Golden hour (the hour just after sunrise or before sunset) is hands-down the best time to shoot outdoors. Here's why and how to make the most of it:
• The light is warm and soft, giving skin tones a beautiful glow.
• Long shadows add depth and drama to landscapes.
• Shoot with the sun slightly behind your subject for a gorgeous rim-light effect.
• Arrive early — the perfect moment lasts only a few minutes!
I captured the shot in my profile picture during golden hour at Loch Lomond. Totally worth the 5 AM alarm. ☀️📷
Just got back from a spontaneous weekend in the Scottish Highlands and I am absolutely blown away. The combination of mist, mountains, and lochs is unlike anything else.
Top spots we hit:
1. Glencoe Valley — dramatic and moody, perfect for black-and-white photography.
2. Eilean Donan Castle — yes, it really does look that good in person.
3. Fairy Pools on Skye — the turquoise water is completely real, no filter needed!
A lot of people assume great-looking photos require expensive software. Not true! Here are my top three free options:
🖼️ Darktable — a powerful open-source RAW editor (think Lightroom, but free).
🎨 GIMP — fantastic for compositing and retouching.
📱 Snapseed — best mobile editor, full stop.
All of them are available on Windows, Mac, and Linux. Give them a try and let me know what you think in the comments!
For years I managed local environments with XAMPP and virtual machines. Then I tried Docker — and I haven't looked back.
Here's what sold me:
✅ Each project gets its own isolated environment — no more version conflicts.
✅ docker-compose makes spinning up a full LAMP stack trivially easy.
✅ Works identically on Mac, Windows, and Linux.
✅ Your team shares the same environment via a single docker-compose.yml file.
The learning curve is real, but the payoff is absolutely worth it. Happy to help anyone getting started — drop a comment below!
Currently re-reading The Pragmatic Programmer by Hunt & Thomas and it holds up brilliantly even after 25 years. A few gems that stuck with me:
📌 'Don't live with broken windows' — fix small problems before they compound.
📌 'Make it easy to reuse' — if code is hard to reuse, it will get duplicated.
📌 Invest regularly in your knowledge portfolio, just like a financial portfolio.
Music is such a personal thing, but here are five records that genuinely rewired my brain:
1. Daft Punk — Random Access Memories (production quality out of this world)
2. Kendrick Lamar — To Pimp a Butterfly (storytelling on another level)
3. Radiohead — OK Computer (still futuristic 25+ years later)
4. Nina Simone — I Put a Spell on You (raw emotion, timeless)
5. Bonobo — Black Sands (perfect background music for coding or studying)
Spent most of Saturday making tonkotsu ramen from scratch and honestly it was one of the most satisfying kitchen projects I've ever tackled.
Key tips if you want to try it:
🍖 Simmer the pork bones for at least 12 hours for that creamy, rich broth.
🥚 Soft-boil your eggs and marinate them overnight in soy + mirin.
🌿 Don't skip the tare — it's the seasoning sauce that brings everything together.
The whole thing took a day, but the flavour was restaurant-quality. 10/10 would recommend as a weekend project. Who else cooks from scratch? 🍜
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