Blog

Engineering notes from a calm, developer-first corner of the web.

The Birdor Blog is where we share deep dives, experiments, and honest lessons from building tools, infrastructure, and games for the modern web. No hype, no clickbait — just thoughtful writing for developers who care about how things actually work.

The main Birdor Blog runs at blog.birdor.com and is powered by a fast, static-first stack (Jamstack + CDN).

What we write about

Birdor's content focuses on practical, in-the-trenches topics:

  • Modern web architecture (Jamstack, SSR, SPA hybrids)
  • Next.js, Tailwind, and Cloudflare in real-world setups
  • Dev tools, CLIs, and small SaaS infrastructure
  • Game server design, networking, and simulation
  • Indie developer workflows, tooling, and automation
  • Notes on scaling, observability, and reliability

Articles are written from the perspective of a working developer, not a marketing team. If something is confusing, we say so. If something breaks, we document it.

Types of posts you will find

1. Deep technical guides

Step-by-step explanations on topics like multi-tenant SaaS, frame-synced game loops, HTTP internals, or Jamstack deployment patterns.

2. Architecture handbooks

Opinionated but practical blueprints: how to design a webhook gateway, how to run a small CI/CD platform, or how to wire up a real-time backend.

3. Tooling & productivity notes

Small improvements that make a big difference: shell tricks, editor setups, debugging workflows, and tiny automations.

4. Indie dev & SaaS stories

Honest write-ups about shipping tools, dealing with infra, pricing, and the emotional side of building things on your own.

Long-form series & handbooks

Many Birdor articles are organized into series and living handbooks:

  • Backend architecture best practices
  • Next.js in depth (App Router, routing, data fetching)
  • Jamstack & Cloudflare deployment guides
  • Game server programming & simulation patterns
  • Indie developer finance, hosting, and legal notes

These are designed to be bookmarked, revisited, and updated over time — more like reference manuals than one-off posts.

How to follow Birdor Blog

If you want to keep up with new posts:

We don't do aggressive email funnels or noisy marketing. If you follow Birdor, it's because the content genuinely helps you build better systems.

A calm feed for builders

The internet is loud enough. Birdor Blog aims to be a calm, reliable stream of deeply technical, quietly opinionated writing for people who still enjoy reading about how systems are built.

If that sounds like you, step into the blog and stay for a while.