This blog has been a therapy of sorts. A way to speak my mind, to reflect on what was lost, and to remind myself that it’s ok to fail sometimes. When I started this blog, I thought it would be about technology. About networks, servers, and systems that obey logic. I wanted to master the technical side and stay there.
Author: teodulfo.espero
The danger isn’t that the machines will become sentient. The danger is that we’ll stop acting like we are. We built machines to think for us. Then we built better ones to think faster. Now we’re teaching them to think without us, and to smile while doing it. Academics call it a “paradigm shift.” I call it a slow-motion dismantling
Every pixel carries a truth invisible to the eye. Hyperspectral imaging doesn’t just capture color, it captures the chemistry of the world. Intro This post is based on one of our lab assignments in Applied Remote Sensing at Delta State University. The task was to explore the power of hyperspectral imagery, the kind of data that captures hundreds of spectral
Stack Overflow doesn’t just teach you how to code. It teaches you how to survive developers. Stack Overflow is the internet’s cathedral of genius and arrogance. An effing monument to brilliance wrapped in bureaucracy. You go there begging for a line of code to save your sanity and instead get a sermon from some blasted self-anointed saint of syntax. It’s
CMD survives because it still works. PowerShell dominates because it can do everything CMD never imagined. The Command Line Never Died CMD is not dead. Microsoft did not bury it. It still waits patiently for someone to type ipconfig or dir like it is 2002. For its core tasks, CMD is simple and consistent. It remains the screwdriver every Windows
Introduction: From Pixels to the Real World Every satellite image tells a story, but that story only makes sense when you can trace each pixel back to the ground. In remote sensing, this connection between imagery and reality is called ground truthing. It ensures that what we interpret from orbit reflects what truly exists on Earth. As Campbell and Wynne
Every engineer eventually outgrows text. Git LFS is what stops that growth from killing Git itself. The Moment of Discovery I’ve used Git for years and I thought I knew it. Until someone mentioned Git LFS. Large File Storage. Three words that sound like something I should have cared about long ago but didn’t. I’ve never used it. Never needed
Every network outage has a story. Git just makes sure you never forget who wrote it Before You Begin Before diving into Git, let’s get a few things straight: Think of Git as the engine, and GitHub as the garage where you park your work. Why Git Belongs in Networking If you’ve ever asked “Who changed this?” or “Why is
The best engineers don’t just fix things. They build systems that survive them. Git is where that discipline begins. The Myth That Git Is Only for Developers I used to believe Git was for people who built apps, not networks. The ones who spoke in JavaScript, not BGP. The ones who pushed commits, not packets. Then I realized something. Managing
The Network That Never Sleeps Networks don’t take breaks. They hum through nights, holidays, and your supposed day off. Every ping, packet, and login request demands precision and continuity. For those of us in IT, it’s not glamour, it’s survival. That’s where automation steps in. Not to replace you, but to give you back the hours you’ve been surrendering to