoking, this read shows how individuals can make a big impact despite going against a much greater power. It's a story about resiliency and the tenacity of the 'underdog' that will give readers (and book clubs!) much to discuss. Highly recommended.
Disclaimer: My sincere thanks to Gallery Books for the complimentary digital advanced copy of this book that was given to me in exchange for my honest review.

My Rating: 4.5 starsAuthor: Laura AnthonyGenre: Historical FictionType and Source: ebook from publisher via NetGalleyPublisher: Gallery Books (S&S) First Published: May 12, 2026Read: April 19-29, 2026

Book Description from GoodReads: Set in the dual timelines of present-day and 1950s Ireland and based on real historical events, a powerful, poignant novel of feminism and resilience that follows the life of a young woman consigned to work in a home for “fallen girls” who quickly realizes she must risk everything to protect them.
New Jersey, 2023. Riley Carmichael is getting married and finally joining a huge, loving family but can’t help but feel the emptiness of her own side of the church. For most of Riley’s life it’s just been her and her wonderful grandmother, Betty, but as late-stage dementia overtakes her grandmother’s mind, Riley knows she’s losing her, too. On one of Riley’s visits to Betty’s nursing home, she encounters her grandmother in one of her increasingly rare moments of lucidity as Betty desperately hands Riley a tatty birth certificate for an unknown baby born in Ireland in the 1950s. Full of questions about her heritage, Riley embarks on a trip to Ireland to find that elusive sense of home.

Tipperary, Ireland, 1954. Margaret Lannigan’s life is made up of weekly dances and spending time with the love of her life, Joseph. But when Margaret’s older sister suddenly passes away, it falls to Margaret to fulfill the family’s commitment to the the eldest daughter of the Lannigan family has joined the Sisters of Mercy nuns for generations. Forced to part with Joseph and take the veil, Margaret is sent to a Home for Fallen Girls to care for expectant mothers who fell pregnant outside of marriage. With no training or midwifery skills, she must fight to provide compassionate care she feels these women deserve amid the cruelty and abuse they face.

When Margaret meets a young and terrified Delia O’Rourke, the sister of her childhood best friend, she must find the strength she needs to protect this young woman and her baby in the face of a system built to ensure they disappear.

Based on true historical events, The Forgotten Midwife is a powerful and emotional story of the women lost to Ireland’s “mother and baby homes,” as well as the young women forced to join the orders that ran the establishments. Told with courage and heart, it’s a haunting, hopeful novel of feminine strength, found family, and love that transcends oppression.

Child Witness Centre

Spring Appeal: Make a Powerful Difference for Local Kids

Dear Friend,

This spring, we’re sharing a difficult truth. For many children and youth who have experienced abuse or crime, the impact doesn’t end when the harm stops.

It can live on in anxiety, in fear, in sleepless nights and overwhelming thoughts.

Children like Jenna.* When Jenna first came to us, she was quiet and withdrawn. She stayed close to her caregiver, unsure who she could trust.

But with the right support, something powerful can begin to change.

At Child Witness Centre, children and youth are met with compassionate, trauma-informed care that helps them begin to feel safe again.

  • They begin to understand what they’ve experienced.
  • They learn ways to cope with difficult thoughts and emotions.
  • They rebuild confidence, connection, and a sense of control.

Give Today and Help a Child Feel Safe Again

Right now, your gift will be matched – doubling your impact. All donations will be matched up to $5,000, thanks to Badge of Hope.

That means twice the support, twice the care, and twice the opportunity for a child like Jenna to begin healing.

Warmest regards,
Robin Heald | Executive Director

*Name changed to respect confidentiality. This child’s story reflects countless clients we support on a regular basis.

Giving options include: on our website, by phone (519-744-0904) with your credit card, by e-transfer, or by mailing/delivering a cheque payable to Child Witness Centre to our office (111 Duke St E, Kitchener, ON N2H 1A4). Thank you!

The post Spring Appeal: Make a Powerful Difference for Local Kids first appeared on Child Witness Centre.


Kitchener Panthers

2026 SIGNING TRACKER: OF Mateo Zeppieri

KITCHENER - The Kitchener Panthers are proud to announce the signing of outfielder Mateo Zeppieri.

The 23-year-old hit .289 with the Panthers last season, primarily slotted in as the lead off hitter.

He had 24 hits, including 11 for extra bases. Six of those were home runs.

He is coming off his final year at Richmond, where he saw limited action.

Previously, he was with Mount St. Mary's University (NCAA D1), where he hit .231 in spring 2025. He had 12 home runs and 40 RBI in 48 games with the Mountaineers.

"I'm excited to have Mateo start the season with us this year," said general manager Shanif Hirani.

"As soon as he joined our team midway through last season, he flashed his elite power, but also helped solidify our outfield defence. His all around game complements our lineup really well."

============

MATEO ZEPPIERI

  • Bats/Pitches: L/R
  • Hometown: Newcastle, ON
  • Birthdate: April 8, 2003
  • Pronunciation: muh-TAY-oh ZEP-ee-AIR-ee

KW Habilitation

KW Habilitation Health and Wellness Fair

Join Us for a Free Health & Wellness Fair at KW Habilitation!

You’re invited to a Health and Wellness Fair at KW Habilitation, a free, fun, and inclusive event focused on promoting well-being for everyone in our community!

Location: 99 Ottawa Street South, Kitchener
Date & Time: June 4, 2026 from 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM
Cost: Free!
Who’s Welcome: Everyone!
RAFFLE PRIZES TOO!

♦What to Expect

This event brings together a wide range of local vendors and wellness activities designed to support your mind, body, and community connections. Whether you’re looking to explore new wellness services, learn about community resources, or just enjoy a relaxing evening, there’s something here for you.

Vendor Highlights Include:

  • Medical Device and Supply Providers: Westmount Place Pharmacy, Silver Cross, Adaptive Clothing
  • Community Activities and Groups: Special Olympics, Sports for Special Athletes, Red Line Fitness
  • Health and Aging: Arnold Hearing Centre, Hospice Waterloo Region, St. Mary’s Health @ Home
Special Activities

Crescendo Choir Performance
6:00 PM – 6:20 PM in the Parking Lot
Enjoy a live performance from Crescendo Choir, WRDSBs Special Education Choir that will lift your spirits and celebrate our community’s talent.

Tae Kwon Do Demonstration
6:30 PM – 7:00 PM in the Parking Lot
Be inspired by a high-energy martial arts demo showcasing strength, focus, and discipline.

Parking Information

Please note: There is no parking available at 99 Ottawa Street South.
Free parking is available nearby at:

  • 124 Sydney Street
  • 85 Ottawa Street South

Come connect with local organizations, learn about healthy living options, and enjoy activities that focus on wellness in all forms. We can’t wait to see you there!

 

The post KW Habilitation Health and Wellness Fair appeared first on KW Habilitation.


Code Like a Girl

Why Your Brain Keeps Choosing Good Looks Over Good Logic

Why our brains keep choosing aesthetics over logic — and how it’s quietly shaping the future of work.

♦Automatic Rendering: How our brains “fill in the blanks” before we even process the substance. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)

There’s an invisible variable shaping more of our lives than most of us are comfortable admitting. It doesn’t show up on resumes, no recruiter will ever say it out loud, and yet it quietly influences who gets attention first, who gets trusted faster, and who gets remembered longer. The more I pay attention to it, the more it feels less like a personal trait and more like a background system, something always running, rarely questioned, but constantly affecting outcomes.

We call it pretty privilege. And honestly, the name still feels too soft for how much impact it actually has.

The Moment I Stopped Believing in Meritocracy♦The Halo Effect: When the shadow of perception outshines the reality of the work. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)

I didn’t arrive at this idea through theory. It came from small, forgettable moments that started stacking up into a pattern I could no longer ignore. Try to remember your last Zoom meeting. Not the agenda or the metrics, but the screen itself. Those small rectangles lined up in silence, each one waiting for its turn to speak. Someone leans slightly closer to the camera, inhales like they’re about to contribute something important, and then it happens. Another voice cuts in. A different square lights up. The first microphone flickers on, then off again. No one calls it out, but everyone notices.

Same meeting. Same topic. Same level of competence.

Different gravity.

At some point, I stopped asking who was better. I started asking something more uncomfortable. Why does it feel like the room has already decided before the conversation even begins?

Why Our Brains Love “Automatic Rendering”

We’ve spent years swallowing the promise of meritocracy. Work hard, be competent, and things will align. I used to believe that almost by default because it offers a clean narrative and a sense of control. But the more you observe how people respond to each other in real situations, the harder it becomes to ignore the cracks. Put two equally capable people in the same room and something shifts before either of them completes their first sentence. One is read as confident almost instantly, while the other has to earn that label slowly, sometimes painfully. Same idea. Same delivery. Different starting line.

Psychology calls it the halo effect, but that term feels too polite for what’s actually happening. If I’m being honest, it feels more like Automatic Rendering. The brain upgrades the visuals before it processes the substance. When someone attractive speaks, their ideas seem sharper, more structured, more convincing, as if you’re watching them in high resolution with perfect lighting. Someone else might be delivering something equally valuable, but it lands flatter, like the connection isn’t quite stable.

And here’s the part that stays with me.

We don’t feel like we’re being unfair when it happens. We call it intuition. We trust it. But in reality, it’s often just the brain taking a shortcut, choosing efficiency over accuracy, and disguising that shortcut as insight.

Legacy Software in a Digital World

Blaming modern culture alone feels too easy. This didn’t start with social media. Evolution doesn’t care about your meritocracy; it cares about efficiency. Our brains are still running legacy software from a time when quick visual judgment meant survival. There’s a biological layer behind it that’s hard to ignore. When we see symmetry or conventionally attractive features, the brain triggers small dopaminergic rewards, subtle signals that say, this feels right. That reaction happens before logic even has a chance to load.

It’s a survival shortcut that simply hasn’t been updated, running legacy code in a high-speed digital world.

Before the internet, these biases had physical limits; they were confined to offices, classrooms, and small social circles, which made them easier to overlook because their impact felt localized. But the moment the feed replaced the room, those boundaries disappeared. First impressions are no longer handshakes, they are scrolls, repeated hundreds of times a day, turning something once situational into something constant.

Algorithms don’t care about fairness. They care about eyeballs.

An attractive face functions like a perfectly optimized thumbnail. It buys you a second of attention, just enough to interrupt someone’s scrolling pattern. That second becomes a pause, the pause becomes engagement, and the system quietly amplifies it. More reach leads to more visibility, and more visibility starts to look like credibility. Over time, the line between perception and merit begins to blur, until the advantage feels earned, even when it wasn’t neutral to begin with.

First Impressions are Now Handshakes with Algorithms

The more I observe platforms like LinkedIn, the harder it is to ignore how subtle this has become. A well-lit photo, a clean aesthetic, a face that fits a certain mold, and suddenly the exact same idea feels sharper, more trustworthy. Nothing about the substance changes. Only the packaging does.

The Aesthetic Audit in Tech

This becomes even more layered when you look at women in tech.

I’ve seen a female software engineer spend hours solving a deeply complex production issue, breaking it down into something clear and accessible, and sharing it publicly. It’s the kind of content that should trigger thoughtful discussion, maybe even admiration for the technical depth behind it. But look at the comment section, and you’ll see the halo effect mutate into something more subtle and more frustrating. While she’s presenting a masterclass in debugging, the feedback loop drifts toward her lipstick shade, her headphones, or the aesthetic of her workspace.

The 200 lines of elegant, complex logic become a footnote to her appearance. We aren’t auditing her technical depth; we’re auditing how she looks while explaining it.

Another developer builds credibility slowly through consistent, thoughtful contributions. Real effort, real substance. Then something shifts. People start questioning whether her visibility is entirely earned, hinting that appearance might be part of the equation. It’s rarely said directly, but it lingers in tone and implication. And what’s striking is how unevenly that suspicion is distributed.

For a while, I thought this might just be my own pattern recognition going too far. Maybe I’m overthinking this. Maybe I was projecting meaning onto something neutral. But the more I looked into it, the harder it became to dismiss.

The Competence Premium: What the Science Says

This isn’t just a subjective observation; it’s a quantified bias. Researchers from have found that we instinctively assign a Competence Premium to individuals we perceive as attractive, rating them higher even when their qualifications are identical to others. Experiments from push this further, showing that this bias doesn’t stop at first impressions. It influences salary expectations, shapes hiring decisions, and quietly determines who we see as leadership material before they’ve even had the chance to lead.

So this isn’t just perception. It translates into measurable outcomes.

I keep seeing conversations about pretty privilege collapse into two extremes. One side insists everything is purely merit-based, as if perception plays no role at all. The other treats appearance as the main explanation for success, reducing everything to aesthetics. From what I’ve seen, both positions miss something important.

Attractiveness doesn’t guarantee success. But it shifts the starting point in ways that are easy to overlook and hard to measure in isolation. It smooths first interactions, reduces friction, and builds trust faster than it logically should. Those small advantages compound over time.

You start noticing it in subtle ways. Someone gets interrupted less. Someone’s rough idea is treated as promising, while someone else’s polished explanation is met with skepticism. Someone gets described as naturally confident, while another is asked to prove it repeatedly. None of these moments seem significant on their own, but together they form a pattern that’s difficult to ignore.

Zoom out far enough, and that pattern becomes structural. Certain types of faces appear more frequently in visible positions. Not always intentionally. Not always consciously. But consistently enough to shape expectation. Over time, people begin associating specific appearances with competence, even if they would never openly admit it.

That’s the point where this stops being about individuals and starts influencing who gets seen, who gets heard, and who gets opportunities in the first place.

“Awareness doesn’t uninstall the system. It just exposes it.”
The Power of the Pause♦Seeing honestly requires a moment of hesitation in a world driven by split-second impressions. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)

And knowing all of this doesn’t magically fix anything. I’ll probably still catch myself trusting a well-lit profile picture faster than I should tomorrow.

But now, there’s something new in the loop. A moment of hesitation that didn’t exist before. And in that split second, we find something small, but real.

A choice.

Maybe this awareness won’t fix the system tomorrow morning. But the next time your finger pauses on a post, or you’re about to cut someone off in a meeting, stop for a second.

Ask yourself something uncomfortable.

Is this really about the quality of the work?

Or are you just reacting to how good it looks?

Because in a world driven by perception, admitting that you can be fooled might be the only way to start seeing honestly.

Why Your Brain Keeps Choosing Good Looks Over Good Logic was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

How I Used Notion AI’s Agentic Features to Build a Self-Updating Learning Plan for My Preschooler

Seed data, multi-document reasoning, and GPT-5.2 in Notion AI

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »


Elmira Advocate

CREDIT GOES TO SANDY SHANTZ FOR ANNOUNCING HER STEPPING DOWN EARLY

 

Instead of delaying her announcement that she wasn't running and hence possibly being viewed as a "lame duck" mayor by both her Woolwich and regional colleagues; she has announced already that she is not running for Woolwich Mayor again this October. Hallelujah albeit the damage is done and the last ditch chance to reverse Woolwich Township's disgraceful "water crisis" legacy is now well past. The Township rolled over early and joined the Uniroyal Chemical fellow travellors' cheerleading group. After the new CPAC (2011-2015) changed the channel and set the new direction however it was Sandy Shantz who re-embraced Uniroyal/Chemtura, kicked out CPAC and went back to the status quo of much talk and little action or cleanup.  

Uniroyal and their corporate successors have made a laughing stock of local democracy and of the provincial Ministry of Environment (MECP). Clearly our provincial environmental laws are absolutely no match for multi billion dollar, multi national corporations with large legal budgets and tiny ethics and decency. No effort was ever spared by the polluters to minimize their cleanup costs and enhance their soiled reputations. And our local councils aided and abetted that over decades to their everlasting shame. 

To date I believe that councillor Eric Schwindt has thrown his hat into the ring.  I guess I'm not terribly surprised nor alarmed although I will admit my knowledge of him is limited. What I have seen over the last four years has been positive in a number of areas . I do not know if there will be other contenders or not although it seems likely. You know I can live with a mayor with a different background than myself but dear God at least let them have an open mind regarding our public water supply and they must put the public interest first in all matters. They must not be beholden to developers, builders, industrialists or our local big shots or for that matter any other self-serving groups especially including regional and provincial governments.   


Code Like a Girl

What Fear Costs Your Team Over Time

Fear can make leaders play safe by sticking with the status quo, avoid decisions with unknowns and uncertainty to limit mistakes, people…

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »


Aquanty

HydroSphereAI Case Study: Spring Freshet Forecasting for Hydropower Risk Awareness – Vermilion River Ontario (Station: 02CF011 - VERMILION RIVER NEAR VAL CARON) – April 2026

HydroSphereAI’s machine learning-driven forecasting system.

Between April 15 and April 22, 2026, watersheds across Greater Sudbury experienced a significant spring flood event driven by rapid snowmelt and sustained rainfall. A Flood Warning issued by Conservation Sudbury highlighted elevated inflows across the region, including the Vermilion River system near Val Caron.

While the Vermilion River is not a regulated hydropower system, Water Survey of Canada Station 02CF011 (Vermilion River near Val Caron) provides a comparable watershed area for understanding naturalized inflow dynamics relevant to hydroelectric operations across northern Ontario.

This case study demonstrates how HydroSphereAI (HSAI) captured the timing and magnitude of peak flows during a complex spring freshet event, and how similar forecasting capability can support hydropower decision-making.

Vermilion River Ontario. Vermilion River near Val Caron (Station 02CF011).

Why This Event Matters for Hydropower
Spring freshet events represent one of the most operationally challenging periods for hydroelectric utilities. Even in unregulated basins like the Vermilion River, the hydrologic behaviour observed is directly transferable to regulated systems. During this event rapid snowmelt combined with rainfall generated sustained high inflows. Peak discharge of 104 m^3/s occurred on April 19, following several days of rising flow, with flows exceeding 83 m^3/s (a 1 in 20 year flow rate) for 4 consecutive days from 2am on April 18th until 11pm on April 21st. Flood warnings were issued by Conservation Sudbury on April 15th and April 17th, highlighting Val Caron and surrounding areas as high-risk zones.

For hydropower operators, similar inflow conditions can translate to reservoir level exceedance risk, spillway activation and flood routing decisions, reduced flexibility in generation scheduling and increased downstream flood liability.

Comparable Watershed for Regulated Systems
The Vermilion River basin upstream of station 02CF011 exhibits characteristics common to many hydroelectric operational locations in Ontario, including a mixed storage response (lakes and wetlands) , snowmelt-dominated hydrology, sensitivity to rain-on-snow events and multi-day hydrograph peaks rather than flash responses. Although no dam is present at this site, the observed inflow dynamics closely resemble naturalized inflows to hydroelectric reservoirs, making it an ideal test case for forecasting performance.

Forecasting Challenge for Hydropower Operations
Spring inflow forecasting is particularly complex due to uncertainty in snow water equivalent and melt rates and nonlinear runoff generation during rain-on-snow events. The temperature-driven variability in timing of peak inflows and prolonged inflow periods often require multi-day operational planning.  For hydroelectric facilities, the key challenge is not just predicting that inflows will rise, but accurately forecasting when peak inflow will occur, what maximum flow rates to expect, and how long elevated inflows will persist.

HydroSphereAI Performance Overview
HydroSphereAI demonstrated strong predictive capability at station 02CF011 (Vermilion River near Val Caron) throughout the event:

  • April 11 (8-day lead time):
    Early forecasts identified a developing inflow event, providing advance notice of potential operational stress. The model was already tracking the timing and magnitude of peak inflow with high accuracy, enabling early planning.

  • April 15–22 (Flood Warning period):
    Forecasts remained stable as inflows increased, aligning closely with observed hydrograph trends. Short-range forecasts (1–3 day lead time) performed particularly well between April 17 and April 20, closely matching both the rate of rise and sustained peak conditions, further reinforcing confidence during critical operational decision-making periods.

  • Peak Capture (April 19):
    HydroSphereAI accurately predicted the timing of peak inflow, maintaining consistency throughout.

  • Forecast Convergence:
    As lead time decreased, uncertainty narrowed, supporting higher-confidence operational decisions.

Operational Value for Hydropower
HydroSphereAI’s performance in this event highlights several direct applications for hydroelectric operators:

  1. Advanced Inflow Forecasting
    Early detection (up to 10 days ahead) enables pre-emptive reservoir drawdown and optimization of storage capacity ahead of peak inflow.

  2. Surplus Flow and Flood Management
    Accurate peak timing supports controlled spillway operations and reduced downstream flood risk.

  3. Generation Optimization
    Reliable inflow forecasts allow operators to maximize generation during high inflow periods and avoid reactive or suboptimal dispatch decisions.

  4. Risk Reduction
    Improved foresight can improve emergency operational responses and reduces infrastructure stress during peak events.

Conclusion

The April 2026 spring freshet event across the Sudbury region illustrates the type of inflow dynamics that hydroelectric operators must manage each year. Even in an unregulated system like the Vermilion River, the observed hydrologic response, driven by snowmelt, rainfall, and basin storage, closely mirrors conditions experienced at hydroelectric reservoirs.

HydroSphereAI’s ability to detect early inflow signals , accurately forecast peak timing and maintain consistency across a multi-day event demonstrates its value as a decision-support tool for hydropower operations. As climate variability increases the uncertainty and intensity of spring inflows across Canada, AI-driven forecasting platforms like HydroSphereAI provide utilities with the actionable intelligence needed to improve reservoir management, optimize generation, and enhance flood resilience.


James Davis Nicoll

Dress You Up / My Dress-Up Darling, volume 1 By Shinichi Fukuda

My Dress-Up Darling, Volume One is the first tankōbon in Shinichi Fukuda’s romantic comedy manga series (tankōbon is titled ​“Sono Bisuku Dōru” in the original Japanese). Dress-Up was serialized in Square Enix’s seinen manga magazine Young Gangan from January 2018 to March 2025.

Although he assures his grandfather that he has friends, high schooler Wakana Gojo is a loner. This is because Gojo has a dreadful secret, a dark passion that he is desperate to ensure none of his classmates ever learn.

Gojo is an aspiring doll-maker.

KW Linux User Group(KWLUG)

2026-05: Incident Response, LibreTime

Thomas Busch discusses how to respond to security incidents. Bob Jonkman discusses how he uses LibreTime to manage the Radio Waterloo radio station. See kwlug.org/node/1463 for additional information, slides and other auxiliary materials. Note that this audio has had silences clipped.


Code Like a Girl

Readability vs. Performance: What Should You Optimize First?

Engineering Beyond Code | Part 5The honest answer is both matter, but not at the same time and not equally.♦Photo by Justin Morgan on Unsplash

Should performance be important? Absolutely yes.
Should it be your starting point? Not really.

I recently ran a poll on LinkedIn where 71% of engineers said they prioritize performance over readability. That instinct isn’t surprising. Performance feels tangible. Faster systems, lower latency, better benchmarks — it’s measurable, visible, and often celebrated.

But here’s the catch: most engineering work doesn’t fail because the code was too slow. It fails because the code was too hard to understand.

Early in your career, this distinction is easy to miss.

You’re drawn to writing clever code. Optimized logic. Compact solutions. It feels like real engineering. But over time, you start realizing that code is not written for machines — it’s written for people who have to read, debug, extend, and trust it.

That’s where readability quietly becomes a force multiplier.

Readable code reduces the time spent deciphering intent. It makes debugging less of a guessing game and more of a structured process. It allows teams to collaborate without constantly reinterpreting each other’s work. And perhaps most importantly, it ages well. Systems evolve, teams change, and requirements shift—but readable code adapts without breaking under its own complexity.

It also has practical advantages that are easy to underestimate. Clean, understandable code lowers onboarding time for new engineers. It reduces the chances of introducing subtle bugs. It makes testing more straightforward. Over time, this directly translates into lower maintenance costs and less technical debt.

That said, performance is not optional — it’s contextual.

There are systems where performance is the product. Real-time gaming, high-frequency trading, large-scale data processing — these domains demand precision and efficiency. In such cases, optimizing code is not premature; it’s essential.

Performance can also unlock real business value. Faster systems can handle more users, reduce infrastructure costs, and provide better user experiences. In competitive environments, these gains matter.

But here’s the nuance most engineers miss: performance should be intentional, not instinctive.

You don’t start with optimization. You start with clarity. You build something correct, understandable, and measurable. Then you identify bottlenecks. Then you optimize—with purpose.

This is what Donald Knuth was pointing to when he said, “Premature optimization is the root of all evil.”
Not that optimization is bad—but that optimizing without context leads to unnecessary complexity with little payoff.

The real skill is not choosing readability over performance or vice versa. It’s knowing when each matters more.

Early in your career, bias toward readability. It will teach you how systems work, how teams collaborate, and how to write code that survives beyond your immediate use case. As you grow, you’ll develop the judgment to selectively optimize where it actually counts.

Because in the end, performance might give you a thrill — the satisfaction of efficiency, speed, and precision.

But readability gives you something far more enduring: stability, clarity, and trust in the systems you build.

And in most real-world systems, that’s what scales.

Readability vs. Performance: What Should You Optimize First? was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

How I Use AI as a Product Data Scientist (A Year In)

The tools, the trade-offs, and the parts of my work I still do myself.♦

I didn’t notice the shift while it was happening.

It only became clear when I looked back at how I worked a year ago compared to now.

The tools changed, but more than that, the nature of what I spend my time on changed, in a way that’s hard to reverse once you see it.

What my work used to look like

A year ago, a large part of my week was operational.

Cleaning data, writing SQL and Python, producing ad-hoc analyses, building dashboards that stakeholders would inevitably come back to and ask me to update.

A lot of repetition, much of it necessary to make sure the final output actually fit their use case.

That layer has started to shift. For me, the change wasn’t from “using AI as a helper” to “using AI more”, it was from using AI as a tool to building agentic skills, MCP servers, LLM applications, as part of my job.

What I actually use, and for what

The fundamentals of my role haven’t changed, but the shape of it has. I’ve gone from a builder of dashboards to a curator of domain context and a builder of AI systems.

  • Codex and Claude Code for generating code, refactoring, and code review. Most of the time it’s faster than writing it myself. Sometimes it’s not, I’ll come back to that. 👀
  • Claude / ChatGPT for first-pass analyses. I feed in a previous analysis and ask it to draft a new one for a similar problem. I still rewrite most of it, but starting from a draft is much easier than starting from a blank page.
  • Agent and skill building for the parts of my work that repeat. Here I’m not the writer of the analysis, I’m the conductor, making sure the AI’s logic aligns with business goals.
The shift I didn’t expect

The bigger change wasn’t speed. It was scope.

A few weeks ago, a UX researcher reached out asking me to help understand a product behavior pattern. The analysis involved building a logistic regression to understand what drives users to return (for a product I don’t own).

A year ago, that kind of cross-functional ask would have required real setup: scoping the work, routing it to a data scientist to do the analysis, even for a proof of concept.

Now, stepping into an adjacent problem is much easier, because execution isn’t the limiting factor anymore. Judgement is.

Our team is also building an LLM-powered internal tool right now, even though none of us are full-stack web developers. The gap between “what I know” and “what I can build” has narrowed, not because we suddenly became experts, but because the execution layer is no longer where the time goes.

And this isn’t unique to data roles. I see engineers building tools outside their main stack, designers prototyping with code, PMs running their own analyses.

The shape of what someone can do at work is changing across the entire workforce.

Where my time actually goes now

Less coding. More everything else.

More time talking to PMs and stakeholders to understand what they need to move faster.

More time on the deep analyses where the pattern looks fine on the surface and only gets interesting when you push on the assumption underneath.

More time deciding what’s even worth building in the first place.

AI is fast at implementation, but it’s not yet reliable at knowing what’s meaningful to pursue. It tends to over-engineer when the context isn’t constrained, so part of my job is now framing the problem tightly enough that the output stays grounded. Strong references in, useful output out.

What I won’t outsource

Even with all this, there are parts of my work I still do myself.

I talk to PMs and stakeholders directly to understand what they actually need before any code gets written. I sanity-check data across sources manually, that’s the kind of work where being wrong is expensive and AI shortcuts haven’t earned my trust yet.

I design the experiments and write the recommendation at the end of an analysis, because AI lacks the domain knowledge to decide which metrics are worth tracking and which trade-offs are worth accepting.

There are also moments where writing the code myself is just faster than waiting for AI to generate and review it. I’ve stopped forcing it.

The point isn’t to use AI for everything, it’s to use it where it actually helps. For small code updates and edits, I let it handle the work. For framing, judgment, and decisions, that part stays mine.

💭 Final Thoughts

When writing code becomes easy, deciding what to build becomes the real bottleneck.

A year ago, you could still get by as a primarily execution-focused data scientist, someone who writes the SQL and python codes, builds the dashboard, answers the request. I don’t think that’s enough anymore.

The value is shifting toward understanding the business, the KPIs, the system behind the product. Toward being the person who uses AI as an execution layer, rather than being the execution layer.

I’ve stopped thinking about it as replacement and started thinking about it as positioning.

That’s the part of the year that actually changed me.

Xoxo,

Kessie 🧚

How I Use AI as a Product Data Scientist (A Year In) was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

Confessions of Building a Digital Wardrobe in C++

By Someone who is trying to learn C++

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »


Code Like a Girl

The Evolution of Cybersecurity: From Simple Defenses to Intelligent Warfare.

Cybersecurity, intrestingly, didn’t start as the complex, high-stakes battlefield you know it today to be. It evolved quietly at first, and then, rapidly.

As technology became deeply braided into every aspect of human life. What began as basic system protection transformed into a continuous, intelligent fight against highly adaptive adversaries.

♦Photo by Boitumelo on UnsplashThe Early Days: When security was simply an afterthought

In the 1970s and 1980s, cybersecurity wasn’t a defined field. Computers were isolated systems, used mainly by governments, research institutions, and large corporations. The primary concern wasn’t external attacks , it was system functionality.

One of the earliest known cybersecurity incidents, the Creeper Virus, was more of an experiment than a threat. It displayed a simple message and spread across ARPANET. Shortly after, the Reaper Program was created to remove it , marking the birth of defensive security.
At this stage, security was minimal, and at large, experimental.

The Internet Era: Rise of Digital Threats

The 1990s changed everything. With the rise of the internet, systems became interconnected — and vulnerable.
Malware evolved from harmless experiments into destructive tools. Attacks like the ILOVEYOU Virus and the Melissa Virus demonstrated how quickly threats could spread globally, causing billions in damage.
This era introduced:

  • Antivirus software as a standard defense.
  • Firewalls to control network traffic.
  • Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS).

However, defenses were still largely signature-based; meaning they could only detect known threats. Attackers quickly learned to stay one step ahead.

The Modern Age: Sophisticated and Persistent Threats

As organizations digitized operations, cyberattacks became more targeted, strategic, and financially motivated and personal.
The emergence of Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) marked a turning point. These weren’t random attacks — they were carefully planned campaigns designed to infiltrate, remain undetected, and extract value over time.
Incidents like Stuxnet showed that cyber warfare had entered the geopolitical stage. Meanwhile, ransomware attacks such as WannaCry disrupted healthcare systems, businesses, and governments worldwide.
Key advancements during this period included:

  • Security Information and Event management (SIEM) systems.
  • Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR).
  • Cloud security frameworks.
  • Zero Trust architecture.

Cybersecurity was no longer just IT’s responsibility — it became a business-critical function.

The AI Revolution: A Double-Edged Sword

Artificial Intelligence is now redefining cybersecurity on both sides of the battlefield.

AI enables:

  • Threat detection at scale through behavioral analysis.
  • Anomaly detection beyond known signatures.
  • Automated response systems that act in real time.
  • Predictive intelligence to anticipate attacks before they occur.
  • Machine learning models can analyze massive datasets far faster than any human team, identifying subtle patterns that signal compromise.
How AI Empowers Attackers

At the same time, attackers are leveraging AI to:

  • Automate phishing campaigns with personalized content.
  • Develop polymorphic malware that constantly changes form.
  • Bypass traditional detection systems.
  • Generate deepfakes for social engineering attacks.

Cybersecurity today is moving toward proactive and intelligence-driven defense. Some of the most impactful advancements include:

  • Zero Trust Security: Never trust, always verify — every access request is continuously validated.
  • Extended Detection and Response (XDR): Unified visibility across endpoints, networks, and cloud.
  • Cloud-Native Security: Protecting dynamic, scalable environments.
  • Threat Intelligence Platforms: Real-time global insights into emerging threats.
  • Security Automation (SOAR): Reducing response time and human error.

Organizations are shifting from “defend the perimeter” to “assume breach and minimize impact.”

♦Photo by Joshua Sortino on UnsplashThe Road Ahead: Cybersecurity as a Continuous Strategy

Cybersecurity is no longer a static solution — it is a continuous, evolving strategy.
The future will likely be defined by fully autonomous security systems, AI-driven cyber defense ecosystems, Increased regulation and global cooperation and a stronger focus on human factors and insider risk.

One thing is clear: cybersecurity is no longer about preventing attacks entirely — that’s unrealistic. It’s about resilience, speed, and adaptability in the face of constant threats.

Final Thoughts

The evolution of cybersecurity reflects a simple realistic truth: as technology advances, so do the risks that come with it.

The journey has been defined by continuous adaptation. Organizations that succeed are not those with the most tools — but those with the ability to evolve as fast as the threats they face.

Enjoyed the article? Give it a clap and share your thoughts in the comments.
Have a different perspective? I’d genuinely like to hear it.
Until then, stay safe and stay secure.😁

The Evolution of Cybersecurity: From Simple Defenses to Intelligent Warfare. was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

From Jira Bug to Draft PR

I wanted bugs filed in Jira to turn into draft pull requests on GitHub without anyone needing to shepherd them through the middle.

That’s the one-line version. The actual version took about two weeks and ended up with four moving parts:

  1. A Lambda that takes a Jira webhook, classifies the ticket, mirrors it as a GitHub issue, and copies attachments to S3.
  2. A triage workflow that generates a repo map and decides, for every freshly opened GitHub issue, whether to assign Copilot coding agent or just post a diagnosis comment.
  3. A log analyser in dev-scripts/ for the heavier path, where attached logs need to be turned into a structured root-cause analysis first.
  4. Copilot coding agent itself, which opens the draft PR.

None of the pieces were especially hard on their own. Each one was some Python, some Terraform, and some agent instructions. The time went into the joins: Jira’s idea of valid JSON, webhook retries, Copilot’s token rules, S3 log links, and a model that decided to ask for more information instead of checking the repo.

So this is the long version. The small annoying bits are most of the story.

The shape♦Stage 1: The Lambda

The Lambda is the boring bit you only notice when it gets something wrong.

When a Jira ticket is created or updated, it receives the webhook, decides whether the ticket is actionable, and opens or updates the matching GitHub issue. It also carries over attachments or S3 links so the GitHub side has enough context to do something useful.

The classifier itself is mostly regexes and form fields. Not glamorous. The parts that slowed me down were the places where Jira, AWS, and GitHub all had slightly different ideas of what “simple webhook” meant.

Webhook payloads are user-controlled JSON, sometimes barely

Jira’s automation rules let you POST a custom JSON body to a URL. You write the body as a template and Jira fills in the values from the ticket. In theory, simple. In practice, the validator that decides whether your template is “valid JSON” is brittle in ways nobody documents.

Things I had to discover the slow way:

  • Some smart-values aren’t supported on every tenant. The literal {{issue.url}} text was being left in the body on mine, breaking the JSON.
  • Array-valued smart-values have to come last in their object, or the validator fails before you can even save.
  • Free-text fields like description blew the body up whenever a user pasted text with control characters or unescaped quotes.

I ended up bisecting the body field by field, saving the rule each time, until I found which smart-value was breaking it. The validator’s error message is basically the same regardless of which line is wrong.

What I now do by default: send the smallest possible payload — usually just the ticket key — and have the Lambda fetch everything else via the Jira API. One extra call per webhook is free. Debugging the validator is not.

Make it safe to retry, then assume it will be

Webhooks have at-least-once delivery. The Lambda can see the same event twice, see an update while a previous run is still in flight, or trigger itself by editing the same ticket. None of those should create duplicate GitHub issues or comments.

Three mechanisms, roughly:

  • A hash of the classification result, written back to the ticket. If the new hash matches the stored one, skip everything.
  • A sentinel label that says “the classifier just touched this.” The Jira rule excludes that label so the Lambda’s own writes don’t loop.
  • Reading the existing GitHub-issue mapping on every event, not just on updates.
Stage 2: The triage layer

By the time I reached the GitHub-issue side, the Lambda was mirroring tickets reliably enough that the next question was obvious: can Copilot do anything useful with them?

The naive plan was: assign Copilot coding agent to every issue the Lambda creates, let Copilot figure it out.

That plan falls over as soon as the first vague ticket arrives. Copilot coding agent is not a triage tool.

What Copilot coding agent actually does

When you assign Copilot to an issue, it:

  1. Reads the issue body and existing comments at the moment of assignment.
  2. Researches the repo in its own GitHub Actions VM.
  3. Drafts a plan.
  4. Opens a draft PR — success or otherwise.
  5. Requests review.

What it does not do:

  • Post “I need more info before I try”
  • Decide the issue isn’t fixable and abstain
  • Use your domain-specific tooling
  • Read comments added after assignment

If the issue is vague, you get a low-quality draft PR you’ll close. If the issue is a duplicate, you get a draft PR. If it’s a “the docs don’t make sense” question, you get a draft PR for that too.

Useful tool. Wrong contract for “triage every opened issue.”

The three-way decision

What I actually needed before Copilot ran was a small decision point:

ClassificationActionauto_fixableAssign Copilot, let it open a draft PRneeds_infoComment listing what's missing, don't assigndiagnosis_onlyComment with root cause + workaround, don't assign

Copilot only fires when there is a real fix to make and enough information to make it. Everything else gets a comment and stops there.

The triage model is Claude Sonnet 4.6 routed through the Copilot SDK: same billing surface as the coding agent, but chat completions instead of the cloud agent. In practice the pipeline uses two different shapes of agent. Claude does the messy issue reasoning. Copilot coding agent does the repo-aware code edit.

The token maze

This is the part I would shortcut hardest if I started over.

Copilot SDK has its own auth contract, separate from regular GitHub auth. The SDK does not accept:

  • GITHUB_TOKEN (the built-in Actions token)
  • ghp_* classic PATs
  • ghs_* GitHub App installation tokens

It accepts:

  • gho_* OAuth user tokens
  • ghu_* GitHub App user tokens
  • github_pat_* fine-grained PATs with Copilot Requests: Read

The fine-grained PAT path looks easy until you discover that org-owned fine-grained PATs don’t expose the Copilot Requests permission. There’s an open GitHub issue about it. If your repo is in an org, that path is blocked.

The OAuth route works but requires running a device flow, which is annoying when what you want is “give CI a secret and move on”. After two days of permission spelunking, I found the shortcut: the ghu_* token already exists on any machine signed into Copilot. It's sitting in ~/.config/github-copilot/apps.json. Pull it out, drop it into a secret, done.

That’s the SDK token. Then there’s the assignment token.

The Copilot coding agent assignment goes through a separate GraphQL call (replaceActorsForAssignable), and that one needs a PAT that can see Copilot in suggestedActors. The Actions GITHUB_TOKEN cannot — GitHub explicitly filters Copilot out of suggested actors for the Actions identity. This is by design: the same loop-prevention rule that stops Actions from triggering other Actions.

So I tried to consolidate. Use GITHUB_TOKEN for assignment, simpler workflow, fewer secrets. The error was crisp:

Copilot is not in suggestedActors — coding agent is not enabled
for this repository, or the token lacks the scope to see it.

Coding agent was enabled. The token just couldn’t see it.

Final shape: three tokens.

SecretWhat it doesToken typeCOPILOT_SDK_TOKENTriage + log analysis (Copilot SDK inference)ghu_* from local CopilotCOPILOT_ASSIGN_TOKENAssign coding agent to issueFine-grained PAT, repo-scopedGITHUB_TOKENComments, labels, gist fetchesBuilt-in Actions token

Three tokens for three different jobs. Annoying, but at least explicit.

The two paths

Once auth was out of the way, the workflow branched on a label:

TriggerPathissues.opened (no label)Generate repo map → Claude triage → comment → maybe assignlabeled: analyze-logsDownload log → run log_analyze.py → log-triage comment → maybe assign

Path A is cheap. The repo map gives the model project layout, Claude classifies the issue, and assignment is gated on confidence >= 0.7.

Path B is heavy. The Lambda renders log attachments as markdown links to S3 pre-signed URLs. When the analyze-logs label gets added, the workflow downloads the log and runs the multi-agent log analyser from stage 3. That already produces root_cause, possible_fixes, and code references, so there is no point asking a smaller triage prompt to rediscover the same thing.

Most issues take Path A. The expensive path only runs when there is a log worth spending time on.

Grounding the triage

The fix was not a smarter model. It was making the procedure less optional.

I’d already given the triage agent the same search_repo and read_repo_file tools that log_analyze.py uses. Tools alone weren't enough. The model treated them as optional. So the prompt got a numbered procedure:

  1. Extract every identifier from the issue body
  2. search_repo each one
  3. Follow the path-chain: registry → template → implementation
  4. read_repo_file to confirm the leaf
  5. Only then classify

I also added a small set of owner-to-file routing rules that I had internalised but the model had not. Things like “templates owned by namespace A live in config X, namespace B lives in config Y”. Encoding those cut a whole class of “model guessed the wrong file” misses.

Then citation discipline. diagnosis and copilot_instructions must include file:line references with before/after values, not vague paths. Vague paths gave Copilot a worse starting position than no instructions at all.

And one carve-out. The original needs_info rubric was too bug-report-shaped: repro steps, expected vs actual, environment. That is right for a crash, but wrong for a change request like "bump version to 7" or "rename flag X to Y". Those have no repro steps because they do not need any. The model was pattern-matching on missing bug fields and refusing to classify obvious edits as fixable. The carve-out is simple: when the body names an explicit target value, do not demand a repro before considering auto_fixable.

After all four edits, the same issue went auto_fixable → assign Copilot → draft PR. Copilot still does the work. The triage layer just stops getting in its way.

Single LLM vs orchestrated pipeline

I wrote about this gap before, in Computer Says No. It applies here too.

A vanilla LLM call on the issue body would have classified needs_info and stayed there forever: no tools, no grounding, no way to verify. The orchestrated version reads actual files, traces actual chains, and only then decides. Same model. Different shape.

The annoying part is that Copilot coding agent already does this internally. It researches the repo before drafting. That’s why assigning it directly worked on some issues my own triage was bouncing. The triage layer needed the same kind of grounding before deciding whether to hand off. Otherwise it was just a worse version of Copilot gating a better version of itself.

Once I made the triage agent use its tools the way Copilot uses its own, the pipeline started behaving the way I wanted: most issues either get a useful comment or a draft PR within minutes of opening.

Stage 3: The log analyser

Stage 3 is the heavy path the triage layer hands off to. I built it before the triage layer existed, because the bugs that mattered were arriving as megabyte-sized application logs and reading them by hand was killing my afternoons. By the time I needed a triage agent, this tool was already doing useful work.

The shape:

♦The split that matters

The line I kept coming back to was: deterministic where it can be, model-driven where it has to be. If you can compute something from the log without judgement, compute it. If it needs judgement, give it to a model with grounded tools. Try not to blur the two.

What that meant in practice:

  • Actor detection. Logs contain both the orchestrator side and the worker side, sometimes on the same machine, both logging under the same [orchestrator] tag. A regex over thread-name patterns determines which actors are present and which one to prioritise (worker-side first, because that's where root causes live). No model involved.
  • Window selection. Logs are 50–100 MB. Models can’t usefully read the whole thing. The deterministic layer offers anchors such as last_task, last_abort, and last_traceback, then slices the relevant ~500 lines. The model never sees the rest unless it asks for more.
  • Evidence ranking. Within the window, traceback frames beat worker-side exceptions beat protocol-level exceptions beat task-abort summaries beat generic warnings. This priority is hard-coded; the model can override it only with explicit reasoning. Without this, models default to “the first ERROR line is the cause” and you get diagnoses that point at the wrapper.
  • File reference extraction. If the log mentions sdk/foo/bar.py:247, the deterministic layer captures that and pre-loads the file as context. The model doesn't have to figure out it's relevant.

By the time the scout agent runs, it is looking at a couple hundred lines of high-signal log plus pre-resolved file references. Not the raw log. Not a generic instruction to “find the bug.”

The agent stack

The analyser uses three separate Copilot SDK sessions, with a different model for each role:

RoleModelWhyScoutgpt-5-miniCheap. Plans which files/searches matter. Doesn't need to reason deeply.Analystclaude-opus-4.6Strong. Does the actual root-cause reasoning with grounded repo tools.Reviewergpt-5.4Strong, different family. Challenges the analyst. Up to three rounds of disagreement.

The reviewer loop is the part I am most attached to. Without it, the analyst picks an answer and you take it. With it, the reviewer either accepts or sends a structured “no, here’s why I disagree” back to the analyst, which reruns with that as additional context. After three rounds, whatever they converge on is the answer. If they still disagree, an optional orchestrator model reconciles.

This is more expensive than a single-model call. It is also much better on the awkward 15–20% of investigations where the first-pass answer is plausible but wrong.

The tools, for real

The agents don’t get “use search_repo” as a hint. They get actual SDK-defined tools backed by Python implementations:

search_tool = define_tool(
"search_repo",
description=(
"Search the monorepo for lines matching regex patterns. "
"Use this to find relevant code when the supplied evidence is "
"insufficient to diagnose the issue."
),
handler=_handle_search_repo,
params_type=SearchRepoParams,
skip_permission=True,
)

_handle_search_repo does a real ripgrep-style scan over the checked-out repo, returns hits with path, line, text. read_repo_file reads bounded snippets (default 40 lines of context) from a file the model names. Path resolution allows relative paths or unique-filename suffixes — the model can ask for dataframe.py and the tool finds sdk/data/sources/dataframe.py if it's the only match.

The bound repo_root matters. The tool can't escape the checkout (path traversal blocked at the resolver layer), can't read absolute paths, can't see ignored directories. Read-only by construction. The agent has every relevant lookup it needs and zero ability to do anything destructive.

This is what makes the analyst’s diagnoses grounded. Every file path it cites came from a real read_repo_file result. Every code reference was a real search_repo hit. The output is still model-synthesised, but the raw material is real.

The instruction file

Domain rules about how to read these specific logs aren’t in code; they live in log_analyze_instructions.md, loaded automatically and appended to every agent's system prompt. The file is short, opinionated, and mostly negative — it tells the models what not to do:

  • “Treat GenericAbortError as a wrapper unless deeper evidence is missing."
  • “Do not report wrapper messages as the root cause if the selected window contains earlier causal evidence.”
  • “Prefer multiple small targeted investigations over one large unfocused pass.”
  • “If the model owner is not internal, bias toward the model input path, not opaque model internals.”

These were learnt the expensive way. The first version of the analyser kept reporting “GenericAbortError” as the root cause for every failure. Technically true, completely useless. The wrapper-error rule fixed that. The third-party model rule came after watching the analyst speculate about model internals it could not read, when the actual bug was in the data pipeline feeding the model.

The rule I took from this: domain knowledge belongs in instructions, not code. Encode the rule once in markdown and every agent in the stack inherits it. The --agent-instruction and --agent-instruction-file flags let me steer per-run without editing the repo.

Streaming and timeouts

Each SDK call has a timeout: 180s for scout, 420s for analysis/review. They also use streaming events. Streaming matters for two reasons: progress logs appear in stderr while the model is still thinking, and if a turn times out before completing, the partial content can often be salvaged instead of throwing the whole investigation away.

The fallback chain when a turn times out:

  1. Did we get a final assistant message before timeout? Use it.
  2. Did we accumulate any streamed parts? Concatenate and use them.
  3. Can we read the latest assistant message from session history? Use that.
  4. None of the above? Raise — the run is genuinely lost.

I built this after the third time a seven-minute analysis call basically succeeded but threw on the timeout boundary. The work was done; the SDK just had not formally closed the turn. The fallbacks recover that work.

What came out of building it

log_analyze.py taught me most of what the triage agent in stage 2 needed:

  • Tools beat prompts. Give the model real search_repo and read_repo_file, not a description.
  • Deterministic preprocessing wins. Don’t make the model read 50 MB; pre-rank evidence and slice the window.
  • Domain rules go in instructions, not code.
  • Multi-agent isn’t just “more is better” — it’s specifically scout-cheap, analyst-strong, reviewer-different-family.
  • Defensive parsing is part of the contract.
  • Streaming + timeout-fallback turns flaky into robust.

The triage layer reuses build_repo_tools() directly. It shares the same search_repo / read_repo_file implementations as the analyst. It gets the same grounding for free. That code reuse is why the triage prompt can stay fairly short: the heavy lifting is in tools the analyser already proved out.

Stage 4: Copilot assignment and draft PR

If you made it here, thank you. This is actually the easy part.

Once an issue is deemed auto_fixable, the workflow assigns Copilot coding agent. It analyses the request in the cloud agent environment and opens a draft PR.

The thing I like is that there is still a human review point, just later. The workflow does not merge code. It only spends Copilot/GitHub minutes when the triage layer thinks there is a real edit to make.

Some open questions readers might have

Why not use an off-the-shelf tool? The simple answer is that I didn’t want to. I had fun building this, and I learnt more by sitting in the annoying bits myself.

Could something like n8n have done this instead? Yes and no. It could have saved me time on the boring routing parts, and would have been a great choice if the pipeline was “Jira event in, GitHub issue out, maybe a Slack ping”. I still would have had to do my own work for the AWS infrastructure, the agent grounding needs custom code, and the Copilot auth dance still needs extra hip movement. I preferred the learning curve to be focused on building blocks rather than tools.

Why Jira? It is the workflow tool my company already uses. I wanted to minimise friction for non-engineer colleagues.

Why GitHub Copilot instead of OpenAI or Anthropic directly? Our code already lives in GitHub and we already have Copilot enabled, so it felt natural to try that route first.

Why do the S3 dance for logs? The bug reports already arrive with S3 links pointing to the relevant logs. Whatever orchestration tool I picked, I still had to get the logs out of S3 and into the analysis path.

Where it lands

The end-state is a pipeline that, on every Jira bug:

  • Mirrors the ticket to a GitHub issue with the right team’s repo
  • Mirrors any attachments to S3 with pre-signed URLs in the GitHub issue body
  • Generates a repo map for grounding
  • Routes the GitHub issue through Claude triage (cheap path) or log_analyze.py (heavy path)
  • Posts a structured diagnosis comment
  • Conditionally assigns Copilot coding agent when the issue is auto-fixable with high confidence
  • Marks the issue auto-triaged to prevent double-handling
  • Re-classifies and cross-repo-moves cleanly when the team label changes
  • No-ops idempotently when nothing’s changed

Two LLMs, three tokens, two paths, one Lambda, one workflow. Most of the value isn’t in the model calls — it’s in the gates between them.

If you’re doing something similar: don’t try to make Copilot coding agent a triage tool. It’s a fix tool. Build the triage layer separately, and let it decide whether to hand off.

And if you’re plumbing webhooks into AWS and wondering why your auth isn’t working — curl it directly, layer by layer. The error code you see in the audit log is rarely from the layer you think it is.

Have you wired Copilot agents into a custom workflow? I’d love to hear what auth maze you got stuck in — and whether your triage layer is gating better than mine.

From Jira Bug to Draft PR was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


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Why Creative Women in Nature-Tech Change the World Right Now

And neurodiverse youngsters too

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I Thought Dark Mode Was Just a Toggle. It Turned Into a Full-System Refactor

My website was technically done. So I thought: let’s just add one more thing.

Dark mode.

Developers love that right? I didn’t even use that many colors — it should be quick to swap them around.

And yet, it turned into a full-system refactor: it was typography, code highlighting, images and rendering behavior.

The first problem: hardcoded colors

The problem showed up immediately: the few colors I used were hardcoded everywhere. A heading had one hex value, and a paragraph had another. Changing the theme meant updating each instance manually. No, thank you.

The fix

So I introduced CSS variables and defined colors by their roles.

  • --text-primary
  • --text-secondary
  • --background-primary
  • --border

With this, a heading wasn’t “black” anymore. It was text-primary. A background wasn’t “white”. It was background-primary.

This sounds like a small change but it fundamentally changed how I approached styling. I stopped thinking in terms of individual colors across themes and focused instead on the role and intention of each element, with color as just an implementation detail.

At this point, I thought I was mostly done. I wasn’t even close.

Dark mode is not black

With a color system in place, the next step seemed obvious and trivial: invert it. Just change black to white and white to black.

Except it looked terrible. Who would’ve thought that having white text on black would feel so… bright? It was harsh and fatiguing. Everything started blending together — almost like I had suddenly developed astigmatism.

Turns out dark mode isn’t black and white. Maximum contrast does not make text readable.

The fix

Shades of grey.

Instead of pure white, I switched to light grey and text was miraculously legible again. For secondary text, an even softer grey.

Good dark mode was about tuning contrast, making it proportionate and layered.

And that’s all my problems solved, said no one ever.

♦White text on black was too much contrast on my screen. I felt it in my eyes.♦Subtle change to reduce contrast, making it easier to read over a longer period of timeEvery surface breaks differently

Even after fixing colors, the UI was still inconsistent. Different parts of the website broke in different ways

Typography (Tailwind)

I was using Tailwind’s typography plugin (prose) for my writing pages. It worked well in light mode. But once I introduced my own variables, things started conflicting. Headings, links, and inline elements were all pulling from Tailwind’s internal color definitions instead of mine.

Some styles updated, others didn’t. Fixing one element would break another. The abstraction broke down, and the complexity I’d tried to hide came rushing back.

The fix

I explicitly mapped Tailwind’s typography variables to my own. Instead of relying on defaults, I treated typography as part of my system.

Once everything pointed back to the same set of variables, things became predictable again.

Code syntax highlighting

I use a lot of code snippets, especially in my JavaScript event loop article series. Dark mode introduced a new inconsistency with code syntax highlighting:

  • Github light theme was unreadable in dark mode
  • Github dark theme didn’t look great in light mode

Who would’ve thought?

For a while, I assumed I had to pick one.

♦Github’s light theme in dark mode was impossible to read♦Github’s dark theme in light mode looked washed outThe fix

Use both and switch dynamically based on the mode. It sounds pretty obvious now, but at the time, I genuinely thought I had to choose.

Images

Images introduced a different kind of problem. Some worked fine. Others didn’t translate at all.

My hero image is of a sunrise. From the start, I imagined using a sunset version for dark mode. Did I create dark mode just so that I can use this image? Maybe.

Thankfully, this was easily implemented by including both images and switching between them based on the mode.

But my SVG diagrams were harder. I tried making their colors dynamic using CSS variables but it didn’t work reliably.

The fix

Instead of forcing everything to be dynamic, I created two versions of each diagram, one for each mode. It felt less elegant at first, but it worked better. Not everything should be dynamically styled.

♦Diagrams designed for light mode don’t translate automatically.The problem wasn’t only styling — it was timing too

After fixing all that, I refreshed the page for my moment of victory. A flash of light mode appeared before it switched to dark. It was subtle, but definitely there. And yes, the temptation to pretend that didn’t happen was definitely there too.

The browser was rendering before the correct theme was applied. By the time JavaScript the correct theme was set, the browser had already painted the wrong one.

♦The flash: light mode renders before dark mode is appliedThe fix

The theme needed to be determined before rendering. Moving the theme logic earlier removed the flash entirely. It was a small change technically, but it had a big impact on how the site felt.

What this changed for me

I thought I was adding a feature: a toggle button and a visual enhancement that sits on top of everything else.

But dark mode didn’t sit on top of my UI. It ran through it and every part of the system had to agree. None of the above was individually difficult. But together, they revealed that dark mode was a system and one that needs to be designed intentionally.

If you’re implementing dark mode

A few things I wish I knew earlier:

  • Define colors by role, not value
  • Avoid extreme contrast
  • Treat typography as part of your system
  • Don’t force everything to be dynamic
  • Handle theme selection before render

If you’re curious, the full implementation and visuals are on my site. This article was also originally published there.

I Thought Dark Mode Was Just a Toggle. It Turned Into a Full-System Refactor was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


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Fearless Female (May): Dorothy Zubel

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 May is Dorothy Zubel, Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer of The Finance Group.

Dorothy Zubel is the Co-Founder and CEO of The Finance Group, where she leads the vision to redefine the future of finance through an insights-driven, technology-enabled model.

With over 15 years of experience across accounting, finance, and systems implementation, Dorothy has held senior finance roles at small, mid-sized, and large organizations. Today, her focus has evolved from client advisory to building a modern finance firm that leverages technology, including AI, to reduce reliance on manual processes and elevate the role of finance professionals.

Dorothy is passionate about transforming finance from a reactive, compliance-driven function into a proactive, insight-led discipline that delivers clarity, confidence, and peace of mind to business leaders. She is equally committed to breaking the glass ceiling for women in finance, creating opportunities for the next generation of leaders to thrive in a more innovative and inclusive industry.

As CEO, Dorothy is focused on scaling a values-driven organization that combines people, process, and technology to deliver meaningful impact — both for clients and within the profession itself.

Outside of work, she enjoys spending time with her family, traveling, and exploring new parts of the world.

To learn more about Dorothy journey as a Fearless Female, watch the interview below (or read the written format).

Tell us more about The Finance Group and your role at the company.

The Finance Group is a fractional finance firm. We’ve been around for about four years, but I’ve been working in the fractional finance world for about 12 years.

I came from corporate finance, and when I entered the fractional finance world, I noticed it was transactional in nature. A lot of people were just posting entries and spitting out financials to business owners, and business owners really weren’t getting the insights they needed into their finances. And so, I started delivering services in the fractional finance world the way I did in corporate finance, which was finding efficiencies, cost savings, teaching leadership how to read financial statements, and that really resonated and made a difference to the business owners that I was working with.

I subsequently met my business partner, Donna Gleha, and we wanted to bring that vision of fractional finance to a larger audience, and so we launched The Finance Group four years ago.

What inspired you to pursue the finance field?

Originally, I started working really young. So, I started my working career in retail and became a manager of a retail store and realized I enjoyed business but didn’t see a future in retail. It was grueling hours. So, I went back to university, and I did my Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Toronto, which led me to accounting and finance. After graduating from university, I started working with Enterprise Rent-A-Car because I loved their promote from within culture, as well as their leadership development program.

And so, keeping with that, within about seven months of working there, I was hired into their accounting department, and that’s where my real accounting journey began, really learning the ropes, so starting from the ground up, and was able to kind of move and develop through that role as well, and ultimately loved the fact that they taught their branch leaders and branch managers the financials to each branch and how it operated and their profitability. And that allowed those branch managers to effectively manage the branches and to really drive profitability of each individual branch.

And that kind of style I loved. I thought every owner should know how they’re doing, and so that’s what ultimately served me throughout my career, is making sure there was a deep understanding of the financials for most business owners.

How did your experience at University of Toronto prepare you for a leadership role?

Yeah, so a couple things. I mean, after university and after joining Enterprise, I did do my CPA. I was fortunate enough to do my CPA when it was the CMA, and they had a rigorous two-year, like, case program where you would analyze companies and how they were doing. I found that work fascinating.

And, you know, even coming up in my career through Enterprise, I was overseeing people as I kind of grew up, grew in roles there, and then ultimately started working in other small, medium businesses where I had a team reporting to myself, and that allowed me to develop some of my leadership style. Further to that, I think everything is about learning and growth, so I also work closely with a leadership coach where I continue to foster my leadership skills and my ability to be a successful CEO.

What are some of your accomplishments so far?

First off, I think I’m proud of the path I took in terms of taking a step back from regular corporate finance into fractional finance 12 years ago. I received a lot of discouragement from that strategy, and for me it was an extremely successful journey and an extremely empowering journey. And then, you know, obviously a huge milestone for me four years ago with my business partner Donna Gleha, launching the finance group and, you know, us able, being able to grow the business today with over 40 employees and continuing to grow is a huge milestone for us, and we’re extremely proud of it.

What are some of the challenges that you have faced so far?

So, as you’re scaling a business, there’s always challenges that you encounter. You know, we’ve had challenges from not always hiring the right people, from having cash compression issues, as well as not having the correct systems processes in place, you know, as we’re scaling the business. So over the four years, you know, when those opportunities have happened, I call them opportunities, you know, we’ve worked on not dwelling on the mistakes we’ve made, but instead recognizing how that mistake was made and taking corrective action to avoid it going into the future so that we can hit the bumps in the road, not have a car crash, but keep moving and looking at those in the rear view.

If you could go back in time, would you do anything differently?

I don’t think life is about regrets. I think life is about learning and growing from the decisions that you make. And I truly think that, you know, where I am today is where I am because of the path I took.

And so, if I were wanting to change something, it would take me on a different path. And who knows where that would lead?

What are some of the tools you used to grow as a leader?

You know, in part of my journey, even early on in my career, I sat as treasurer of my daughter’s co-op school, in which case for four years, I sat there and we relocated a school, applied for funding and moved to school. So, I don’t take anything half-heartedly.

So that community involvement really helped to keep that school going. So, it’s still open today because of those efforts, because based on their financial positioning, they wouldn’t have been able to sustain that.

I’m part of a peer group through Tech Canada. That team has been fantastic in terms of helping navigate challenges and to bounce ideas from, you know, it can be lonely at the top, so having that peer group. My leadership coach has been huge. And I would say two other things.

One is I have very great partnerships in my life, and that’s not just in my business, but also with my husband, who I’ve been married to for over 25 years, and my business partner, Donna Gleha, who, you know, we very much complement each other, have a lot of respect for each other, and more importantly, we’re also friends. So, I think all those things combined helped to get us to where we are today and get me to where I am today.

How do you define success?

I define success very differently than I would have said in the beginning of my career. You know, I think when you’re young, I think you’re pursuing the financial aspects of success. I’ve realized as I’ve gotten further along in my career and in launching the finance group, I get more satisfaction or view success through the lens of how we’re impacting the businesses we serve. I love to see the growth in the individuals who work on our teams and seeing them step into those leadership positions themselves, as well as I love alignment with my family and my work. Those are the things I really see as driving success now.

What are some of the core values that you have integrated into your business?

So, the core values that drive me are the same ones we have in our business, which are trust, integrity, accountability, curiosity, and being self-directed. You know, trust being the foundation to anything. You can’t start a relationship, you can’t work in finance, as well as in any relationship without that basis of trust. Those are businesses that are entrusting you with their financial position, and so we take that very seriously. Integrity and accountability kind of go hand in hand.

You know, you have to deliver on what you’re promising to deliver on, and you must stay true to, you know, the core self and to the business values. But what I find that really drives me is curiosity. That need to constantly learn and grow as a person and those around me, so I’m constantly the sharer of information, and that’s a value that I find has served me, and I continue to see it serve me throughout my career.

What are some of the strategies that you use to recruit talent and build teams?

The same way we approach fractional finance in terms of, you know, really making it feel like a shared services or an extension of our client’s team, we take the same approach in finance. Many finance people have been lonely throughout their career because they’re usually the last ones at the top of the food chain in accounting, and people come to them for answers, and the buck stops there. So, when they join the finance group, what they get is camaraderie and collaboration, something that they’ve been hungry for in the past.

So, we do really drive change through that. We work hard to build our teams. We invest in our teams and their growth.

We spend a lot of times having people understand what drives them, what makes them tick by using Colby and EQI as metrics and training through those. So that’s how we really build a strong team environment internally, and especially as a remote team, we must put an even higher focus on that.

I’ve been blessed that my business partner, Donna Gleha, was an expert in this sector. She sat in finance recruiting for many, many years, and so she has the unique talent of going and attracting that talent and finding the talent. And then for every 70 people we might interview, it’s only one person who’s really getting hired just because of how rigorous our process is to make sure that we’re equipping our clients with the highest caliber of individuals out there.

What are some of the benefits of establishing your business in Waterloo Region?

So, I would say the benefit of the Waterloo Region is obviously there’s a high concentration of our ICP, our ideal customer profile, right? There’s a lot of small and mid-sized businesses here, and the ones that I’ve worked with are really interested in growth, really interested in reaching that national stage.

And so, I’m always excited to work with, and so is my team, to work with business owners who are really looking to grow and expand and looking for that real financial basis to do that.

What inspires you?

It’s just making a difference. It’s making a difference in the companies that we serve our people. People are huge for me. I want to make sure we’re serving our people well. You would notice if you went to our website, we’re probably about a 25% to 75% split men to women, so we have predominantly women.

Part of what we do is really breaking that glass ceiling for women in finance as well. So, a lot of our leadership training, that’s kind of been one-size-fit-all in the past for people. We make sure that that’s going to resonate with both groups and that they’re able to lead effectively going forward and have the training that actually suits their style.

Did you see any differences as a women climbing the corporate ladder?

Absolutely. When you’re a woman coming up in the ranks in finance and accounting, there was a glass ceiling that you push up against. When you’re having children, there’s always that limiting talk around executives.

And so, I’ve seen lots of women who’ve been overlooked, not because they’re not capable or not because they don’t have the same skill sets, but maybe they’re not as loud or as vocal about their accomplishments as their male counterparts, which has held them back. So, this isn’t just a journey about saying, you know, women being held back. It’s also, you know, how do we help women and empower them to show up in the way that they need to, to be recognized for the skill sets that they have.

What advice would you give to other aspiring female entrepreneurs?

There was an interesting, and I’ll bring in a book. Malcolm Gladwell’s book, Revenge of the Tipping Point, talks about the 25% representation that must be in any group for voices to be heard. What we still see is a big disparity of females on executive teams, still not even close to that 25% voice.

So even as we break through the glass ceiling and those women get invited to the table, we’re still, it’s going to take time to build up to the 25%, you know, ratio to have your voice heard. So, what I would say to women is it’s not about being like a man. I would say if you can lead through curiosity and you can have, bring those difficult questions to the table that have the leadership to thinking in different ways, then you will be able to provide change and value to those organizations that you’re serving.

You don’t have to be the loudest, you don’t have to, but you can do it through curiosity and gain the same results.

What are some of the goals that you have for the future?

Yeah, we’d like to become one of the best-known fractional finance teams out there. That’s ultimately, you know, our goal to grow this business.

We’ve grown by 50% year over year, and we intend to keep growing at that rate. But more importantly, we want to make sure we’re keeping within our purpose of bringing that insights-based finance and that real rigor and structure and using technology and being, you know, on the forefront of finance to the businesses that we’re serving. We just started launching webinars, so we’re doing webinars for people to attend.

So, you know, check us out on LinkedIn and you’ll see links to those webinars there or reach out to me. I’ll have my contact info. And also, you know, as you’ll see over the next three to four years, AI is going to be transformational in finance, and the finance group is dedicated to making sure that they’re on top of those changes in technology.

And so, if you are looking to streamline or fix your finance department or make it more scalable, I encourage you to reach out to us to see how we might be able to support you.

What financial advice would you give to other business owners?

The challenge that I see for business owners is, that they are scared digging into or know much about their financial statements then get held back from getting funding from banks because they can’t tell the story of their business through their financial reporting. And so, having a strong financial reporting is key and one that really reflects their business. It should be a decision-making report they are receiving and if it’s not what they are getting, they probably need to explore how they can get what they need.

Where can viewers find out more about your business?

Go to our website or email me directly at: Dorothy.zubel@thefinancegroup-global.com

The post Fearless Female (May): Dorothy Zubel appeared first on Greater KW Chamber of Commerce.


Elmira Advocate

GROWTH AT ANY COST MANTRA

 

All around the world economic growth continues to be the alleged panacea of all our ills. Which is complete nonsense even on the face of it. Yes it would be nice to have enough food, water, shelter, health care etc. for everyone on the planet but it is an impossible task getting worse everyday. Why is that you ask? Well there are more and more people on the same size planet everyday. There is however not an automatic and corresponding increase in those life sustaining items everyday as the population continues to grow.  Combined with that is the fact that economic growth at least partially depends on population growth. In other words it's a case of having an ever expanding market for your goods be they foodstuffs, clothing or automobiles.

Population growth leads to some awful environmental problems from basic dumping and overflows from sewage treatment plants into our lakes and rivers as well as forest removal in order to grow more food for more people. Then of course we have climate change which certainly is attributed to more petroleum uses whether for heating our homes or running cars and trucks delivering more products to more people. Climate change including rising ocean levels as ice caps melt is causing havoc with flooding of coastal towns and cities. Greater heat worldwide is causing massive increases in both the numbers and magnitude of violent weather events resulting in more hurricanes and tornados destroying property and lives. Both droughts and floods are increasing in numbers and both affect food production which is already under stress.

Water shortages used to be an issue in third world countries. Now countries are looking for water sources outside their own borders. Water, whether groundwater or surface water, is in greater demand even as our industries continue to ignore pollution laws with little or no public recourse against them. Here in Elmira the now responsible chemical company are bragging about their fine "cleanup" work even as the Ministry of Environment rewrites the Control Order (1991) that was supposed to restore our local aquifers destroyed by Uniroyal Chemical. The deadline is 2028 and it won't happen although desperation may cause attempts to reopen parts of the aquifer to drinking water pumping while pretending to isolate other more contaminated parts. 

This is all our futures unless growth is more seriously limited and supervised. 



James Davis Nicoll

Singing Loud / Tripoint (Company Wars, volume 6) By C J Cherryh

C. J. Cherryh’s 1994 Tripoint is a stand-alone space opera. Tripoint is the sixth of Cherryh’s Company Wars books.

Twenty years ago, Austin Bowe of the ship Corinthian raped Marie Hawkins of the Sprite. Political considerations precluded any meaningful punishment for Austin or recompense for Marie. Marie was left with a son — Tom — and a burning desire for revenge.

Corinthian and Sprite being docked at Viking1 station, perhaps the time has finally come for vengeance.

The Backing Bookworm

Lady Tremaine


When I saw that this book was a retelling of Cinderella but from the 'wicked stepmother's perspective, I snagged a library copy. 
The Reese sticker on the front should have warned me off.
This book had an interesting premise but didn't deliver. Initially I was intrigued with getting the evil stepmother's perspective and perhaps seeing Cinderella in a new (and negative) light, giving credence to the stepmother's poor treatment of her stepdaughter. 
But the first third of the book is dull, excessively wordy with a weak plot and an ending that's tacked on like a bookish Hail Mary. I assume it was added to give some much needed (yet icky - iykyk) oomph to a slow-moving story that didn't have enough of the original fairy tale in it. 
I'm not sure what the author was trying to do here but it didn't work for me. Who is the reader supposed to root for? Ethel? Personally, I loved Sigrid (and Lucy the hawk) and that's not a good sign. 
Final Thoughts: Premise with potential. Awkward and uneven execution. It's a nope for me but I'm in the minority. 


My Rating: 2.5 starsAuthor: Rachel HochhauserGenre: Historical Fiction, RetellingType and Source: Hardcover from public libraryPublisher: St Martin's PressFirst Published: March 3, 2026Read: April 16-19, 2026

Book Description from GoodReads: A breathtaking reimagining of Cinderella, as told through the eyes of its iconic "evil" stepmother, revealing a propulsive love story about the lengths a mother will go to for her children
A widow twice-over, Etheldreda is now saddled with the care of her two children, a priggish stepdaughter, and a razor-taloned peregrine falcon. Her entire life has become a ruse, just like the manor hall they live grand and ornate on the exterior, but crumbling, brick by brick, inside. Fierce in the face of her misfortune, Ethel clings to her family’s respectability, the lifeboat that will float her daughters straight into the secure banks of marriage.

When a royal ball offers the chance to secure the future she desperately desires, Etheldreda must risk her secrets, pride, and limited resources in pursuit of an invitation for her daughters—only to see her hopes fulfilled by the wrong one. As an engagement to the heir of the kingdom unfolds with unnerving speed, she discovers a sordid secret hidden in the depths of the royal family, forcing her to choose between the security she’s sought for years and the wellbeing of the feckless stepdaughter who has rebuffed her at every turn.

As if Bridgerton met Circe, and exhilarating to its core, Lady Tremaine reimagines the myth of the evil stepmother at the heart of the world’s most famous fairytale. It is a battle cry for a mother’s love for her daughters, and a celebration of women everywhere who make their own fortunes.


Catherine Fife MPP

MPP Fife calls for Lydia’s Law, warns survivors cannot be silenced again

WATERLOO — Ontario NDP MPP Catherine Fife is renewing her call for Lydia’s Law following the Sloka verdict, urging the government to act on long-overdue reforms to support and bring justice to survivors of sexual assault:

“What we saw in this case has shaken people’s confidence in the very system that is supposed to protect them,” said Fife. “Survivors are left asking what it will take to be believed and to see justice done.”

Lydia’s Law would strengthen accountability and transparency in how sexual assault cases are handled, including tracking delays and improving access to supports.

“This bill is about fixing the gaps we already know exist - delays, lack of transparency, and a system that leaves survivors navigating it on their own.

“Last year, this government used its majority to shut down debate on Lydia’s Law without warning. Survivors didn’t get their day in court, and then they lost their day in the legislature.

“On behalf of Lydia and all survivors, this government must not silence women again in this debate,” concluded Fife. “This is a choice: listen and act or keep looking the other way while survivors are failed. Our community deserves better.”

Quotes:

“The court system is like a slow-motion grinding down of the spirit that often forgets the human at the centre of the file. Lydia’s Law is our only chance of relief. Survivors of sexual assault deserve to be heard and receive justice in a timely manner”

—Brittany (speaking on behalf of SLOKA Sexual Assault survivor, sister)

“Survivors deserve better than a system that requires exceptional resilience to be heard, that fails to treat them with respect, and that so often falls short of meaningful accountability. That is exactly why Lydia’s Law matters.”

—Sara Casselman, Executive Director of Sexual Assault Support Centre Waterloo Region

“Lydia’s Law is a much-needed step towards a justice system that works and closes the loophole that allows criminals to escape accountability. Men have a role to play. Sexual violence is not simply a women’s issue. It’s a massive problem that affects everyone and it means men have to stand up.”

—MPP Terence Kernaghan (London North Centre)


Jane Mitchell

Getting Elected: The Anatomy of a Ward Campaign

Did you miss the Region of Waterloo School and/or the Women’s Campaign School? Here is a campaign school for everybody. Getting Elected: The Anatomy of a Ward Campaign   May 6, 6:30-8:30 p.m.   Fresh Ground Café, 256 King St. East, Kitchener(just north of the market) 

Join campaign experts and sitting councillors for a no-nonsense orientation to what it takes to run a campaign for municipal ward councillor. Simple but effective approaches to communications
Best practices for door knocking and working the crowd
No-fuss fund-raising
A roadmap from now to election day This free event is for candidates, potential candidates, and folks hoping to directly support candidate campaigns. 
   Registrationis requested
to  help us plan for the event, but if you see this at the last minute, you are still welcome to attend!   If you have any questions, please email president@waterloolabour.ca 


Elmira Advocate

ABUNDANT, ACCURATE & HONEST ADVICE WAS GIVEN TO UNIROYAL & SUCCESSORS : IT WAS ALL IGNORED AND DENIGRATED

 

Who gave them advice exactly? CEAC gave them good advice for years. The Region of Waterloo as well until they walked away unhappy with being ignored. Various bodies from the initially independent albeit stacked with Uniroyal supporters UPAC followed by CPAC (Crompton/Chemtura) followed by RAC/TAG and then TRAC all gave some good advice but other than the 2011-early 2015 CPAC none of the others ever stood up to the company and the Ministry (MOE/MECP) and demanded honest discussions, action and good faith from them. Chemtura were just like their predecessors incapable of doing any of that. 

Woolwich Township have always been far too sympathetic and deferential to the chemical company with the Oct. 2010 to Oct. 2014 council of Todd Cowan at least trying to support greater honesty at CPAC although even then Todd Cowan personally was a problem. Eventually as we all know he self destructed albeit with a little help. The GRCA can best be described as a joke which speaks volumes as to my lack of response to Doug Ford's clipping their wings. 

The advice given was based upon various reports and experts advising what needed to be done including the MOE from time to time, in between polishing Uniroyal's apple and kissing their feet . Advice included Source Removal including DNAPLS, pumping to both the on-site and off-site Target Rates determined by their own consultants,  removing dioxins, DDT and more in the downstream Canagagigue Creek and so much more. Off-site there were poorly managed DNAPLS (chlorobenzene) whether from Uniroyal or a now decades later admission to a second (unnamed) industrial source. There was also advice given to clean up their air emissions which literally took them years to get around to meanwhile harming local residents' (adults & children) health. 

The company's and the Ministry's (MOE) early on sweetheart deal (Oct. & Nov. 1991) set the tone for the company's continuing to be in charge of the "cleanup" from start to finish. The "cleanup" unsurprisingly has failed just like the company and Ministry have failed Elmira, Woolwich and downstream residents. 


Elmira Advocate

HOW MANY WOOLWICH COUNCILLORS WANT TO HANG AROUND FOR THE WATER BLAME ?

 

Well the chief architect of the Elmira cleanup failure over the last twelve years by the time the October elections roll around is running for the hills. She also bears some responsibility at the regional level for the water crisis throughout all of Waterloo Region. How many other regional as well as local councillors do you think will join the exodus? I would expect the mayors with more than one term as mayors and regional councillors might be thinking that this is a good time to hit the road. Is that only Barry Vrbanovic or is one of the other big city mayors a repeat culprit?

I expect that up here in Dogpatch (Woolwich) that there might be some small exodus of councillors although actually other than Bonnie Bryant, the others are all first term councillors. Hard to fault them horribly from one term's experience in which a quadruple term Sandy Shantz was leading the pack. She also spent a term as a councillor before her three terms as mayor. A small peccadillo derailed her for one term between her term as councillor and her three terms as mayor.  

I have spent years trying to figure out if she basically is a naive fool, easily swayed and manipulated by the likes of Dave Brenneman, Mark Bauman, Chemtura/Lanxess and other local big shot companies and individuals. Or has she with full knowledge ploughed ahead wrecking havoc on our environment and health by prioritizing growth and business at all costs?  Uniroyal and successors is not the only industrial dump  in Woolwich Township. Breslube, prior to Safety-Kleen, damaged our environments's air and water for extensive distances throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s. Safety-Kleen were always welcomed with open arms and glad handing by earlier Woolwich mayors including Bill Strauss who personally owned multiple contaminated sites related to the fuel industry. 

Perhaps we the citizens deserve both the environment and the mayors that we've had. Sebastian (TRAC) has very lately sent an excellent treatise on to some local environmentalists and unfortunately to a couple of wanna bees that may bite him. That could be unfortunate or it could turn out to be a blessing in disguise as he spends less time with those he refers to as deferential.  


Brickhouse Guitars

Pierre Explaining Assembly Mold - Interview From Boucher Guitars

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Github: Brent Litner

brentlintner starred NousResearch/hermes-agent

♦ brentlintner starred NousResearch/hermes-agent · May 3, 2026 19:37 NousResearch/hermes-agent

The agent that grows with you

Python 137k Updated May 7


Github: Brent Litner

brentlintner starred plastic-labs/honcho

♦ brentlintner starred plastic-labs/honcho · May 3, 2026 19:35 plastic-labs/honcho

Memory library for building stateful agents

Python 3.3k 1 issue needs help Updated May 6


Code Like a Girl

How Senior Engineers Actually Debug (It’s Not What You Think)

Engineering Beyond Code | Part 3This skill can transform your engineering career♦Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash

Most early engineers think debugging is about being fast, clever, or having seen the bug before.

It’s not.

Senior engineers don’t debug faster because they’re smarter. They debug better because they approach problems differently. What looks like intuition is usually a disciplined, almost boring process underneath.

1. They Don’t Start With Code — They Start With the System

A common instinct is to jump straight into the code and start scanning for issues.

Senior engineers resist that urge.

Instead, they first ask:
What part of the system could even produce this behaviour?

They mentally map the flow — request → service → dependencies → storage → response. Before touching a single line of code, they narrow down where the bug could logically exist.

Debugging, at its core, is a search problem. Seniors reduce the search space first.

2. They Form Hypotheses (And Try to Disprove Them)

Junior approach:
“I’ll try random things until something works.”

Senior approach:
“I think X might be happening because of Y. Let me prove myself wrong.”

This is subtle but powerful.

Instead of blindly trying fixes, they create small, testable hypotheses:

  • “Is this a data issue or a logic issue?”
  • “Is the bug happening before or after this service call?”
  • “Is this reproducible or intermittent?”

Each step is designed to eliminate possibilities, not just find solutions.

3. They Reproduce the Problem Reliably

If a bug can’t be reproduced, it can’t be debugged effectively.

Senior engineers invest time in:

  • Creating minimal reproducible cases
  • Controlling inputs
  • Removing noise from the system

They don’t rush to fix. They stabilize the problem first.

Because once a bug is reproducible, it stops being mysterious and starts being mechanical.

4. They Use Observability as a Tool, Not an Afterthought

Logs, metrics, traces — these aren’t just “nice to have.”

They are how senior engineers see the system.

Instead of guessing, they ask:

  • What do the logs say at each step?
  • Are there anomalies in metrics?
  • Where does the timeline break?

If visibility is poor, they don’t proceed blindly — they improve observability first.

5. They Avoid Fixing Symptoms

A quick fix that “makes the error go away” is tempting.

Senior engineers are cautious.

They ask:

  • Why did this happen?
  • What allowed this to happen?
  • Could this appear elsewhere?

They care about root causes, not just surface-level fixes.

Because debugging isn’t just about solving this bug — it’s about preventing the next one.

6. They Know When to Stop Digging Deeper

Not every bug needs a philosophical investigation.

Senior engineers balance depth with pragmatism:

  • If it’s a one-off issue → patch and move on
  • If it’s systemic → investigate deeply
  • If it’s unclear → isolate and monitor

They understand that engineering is also about time and trade-offs, not just correctness.

7. They Communicate While Debugging

Debugging is rarely a solo activity at senior levels.

They:

  • Share context early
  • Explain their hypotheses
  • Keep stakeholders updated

Not because they need help — but because debugging is also about alignment and trust.

The Real Difference

The biggest shift is this:

Junior engineers try to find the bug.
Senior engineers try to understand the system until the bug becomes obvious.

Debugging isn’t a talent. It’s a structured way of thinking:

  • Narrow the search space
  • Form and test hypotheses
  • Make the system observable
  • Focus on root causes
  • Balance depth with speed

What looks like experience is often just discipline applied consistently.

Distilled Principle

Debugging is not about being clever — it’s about being methodical under uncertainty.

And that’s what makes it a senior-level skill.

How Senior Engineers Actually Debug (It’s Not What You Think) was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

Change Fitness: The Career Skill AI Can’t Replace

You don’t need to code to survive AI. You need Change Fitness. Here’s the 30% mindset framework that Harvard says will save your career.

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »

Cordial Catholic, K Albert Little

Peter Kreeft: My Catholic Conversion Story #shorts #Catholic #apologetics #Christian #converts

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