🔄 회고
월간/연간/프로젝트 회고
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Wrapping Up January and February 2026 (Not Really a Retro)
After leaving the company, a sabbatical, a trip to Italy, fights and reconciliations with my partner, and finally getting back to work. Too thin on results to call a retro, too long to call a journal entry.
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Scrumble Tech Retro - 2. The Frontend, with a Side of Vibe Coding
A retro on Scrumble's Next.js frontend architecture, the realtime sync layer, the HEIC converter, and what I learned about Claude-driven vibe coding the hard way.
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Scrumble Team: First-Release Interview
Updated:Right after Scrumble's first release, Tony, Ellie, and George talk about how they joined the project, what tripped them up, the workshop afterward, and what they want to build next.
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Scrumble Tech Retro - 1. Backend (Golang, DDD, Entgo, Event, Centrifugo)
A technical retrospective on building Scrumble's backend with Go, Fiber, Entgo, and Centrifugo, covering domain modeling, real-time feed infrastructure, caching strategy, and the test and deploy pipeline.
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Scrumble Tech Retro - 0. Intro (Why Golang?)
Opening post of the Scrumble tech retrospective series. I lay out why I picked Golang and Next.js, where vibe coding helped and where it broke, and the roadmap for the backend, frontend, and LLM chapters that follow.
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Scrumble Project Retrospective (June–August 2025)
A monthly look at the Scrumble side project: setting up home-office collaboration, the delays caused by spec creep and missing deadlines, and the LLM and third-party integration roadmap from a partnership retro.
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Four Years at IHFB: A Retrospective
From part-time contractor to a 30-person R&D division: a four-year retrospective on hiring, tech stack, and culture experiments at IHFB, with the unfinished work and the advice I'd pass to the next leader.
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The Last Seven Months: Scattered Thoughts (September 2024 to March 2025)
A seven-month retrospective on how a B2G (business-to-government) project and the early days of marriage wrecked my mental state, and how travel, therapy, and work adjustments slowly pulled me back. Notes on the emotional swings, daily-routine repairs, and the kind of conversations it takes to hold a relationship together.