Dear readers of this blog,
Unfortunately, the time has come to acknowledge that no new articles have been published here for quite a while, and the project itself has effectively been on hold for several years now.
When I first created this platform, I envisioned it as a place that would gather the most useful information any software developer might need. I started with a blog, but I had hopes that it would evolve into something bigger — a learning platform with video tutorials, a discussion forum, and a curated feed of important industry events. Sadly, that vision never came to life. I truly believe that learning should be lifelong and accessible to everyone, which was the inspiration behind this project.
Perhaps I lacked the time and resources to make it all happen. There have been no updates for several years now, and both the frontend and backend are in need of a major overhaul. For a long time, I held onto the hope that I’d come back to it, that it was just a matter of time, but it's time to accept that this won’t happen.
Maintaining the current architecture comes with a cost, especially the server and database, and I no longer see a strong reason to keep investing in it. Sure, I could move the site to a free hosting plan on Vercel and use a free database like MongoDB or Firebase, but I’ve decided to move on and leave the plans for this project behind me.
I don’t intend to delete everything entirely. However, there won’t be any further changes to the blog. All useful pages will be converted into static HTML and uploaded to GitHub. Thanks to GitHub Pages, you’ll still be able to access the existing content.
Thank you to everyone who subscribed to the newsletter — maybe you found this blog by chance, maybe most of you have already forgotten you ever subscribed — but this will be the last message sent through this platform. The database will be shut down, and the contact email will be deactivated shortly after this message.
If you'd like to follow my future content, you can find me here:
dev.to — where I’ll continue publishing technical articles. Some existing posts may be republished there to reach a broader audience.
Medium — where I write more personal, non-technical content: topics like politics, worldview, health, psychology, money, and influence.
GitHub will remain active. In fact, I plan to keep using it for open-source projects if new ideas come up. Currently, there’s one interesting package — a MySQL migration tool written in Go. If time allows, a future version may extend support to other databases as well.
Warm regards,I wish I could sign off as "The Larapulse Team",but it’s just Sergey