The SaaSpocalypse Reached My Office Today
A colleague replaced a $2,900/year SaaS app. A CNBC reporter replicated a $5 billion company. Wall Street is in freefall. And the tools just got better.
A colleague replaced a $2,900/year SaaS app. A CNBC reporter replicated a $5 billion company. Wall Street is in freefall. And the tools just got better.
At an AWS security symposium in Manhattan, I expected caution. What I found was a room full of security leaders urging their audiences to build faster.
AI APIs go down. If your product depends on one, you need a plan for when it doesn't respond.
Small projects can achieve better security ratings than major brands. Here's why internal teams sometimes outperform vendors.
You don't need to be a software engineer to build applications with AI. These are the things I'd want to know if I were just getting started.
My employer lost inbound email for a few hours during today's Microsoft 365 outage. It's not the first major cloud disruption this year, and it won't be the last.
AI is democratizing software development the way the printing press democratized books. That's exciting—and it requires a different kind of organizational thinking.
Third-party lead generation is a waste of everyone's time and money. Here's why vendors should stop using it entirely.
The best thinking happens outside business hours. Not because I'm a workaholic, but because that's when my brain finally gets the space it needs.
Why I'm declining every unsolicited vendor meeting in 2026, and why you shouldn't take it personally.