In software engineering, naming is often dismissed as a superficial concern—an aesthetic layer applied after the “real” architectural work is complete. That view is fundamentally incorrect. Naming is not ornamental; it is architectural. The labels we assign to services, modules, interfaces, aggregates, bounded contexts, and events do not mere
How Naming Issues Styles Technique Architecture By Gustavo Woltmann
In software engineering, naming is often dismissed as a superficial concern—an aesthetic layer applied after the “real” architectural work is complete. That view is fundamentally incorrect. Naming is not ornamental; it is architectural. The labels we assign to services, modules, interfaces, aggregates, bounded contexts, and events do not mere
Artwork as Memory: How Painters Capture Fleeting Times By Gustav Woltmann
Human memory is fragile. It distorts, fades, rearranges itself all over emotion rather than point. Very long in advance of pictures or film, portray emerged as considered one of humanity’s most sturdy technologies for resisting that erosion. To paint wasn't just to stand for the whole world, but to carry it—to arrest a fleeting configuration of