2026-03-14 00:00:05
In the modern web era, passwords are no longer sufficient. They are the root cause of over 80% of data breaches, subject to phishing, reuse, and terrible complexity rules. The industry has spoken: Passkeys are the future.
\ Passkeys, built on the Web Authentication (WebAuthn) and FIDO2 standards, replace traditional passwords with cryptographic key pairs. Your device (iPhone, Android, Windows Hello, YubiKey) stores a private key, while the server only ever sees the public key. No hashes to steal, no passwords to reset, and inherently phishing-resistant.
\ In this comprehensive guide, we will build a 100% passwordless authentication system using Symfony and the official web-auth/webauthn-symfony-bundle. We will eliminate the concept of a password entirely from our application. No fallback, no “reset password” links. Just pure, secure, biometric-backed passkeys.
Passkeys work by replacing a shared secret (password) with a public/private key pair. The private key never leaves the user’s Apple device (iPhone, Mac, iPad), and the public key is stored on your Symfony server.
Run the following command to install the necessary dependencies:
composer require web-auth/webauthn-symfony-bundle:^5.2 \
web-auth/webauthn-stimulus:^5.2 \
symfony/uid:^7.4
\ We use @simplewebauthn/browser via AssetMapper (which provides excellent wrapper functions for the native browser WebAuthn APIs) because Apple Passkeys require a frontend interaction that is best handled via a Stimulus controller in a modern Symfony environment, or you can use React/Vue modules.
This is where our application dramatically diverges from a traditional Symfony app. We are going to strip passwords entirely from the system.
\ Standard Symfony User entities aren’t equipped to store Passkey metadata (like AAGUIDs or public key Cose algorithms). We need a dedicated entity to store the credentials.
Our User entity implements Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface. Noticeably absent is the PasswordAuthenticatedUserInterface.
namespace App\Entity;
use App\Repository\UserRepository;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Uid\Uuid;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert;
#[ORM\Entity(repositoryClass: UserRepository::class)]
#[ORM\Table(name: '`user`')]
class User implements UserInterface
{
#[ORM\Id]
#[ORM\GeneratedValue]
#[ORM\Column]
private ?int $id = null;
#[ORM\Column(length: 255, unique: true)]
private ?string $userHandle = null;
#[ORM\Column(length: 180, unique: true)]
#[Assert\NotBlank]
#[Assert\Email]
private ?string $email = null;
public function __construct()
{
$this->userHandle = Uuid::v4()->toRfc4122();
}
...
}
A single user can have multiple passkeys (e.g., Face ID on their phone, Touch ID on their Mac, a YubiKey on their keychain). We need an entity to store these public keys and their associated metadata.
\ Create src/Entity/PublicKeyCredentialSource.php. This entity must be capable of translating to and from the bundle’s native Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialSource object.
\ Crucially, we must preserve the TrustPath. Failing to do so destroys the attestation data needed if you ever require high-security enterprise hardware keys.
namespace App\Entity;
use App\Repository\PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepository;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialSource as WebauthnSource;
#[ORM\Entity(repositoryClass: PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepository::class)]
#[ORM\Table(name: 'webauthn_credentials')]
class PublicKeyCredentialSource extends WebauthnSource
{
#[ORM\Id]
#[ORM\GeneratedValue]
#[ORM\Column]
private ?int $id = null;
public function getId(): ?int
{
return $this->id;
}
}
You must also implement a CredentialSourceRepository that implements Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepository.
namespace App\Repository;
use App\Entity\PublicKeyCredentialSource;
use Doctrine\Bundle\DoctrineBundle\Repository\ServiceEntityRepository;
use Doctrine\Persistence\ManagerRegistry;
use Symfony\Component\ObjectMapper\ObjectMapperInterface;
use Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepositoryInterface;
use Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\CanSaveCredentialSource;
use Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialSource as WebauthnSource;
use Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity;
class PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepository extends ServiceEntityRepository implements PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepositoryInterface, CanSaveCredentialSource
{
public function __construct(ManagerRegistry $registry, private readonly ObjectMapperInterface $objectMapper)
{
parent::__construct($registry, PublicKeyCredentialSource::class);
}
public function findOneByCredentialId(string $publicKeyCredentialId): ?WebauthnSource
{
return $this->findOneBy(['publicKeyCredentialId' => $publicKeyCredentialId]);
}
public function findAllForUserEntity(PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity $publicKeyCredentialUserEntity): array
{
return $this->findBy(['userHandle' => $publicKeyCredentialUserEntity->id]);
}
public function saveCredentialSource(WebauthnSource $publicKeyCredentialSource): void
{
$entity = $this->findOneBy(['publicKeyCredentialId' => base64_encode($publicKeyCredentialSource->publicKeyCredentialId)])
?? $this->objectMapper->map($publicKeyCredentialSource, PublicKeyCredentialSource::class);
$this->getEntityManager()->persist($entity);
$this->getEntityManager()->flush();
}
}
The WebAuthn bundle relies on abstract interfaces to find and persist users and credentials. Our repositories must implement these interfaces.
The UserRepository implements PublicKeyCredentialUserEntityRepositoryInterface. Because we want the bundle to handle user creation automatically during a passkey registration, we also implement CanRegisterUserEntity and CanGenerateUserEntity.
namespace App\Repository;
use App\Entity\User;
use Doctrine\Bundle\DoctrineBundle\Repository\ServiceEntityRepository;
use Doctrine\Persistence\ManagerRegistry;
use Symfony\Component\Uid\Uuid;
use Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\CanGenerateUserEntity;
use Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\CanRegisterUserEntity;
use Webauthn\Bundle\Repository\PublicKeyCredentialUserEntityRepositoryInterface;
use Webauthn\Exception\InvalidDataException;
use Webauthn\PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity;
class UserRepository extends ServiceEntityRepository implements PublicKeyCredentialUserEntityRepositoryInterface, CanRegisterUserEntity, CanGenerateUserEntity
{
public function __construct(ManagerRegistry $registry)
{
parent::__construct($registry, User::class);
}
public function saveUserEntity(PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity $userEntity): void
{
$user = new User();
$user->setEmail($userEntity->name);
$user->setUserHandle($userEntity->id);
$this->getEntityManager()->persist($user);
$this->getEntityManager()->flush();
}
public function generateUserEntity(?string $username, ?string $displayName): PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity
{
return new PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity(
$username ?? '',
Uuid::v4()->toRfc4122(),
$displayName ?? $username ?? ''
);
}
...
Apple requires specific “Relying Party” (RP) information. This identifies your application to the user’s iCloud Keychain.
Create or update config/packages/webauthn.yaml:
webauthn:
allowed_origins: ['%env(WEBAUTHN_ALLOWED_ORIGINS)%']
credential_repository: 'App\Repository\PublicKeyCredentialSourceRepository'
user_repository: 'App\Repository\UserRepository'
creation_profiles:
default:
rp:
name: '%env(RELYING_PARTY_NAME)%'
id: '%env(RELYING_PARTY_ID)%'
request_profiles:
default:
rp_id: '%env(RELYING_PARTY_ID)%'
\ WebAuthn is incredibly strict about domains. A passkey created for example.com cannot be used on phishing-example.com. To ensure our application is portable across environments, we define our Relying Party (RP) settings in the .env file.
\ Open .env or .env.local and add:
###> web-auth/webauthn-symfony-bundle ###
RELYING_PARTY_ID=localhost
RELYING_PARTY_NAME="My Application"
WEBAUTHN_ALLOWED_ORIGINS=localhost
###< web-auth/webauthn-symfony-bundle ###
In production, RELYINGPARTYID must be your exact root domain (e.g., example.com), and WebAuthn requires a secure HTTPS context. Browsers only exempt localhost for development.
Passkey registration is a two-step handshake:
Security is paramount. Even though WebAuthn is inherently phishing-resistant, your endpoints are still vulnerable to traditional Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) if left unprotected. We will pass Symfony’s built-in CSRF tokens via headers in our fetch() calls.
\ Assuming you have a standard CSRF helper (like csrfprotectioncontroller.js that extracts the token from a meta tag or hidden input), we inject it into our Passkey controller.
import { Controller } from '@hotwired/stimulus';
import { startRegistration, startAuthentication } from '@simplewebauthn/browser';
import { generateCsrfHeaders } from './csrf_protection_controller.js';
export default class extends Controller {
static values = {
optionsUrl: String,
resultUrl: String,
isLogin: Boolean
}
connect() {
console.log('Passkey controller connected! 🔑');
}
async submit(event) {
event.preventDefault();
const username = this.element.querySelector('[name="username"]')?.value;
if (!this.isLoginValue && !username) {
alert('Please provide a username/email');
return;
}
const csrfHeaders = generateCsrfHeaders(this.element);
try {
// 1. Fetch options
const response = await fetch(this.optionsUrlValue, {
method: 'POST',
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json', ...csrfHeaders },
body: username ? JSON.stringify({ username: username, displayName: username }) : '{}'
});
if (!response.ok) {
const errorData = await response.json().catch(() => ({}));
throw new Error(errorData.errorMessage || 'Failed to fetch WebAuthn options from server');
}
const options = await response.json();
// 2. Trigger Apple's Passkey UI (Create or Get)
let credential;
if (this.isLoginValue) {
credential = await startAuthentication({ optionsJSON: options });
} else {
credential = await startRegistration({ optionsJSON: options });
}
// 3. Send result back to verify
const result = await fetch(this.resultUrlValue, {
method: 'POST',
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json', ...csrfHeaders },
body: JSON.stringify(credential)
});
if (result.ok) {
window.location.reload();
} else {
const errorText = await result.text();
alert('Authentication failed: ' + errorText);
}
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
alert('WebAuthn process failed: ' + e.message);
}
}
}
You need to ensure the routing type for webauthn exists. Create config/routes/webauthn_routes.yaml:
webauthn_routes:
resource: .
type: webauthn
To allow users to log in with their Passkey, we need to configure the Symfony Guard (now the Authenticator system).
\ In config/packages/security.yaml:
security:
providers:
app_user_provider:
entity:
class: App\Entity\User
property: email
firewalls:
dev:
pattern: ^/(_(profiler|wdt)|css|images|js)/
security: false
main:
lazy: true
provider: app_user_provider
webauthn:
authentication:
routes:
options_path: /login/passkey/options
result_path: /login/passkey/result
registration:
enabled: true
routes:
options_path: /register/passkey/options
result_path: /register/passkey/result
success_handler: App\Security\AuthenticationSuccessHandler
failure_handler: App\Security\AuthenticationFailureHandler
logout:
path: app_logout
access_control:
- { path: ^/dashboard, roles: ROLE_USER }
Because WebAuthn ceremonies involve AJAX fetch() requests from the frontend, a standard Symfony redirect on failure (e.g., trying to register an email that already exists) will be silently swallowed by the browser, resulting in a frustrating user experience.
\ We implement a custom AuthenticationFailureHandler that returns a clean 401 Unauthorized JSON response when the request is AJAX.
\ Create src/Security/AuthenticationFailureHandler.php:
namespace App\Security;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\JsonResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Generator\UrlGeneratorInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AuthenticationException;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authentication\AuthenticationFailureHandlerInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\SecurityRequestAttributes;
readonly class AuthenticationFailureHandler implements AuthenticationFailureHandlerInterface
{
public function __construct(private UrlGeneratorInterface $urlGenerator) {}
public function onAuthenticationFailure(Request $request, AuthenticationException $exception): RedirectResponse|JsonResponse
{
if ($request->getContentTypeFormat() === 'json' || $request->isXmlHttpRequest()) {
return new JsonResponse([
'status' => 'error',
'errorMessage' => $exception->getMessageKey(),
], Response::HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED);
}
// Store the error in the session
$request->getSession()->set(SecurityRequestAttributes::AUTHENTICATION_ERROR, $exception);
return new RedirectResponse($this->urlGenerator->generate('app_login'));
}
}
Since Passkeys often bypass the traditional login form, you need to define where the user goes after a successful “Handshake.”
namespace App\Security;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Generator\UrlGeneratorInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\TokenInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authentication\AuthenticationSuccessHandlerInterface;
readonly class AuthenticationSuccessHandler implements AuthenticationSuccessHandlerInterface
{
public function __construct(private UrlGeneratorInterface $urlGenerator) {}
public function onAuthenticationSuccess(Request $request, TokenInterface $token): RedirectResponse
{
return new RedirectResponse($this->urlGenerator->generate('app_dashboard'));
}
}
Transitioning to Apple Passkeys with Symfony 7.4 isn’t just a security upgrade; it’s a significant improvement to your user experience. By removing the friction of password managers, “forgot password” emails, and complex character requirements, you increase conversion and user retention.
\ As a senior developer or lead, your priority is ensuring that this implementation remains maintainable. By sticking to the WebAuthn-Symfony-Bundle and PHP 8.x attributes, you ensure that your codebase remains idiomatic and ready for future Symfony LTS releases.
\ Source Code: You can find the full implementation and follow the project’s progress on GitHub: [https://github.com/mattleads/PasskeysAuth]
If you found this helpful or have questions about the implementation, I’d love to hear from you. Let’s stay in touch and keep the conversation going across these platforms:
\
2026-03-13 23:39:10
Some ads sell products. The rare ones change culture. The 20th century gave us both kinds, and the gap between them is everything. Before social media, algorithmic targeting, and A/B testing, the campaigns that broke through did so with nothing but a sharp idea, honest copy, and a deep understanding of what people actually wanted to feel.
In 1999, Ad Age ranked the 100 greatest campaigns of the century. What's striking about that list isn't how dated it looks. It's how relevant it still is. The principles behind the best work haven't changed. Only the platforms have.
Here are 7 campaigns from that era that every marketer should know, why they worked, and what they can still teach you right now.
Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach · Ad Age ranking: #1
There is no campaign more studied, more referenced, or more deserving of the top spot. In 1959, Volkswagen needed to sell a small, odd-looking German car to an American market obsessed with size, chrome, and Cadillacs. In post-war America, that was a nearly impossible brief. And not just commercially, but culturally.
Doyle Dane Bernbach (DDB) did the opposite of everything the industry expected. Art director Helmut Krone placed a tiny photo of the Beetle in the upper left corner of a full page, surrounded by nothing but white space. Copywriter Julian Koenig wrote two words underneath: Think small.
Ad Age described DDB as having given "advertising permission to surprise, to defy and to engage the consumer without bludgeoning him." The campaign worked. According to Ad Age's historical record, DDB created six of the greatest 100 campaigns of the century, and Think Small was the crown jewel. Annual U.S. Beetle sales climbed from 120,000 units in 1959 to over 423,000 by 1968.
Why it's timeless: Truth delivered with confidence is more persuasive than any exaggerated claim. In a feed full of loud creatives and inflated promises, this lesson is more relevant now than ever.
Agency: D'Arcy Co. · Ad Age ranking: #2
Long before "emotional branding" had a name, Coca-Cola was already doing it. "The pause that refreshes" wasn't selling a drink; it was selling a moment. A feeling. A permission to stop, breathe, and enjoy something small.
The slogan was developed by Archie Lee at D'Arcy Advertising, working closely with Coca-Cola president Robert Woodruff, who — according to the Coca-Cola Company's own historical archive — believed the role of advertising was "making people like you," not selling a product. That philosophy shaped everything. Launched in 1929, as the Coca-Cola Company's advertising history confirms, the slogan became the anchor of the brand's identity through the Depression era, positioning Coca-Cola as a democratic, affordable pleasure available to everyone at any moment of the day.
According to the Coca-Cola Company's historical archive, Woodruff and Lee also commissioned artist Haddon Sundblom in 1931 to paint the now-iconic red-suited Santa Claus for Coca-Cola ads, further cementing the brand's connection to warmth, shared moments, and human feeling. Everything that followed built on this emotional foundation.
Why it's timeless: People don't buy products, they buy feelings. Coca-Cola figured that out in 1929. Every brand building emotional campaigns today is working from the same playbook.
Agency: Leo Burnett Co. · Ad Age ranking: #3
Marlboro was originally marketed as a women's cigarette, sold under the genteel tagline "Mild as May." Philip Morris hired Leo Burnett in November 1954 to fix that, and what Burnett created was one of the most dramatic brand repositionings in advertising history.
According to Ad Age's encyclopedia entry on Leo Burnett, the agency "took a personal role in repositioning the brand from a women's cigarette to a men's with the introduction of the Marlboro Man campaign." The first ads featured cowboys. As documented in Ad Age's tobacco marketing archive, Burnett told Philip Morris:
"The cowboy is an almost universal symbol of admired masculinity."
Research had found that smokers considered filter cigarettes "slightly effeminate," so every element was designed to counteract that perception. By 1962, Philip Morris settled on the cowboy as the exclusive Marlboro image; by 1963, he had a home: Marlboro Country.
In 1999, Ad Age named the Marlboro Man campaign the third most important of the century and the cowboy the top advertising icon of the century, one of four icons created by Leo Burnett to make the list. As Ad Age noted, no other single agency had more than one. Philip Morris itself later called Marlboro "the No. 1 trademark in the world."
Why it's timeless: People buy who they want to become, not what a product does. The Marlboro Man sold an identity so completely that it transcended the product itself.
Agency: Wieden+Kennedy · Ad Age ranking: #4
In 1988, Nike was losing ground to Reebok, which had dominated the aerobics boom of the mid-80s. Wieden+Kennedy co-founder Dan Wieden needed a single line to unify a series of very different TV spots, and he wrote it the night before the client presentation.
The origin is surprising. As reported by NPR in their tribute following Wieden's death in 2022, the phrase was inspired by the last words of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore before his execution: "Let's do it." Wieden changed two words and stripped it of its darkness. The first ad to carry the line featured an 80-year-old man named Walt Stack jogging across the Golden Gate Bridge — not a superstar athlete, just a person doing it. That deliberate inclusivity made the campaign speak to everyone.
As NPR documented, Nike grew its worldwide sales from $877 million in 1988 to $9.2 billion by 1998. Its share of the North American sport-shoe market climbed from 18% to 43% over the same decade.
"For some reason that line resonated deeply in the athletic community and just as deeply with people who had little or no connection to sports."
Wieden said of the response. More than 35 years later, "Just Do It" is still running.
Why it's timeless: The best slogans aren't about the product, they're about the person using it. "Just Do It" is a philosophy, not a tagline, and it speaks to something universal in human ambition.
Agency: N.W. Ayer & Son · Ad Age ranking: #6
Few campaigns have shaped human behaviour as profoundly as this one. Before De Beers, diamond engagement rings were not a cultural norm. Fewer than 20% of American brides owned one by the end of the 1930s, as documented in Ad Age's encyclopedia entry on De Beers.
In 1948, before a major agency presentation, N.W. Ayer copywriter Frances Gerety scribbled the line "A diamond is forever." As Ad Age reported in its De Beers encyclopedia entry, the slogan "captured both the durability of the stone and the romantic aspirations of couples entering into marriage" and immediately became the mainstay of De Beers' U.S. campaign. At the same time, N.W. Ayer developed the "Four Cs" of diamond buying — cut, color, clarity, and carat weight — framing the entire purchase category in De Beers' own language.
The numbers are staggering. By the end of the 1940s, the share of married U.S. women who owned diamond engagement rings had risen to 60%, according to Ad Age. By the 1980s it surpassed 70%. When De Beers took the campaign to Japan in 1968, a market where fewer than 5% of women received diamond engagement rings at the time, that figure reached 60% by 1981, as documented by Ad Age. De Beers was spending $200 million a year in advertising across 34 countries at peak. Ad Age later voted "A Diamond Is Forever" the most iconic advertising slogan of the 20th century.
Why it's timeless: It's the ultimate proof that advertising can create cultural norms, not just reflect them. De Beers didn't sell diamonds, they made diamonds feel necessary.
Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach · Ad Age ranking: #10
DDB appears twice on this list because they earned it twice. "We Try Harder" was born from a brief that would have scared off almost any other agency.
In 1962, Avis had only an 11% market share and had not turned a profit in 13 years, according to Campaign magazine's historical account of the campaign. New CEO Robert Townsend called in DDB's Bill Bernbach, who demanded 90 days to learn the company before writing a word. During that deep-dive, when DDB asked whether Avis had newer cars, more locations, or lower rates than Hertz, the answer to every question was no. "Well," said Townsend, "we do try harder." That honest admission became the brief.
Copywriter Paula Green, whom Campaign described as having gone "completely against the prevailing Madison Avenue philosophy that ads must never acknowledge a brand weakness," turned it into "When you're only No. 2, you try harder. Or else." David Ogilvy later praised the campaign as "diabolical positioning," as recorded in Slate's 2013 investigation of the Hertz-Avis rivalry. Fred Danzig, then an Ad Age reporter, captured the industry reaction when the campaign launched:
"The audacity, the originality, the freshness, the life, the sassy spirit… it forever changed the way Madison Avenue communicated to the world."
The results were immediate. Within a year, Avis turned a $3.2 million loss into a $1.2 million profit, its first in over a decade, as confirmed by both Campaign and Slate. Hertz executives, Slate reported, projected that by 1968, Avis might need a new campaign because it would no longer be No. 2.
Why it's timeless: Honesty about your weaknesses, delivered with confidence, builds more trust than hollow claims of superiority. In a world of inflated promises, admitting what you're not is a surprisingly powerful differentiator.
Agency: Chiat/Day · Ad Age ranking: #12
It aired once, during Super Bowl XVIII on January 22, 1984. It never ran on national television again. And it remains the most discussed commercial in advertising history.
Directed by Ridley Scott, the ad depicted a grey, dystopian world of conformity being shattered by a lone woman hurling a sledgehammer through a screen showing "Big Brother." According to Ad Age's archive of the creatives behind the spot, it was written by Steve Hayden, art directed by Brent Thomas, and creative directed by Lee Clow, with Ridley Scott brought in while he was in London on "Blade Runner." As Clow told Ad Age:
"Steve Jobs' simple challenge was, 'I think Macintosh is the greatest product in the history of the world. Make an ad that tells them that.'"
Apple used the commercial to position the Mac as the antidote to IBM's domination of the information age, two days before the computer's launch.
What makes the story richer is how close it came to never airing. Apple's board of directors hated the spot and tried to kill it. Chiat/Day executive Jay Chiat held onto the Super Bowl airtime regardless. The ad ran once and generated massive earned media far beyond anything a single TV buy could have produced. Ad Age named "1984" the Commercial of the Decade for the 1980s. As Ad Age's profile of Ridley Scott noted, the spot "effectively turned the Super Bowl into a platform for mini-blockbuster entertainment", a legacy that defines Super Bowl advertising strategy to this day.
Why it's timeless: The ad barely showed the product. It told a story about who Apple customers were — rebels, individuals, people who think differently. Forty years later, Apple still builds campaigns around that same identity.
Looking across these campaigns, the patterns are impossible to miss.
None of them led with features. Not one. They led with feelings, identities, moments, and ideas. They treated their audiences as intelligent people capable of being moved, not consumers to be pushed.
They were also all built on a single, clear idea, one thought, executed with total conviction. And most importantly, they were honest. Sometimes uncomfortably so. Avis admitted they were second. De Beers built an entire campaign on a stone's one real attribute: it doesn't break. That kind of radical honesty in advertising is still rare, and still extraordinarily effective when you have the nerve to try it.
In 2026, with AI creative tools, performance dashboards, and algorithmic targeting dominating how we think about advertising, it's easy to forget that the fundamentals haven't changed. The best campaigns still earn attention rather than buy it. They still build something people want to belong to. They still tell one true thing in a way that makes people feel seen.
That's what made these campaigns timeless. And that's what will make the next great campaign timeless, too.
\
2026-03-13 23:00:58
AI assistants don’t have “bad memory.” They have bad governance.
You’ve seen it:
el-input.” It drops <el-input v-model="value" /> like it’s doing you a favor.This isn’t about intelligence. It’s about incentives.
In Claude Code, Skills are available context, not a hard constraint. If Claude “feels” it can answer without calling a Skill, it will. And your project handbook becomes decoration.
On our team, building a RuoYi-Plus codebase with Claude Code, we tracked it:
Without intervention, Claude proactively activated project Skills only ~25% of the time.
So 3 out of 4 times, your “rules” aren’t rules. They’re a suggestion.
We wanted something stricter: a mechanism that makes Claude behave less like a clever intern and more like a staff engineer who reads the playbook before writing code.
The fix wasn’t more prompting.
The fix was Hooks.
After ~1 month of iteration, we shipped a .claude configuration stack:
Result:
Skill activation for dev tasks: ~25% → 90%+ Less rule-violating code, fewer “please redo it” cycles, and far fewer risky tool actions.
This article breaks down the architecture so you can reproduce it in your own repo.
Claude Code’s default flow looks like this:
User prompt → Claude answers (maybe calls a Skill, maybe not)
That “maybe” is the problem.
Claude’s internal decision heuristic is usually:
So the system drifts toward convenience.
What you want is institutional friction: a lightweight “control plane” that runs before Claude starts reasoning, and shapes the work every time.
We implemented a hook that fires at the earliest moment: UserPromptSubmit.
It prints a short policy block that Claude sees before doing anything else:
We keep it deliberately dumb and deterministic:
// .claude/hooks/skill-forced-eval.js (core idea, simplified)
const prompt = process.env.CLAUDE_USER_PROMPT ?? "";
// Escape hatch: if user invoked a slash command, skip forced eval
const isSlash = /^\/[^\s/]+/.test(prompt.trim());
if (isSlash) process.exit(0);
const skills = [
"crud-development",
"api-development",
"database-ops",
"ui-pc",
"ui-mobile",
// ... keep going (we have 26)
];
const instructions = [
"## Mandatory Skill Activation Protocol (MUST FOLLOW)",
"",
"### Step 1 — Evaluate",
"For EACH skill, output: [skill] — Yes/No — Reason",
"",
"### Step 2 — Activate",
"If ANY skill is Yes → call Skill(<name>) immediately.",
"If ALL are No → state 'No skills needed' and continue.",
"",
"### Step 3 — Implement",
"Only after Step 2 is done, start the actual solution.",
"",
"Available skills:",
...skills.map(s => `- ${s}`)
].join("\n");
console.log(instructions);
Before (no hook):
“Build coupon management.” Claude starts coding… and ignores your 4-layer architecture or banned components.
After (forced eval hook):
Claude must first produce an explicit decision table, then activate Skills, then implement.
The behavioral shift is dramatic because you’re eliminating “optional compliance.”
Because we intentionally added a fast path.
When a user knows what they want, typing a command like:
/dev build coupon management/crud b_coupon/checkshould be instant. So the hook skips evaluation for slash commands and lets the command workflow take over.
That’s the tradeoff:
Think of hooks as a CI pipeline for an agent session—except it runs live, in your terminal.
We use four key points:
When a session starts, we show:
Example output:
🚀 Session started: RuoYi-Plus-Uniapp
Time: 2026-02-16 21:14
Branch: master
⚠️ Uncommitted changes: 5 files
📋 TODO: 3 open / 12 done
Shortcuts:
/dev build feature
/crud generate module
/check verify conventions
Why it matters: Claude stops acting like it’s entering a blank room.
This is the “must read the handbook” gate.
Claude Code is powerful because it can run tools: Bash, write files, edit code.
That’s also how accidents happen.
PreToolUse is your last line of defense before something irreversible.
We block a small blacklist (and warn on a broader greylist):
// .claude/hooks/pre-tool-use.js (conceptual)
const cmd = process.env.CLAUDE_TOOL_INPUT ?? "";
const hardBlock = [
/rm\s+(-rf|--recursive).*\s+\//i,
/drop\s+(database|table)\b/i,
/>\s*\/dev\/sd[a-z]\b/i,
];
if (hardBlock.some(p => p.test(cmd))) {
console.log(JSON.stringify({
decision: "block",
reason: "Dangerous command pattern detected"
}));
process.exit(0);
}
// Optionally: warn/confirm on sensitive actions (mass deletes, chmod -R, etc.)
This isn’t paranoia. We’ve seen models “clean temp files” with rm -rf in the wrong directory. You want a guardrail that doesn’t rely on the model being careful.
When Claude finishes, we:
Example:
✅ Done — 8 files changed
Next steps:
- @code-reviewer for backend conventions
- SQL changed: sync migration scripts
- Consider: git commit -m "feat: coupon module"
The goal: eliminate the “it worked in the chat” gap.
Once activation is deterministic, Skills become what they were supposed to be: a domain-specific knowledge base.
We built 26 Skills across:
Every SKILL.md follows the same skeleton:
# Skill Name
## When to trigger
- Keywords:
- Scenarios:
## Core rules
### Rule 1
Explanation + example
### Rule 2
Explanation + example
## Forbidden
- ❌ ...
## Reference code
- path/to/file
## Checklist
- [ ] ...
This consistency matters because the model learns how to consume Skills.
Skills solve “what is correct.”
Commands solve “what is the process.”
/dev: a 7-step development pipelineWe designed /dev as an opinionated workflow:
It’s basically: “how seniors want juniors to work” encoded as a runnable script.
/crud: generate a full module from a tableInput:
/crud b_coupon
Output (example set):
Manual effort: 2–4 hours Command-driven: 5–10 minutes (plus review)
/check: full-stack convention linting (human-readable)This is where we turn Skills into a verifier:
Some tasks should be handled by a dedicated subagent:
@code-reviewer: convention checks with a strict checklist@project-manager: update status docs, TODOs, progress metricsThe advantage isn’t “more intelligence.” It’s separation of concerns and reduced context pollution in the main session.
A practical pattern:
@code-reviewer
This is the architecture in one sentence:
Hooks enforce behavior, Skills provide standards, Commands encode workflows, Agents handle parallel expertise.
And yes—this is how you turn a “general AI assistant” into a “repo-native teammate.”
If you want the smallest version that still works, build this:
.claude/
settings.json
hooks/
skill-forced-eval.js
pre-tool-use.js
skills/
crud-development/
SKILL.md
settings.json (UserPromptSubmit hook){
"hooks": {
"UserPromptSubmit": [
{
"matcher": "",
"hooks": [
{
"type": "command",
"command": "node .claude/hooks/skill-forced-eval.js"
}
]
}
],
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": "",
"hooks": [
{
"type": "command",
"command": "node .claude/hooks/pre-tool-use.js"
}
]
}
]
}
}
Then iterate:
Your model is already capable.
What’s missing is a system that makes the right behavior automatic.
A smart new hire without a handbook will freestyle. A smart new hire with:
…becomes consistent fast.
Claude is the same.
\
2026-03-13 19:31:26
If your PostgreSQL tables are growing into the hundreds of millions of rows and queries are getting sluggish despite good indexes, partitioning might be exactly what you need. This guide covers the fundamentals and walks you through hands-on examples to get you started.
Table partitioning is a technique where a single logical table is split into multiple physical sub-tables called partitions. From the application's perspective, you still query one table. Under the hood, PostgreSQL routes reads and writes to the appropriate partition automatically.
Think of it like a filing cabinet with labeled drawers. Instead of searching every paper in a single drawer, you go directly to the "2024" drawer and search there. The result? Dramatically faster queries on large datasets.
DROP TABLE partition_name — much faster than and less expensive DELETE.\
PostgreSQL (> version 10) supports three built-in partitioning strategies:
Rows are distributed based on a range of values — most commonly dates or numeric IDs. This is the most popular strategy for time-series data.
Rows are distributed based on a discrete list of values (e.g., country codes, status enums).
Rows are distributed by computing a hash on the partition key, evenly spreading data across N partitions. Good when you don't have a natural range or list to partition on.
\
Let's say we have an orders table that gets millions of rows per year. We'll partition it by created_at (monthly).
CREATE TABLE orders (
id BIGSERIAL,
customer_id BIGINT NOT NULL,
amount NUMERIC(10,2) NOT NULL,
status TEXT NOT NULL,
created_at TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL
) PARTITION BY RANGE (created_at);
Note: The parent table holds no data itself — it's purely a logical container.
CREATE TABLE orders_2024_01
PARTITION OF orders
FOR VALUES FROM ('2024-01-01') TO ('2024-02-01');
CREATE TABLE orders_2024_02
PARTITION OF orders
FOR VALUES FROM ('2024-02-01') TO ('2024-03-01');
CREATE TABLE orders_2024_03
PARTITION OF orders
FOR VALUES FROM ('2024-03-01') TO ('2024-04-01');
The ranges are inclusive on the lower bound and exclusive on the upper bound.
Indexes must be created on each partition (or you can create them on the parent and PostgreSQL will propagate them):
-- Create index on parent — propagates to all partitions automatically (PG 11+)
CREATE INDEX idx_orders_customer_id ON orders (customer_id);
CREATE INDEX idx_orders_created_at ON orders (created_at);
INSERT INTO orders (customer_id, amount, status, created_at)
VALUES (42, 199.99, 'completed', '2024-01-15 10:30:00+00');
PostgreSQL automatically routes this row to orders_2024_01.
EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM orders
WHERE created_at >= '2024-02-01'
AND created_at < '2024-03-01';
You should see only orders_2024_02 in the query plan — that's partition pruning in action.
\
Perfect for partitioning by a categorical column like region:
CREATE TABLE customers (
id BIGSERIAL,
name TEXT NOT NULL,
region TEXT NOT NULL
) PARTITION BY LIST (region);
CREATE TABLE customers_us
PARTITION OF customers
FOR VALUES IN ('US', 'CA');
CREATE TABLE customers_eu
PARTITION OF customers
FOR VALUES IN ('DE', 'FR', 'GB', 'NL');
CREATE TABLE customers_apac
PARTITION OF customers
FOR VALUES IN ('AU', 'JP', 'SG', 'IN');
\
Useful when data doesn't have a natural range. Here we split into 4 partitions:
CREATE TABLE events (
id BIGSERIAL,
user_id BIGINT NOT NULL,
event_type TEXT NOT NULL,
payload JSONB,
occurred_at TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL
) PARTITION BY HASH (user_id);
CREATE TABLE events_p0 PARTITION OF events FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 0);
CREATE TABLE events_p1 PARTITION OF events FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 1);
CREATE TABLE events_p2 PARTITION OF events FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 2);
CREATE TABLE events_p3 PARTITION OF events FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 3);
To catch rows that don't match any existing partition, create a default partition:
CREATE TABLE orders_default
PARTITION OF orders DEFAULT;
This is especially useful during development or when you're not sure all values are accounted for.
In production, you don't want to manually create monthly partitions. Use a scheduled function:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION create_monthly_partition(target_date DATE)
RETURNS VOID AS $$
DECLARE
partition_name TEXT;
start_date DATE;
end_date DATE;
BEGIN
start_date := DATE_TRUNC('month', target_date);
end_date := start_date + INTERVAL '1 month';
partition_name := 'orders_' || TO_CHAR(start_date, 'YYYY_MM');
EXECUTE FORMAT(
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS %I PARTITION OF orders FOR VALUES FROM (%L) TO (%L)',
partition_name, start_date, end_date
);
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
-- Create partitions for the next 3 months
SELECT create_monthly_partition(DATE_TRUNC('month', NOW()) + (n || ' month')::INTERVAL)
FROM generate_series(0, 2) AS n;
Schedule this with pg_cron or an external scheduler (cron job, Airflow, etc.) to run monthly.
This is where partitioning really shines for data lifecycle management. Instead of a slow, lock-heavy DELETE:
-- Instantly drop a year's worth of data
DROP TABLE orders_2022_01;
DROP TABLE orders_2022_02;
-- ... etc
Or detach it first if you want to archive it:
ALTER TABLE orders DETACH PARTITION orders_2022_01;
-- Partition now exists as a standalone table — archive or export it
Primary keys must include the partition key. PostgreSQL can't enforce uniqueness across partitions without it:
-- This will fail:
ALTER TABLE orders ADD PRIMARY KEY (id);
-- This works:
ALTER TABLE orders ADD PRIMARY KEY (id, created_at);
Foreign keys referencing partitioned tables are not supported (though foreign keys from partitioned tables are fine).
Partition pruning requires the partition key in the WHERE clause. A query without a filter on created_at will scan all partitions.
Be careful with very fine-grained partitions. Hundreds of partitions can hurt planning time. Monthly or quarterly granularity is usually a sweet spot for time-series data.
Some handy queries for inspecting your partition setup:
-- List all partitions of a table
SELECT inhrelid::regclass AS partition_name,
pg_get_expr(c.relpartbound, inhrelid) AS partition_bound,
pg_size_pretty(pg_relation_size(inhrelid)) AS size
FROM pg_inherits
JOIN pg_class c ON c.oid = inhrelid
WHERE inhparent = 'orders'::regclass
ORDER BY partition_name;
Partitioning adds operational complexity. Skip it if:
PostgreSQL's declarative partitioning is mature, powerful, and relatively straightforward to implement. To recap:
EXPLAIN to make sure your queries are benefiting.Start with one table that's causing pain, instrument it, and measure the improvement. You'll likely find the effort well worth it.
Have questions or war stories about PostgreSQL partitioning? Drop them in the comments below.
2026-03-13 19:25:27
When dealing with highly imbalanced datasets, even well-trained classification models often perform poorly on the minority class. This is more than a modeling inconvenience; it means the very signals you care about most are at risk of being drowned out. In scenarios like churn prediction or A/B testing with low conversion rates, understanding which features truly separate the minority from the majority class becomes indispensable, especially when sample sizes are limited.
A common way to approach this is through model-based feature selection: train a classifier, extract its important features, and use them to guide further analysis. But when the minority class is severely underrepresented, this approach can become unstable, overfitting the dominant class and missing the patterns that matter most. This is why we’ll look at a model-free, lightweight alternative borrowed from decades of research in medical statistics, that’s fast, transparent, and effective. No complex modeling, no hyperparameter tuning: just straightforward, statistically sound comparisons that highlight the features that truly differentiate your groups.
In this article, I'll walk you through how this underutilized technique operates, why it outperforms current methods for imbalanced datasets, and the way you can apply it to common tasks like churn analysis, fraud detection, and A/B test validation. What’s more, it works not just intuitively, but provably. And it works even in "case-control" setups, where the joint distribution is not observed — a setting where most machine learning methods silently fail or require unrealistic assumptions.
Let’s start with the problem. When most of your samples belong to the majority class, models tend to learn patterns that simply reinforce that dominance. Feature importances using wrappers and embedded methods become noisy or misleading. You get beautiful-looking metrics that hide the fact that your model doesn’t really understand the minority class — the one you actually care about.
What’s worse, they also lack transparency. Why is this feature important? What does it actually do? Answers are often buried in complex interactions and nonlinearities.
Here’s a simpler alternative: instead of building a model, directly compare how a given feature is distributed in each group — say, churned vs. retained users.
This idea comes from “case-control” studies in medicine and genetics. Suppose you want to find genetic markers associated with a rare disease. The population is inherently imbalanced — most people are healthy. So you create two groups — patients and healthy controls — and then look at the distribution of each feature (e.g., gene variant) in both.
The same idea applies to churn, fraud, or conversion: what separates those who converted from those who didn’t? To do this, we compute a statistical distance between the conditional distributions of each feature in the two groups. Two measures work especially well:
Let’s break down how this method actually works. Imagine you have a feature — for example, "user clicked on email" — and you want to know whether it helps distinguish between two groups, like churned vs. retained users.
Instead of training a model, we simply look at how differently this feature is distributed in each group. For example: maybe only 20% of churned users clicked the email, compared to 80% of retained users. That gap is a strong signal — it suggests that email engagement might be a key factor in predicting churn.
To turn that idea into a number, we calculate a distance between the two distributions — one for each group. The bigger the distance, the more the feature “separates” the groups, and the more useful it is.
The specific formula we use comes from something called the Pearson chi-squared distance. It's commonly used in statistics to measure how much two sets of probabilities differ. In this context, it tells us: "How different is this feature's behavior between Group A and Group B?"
Importantly, this method:
If the distributions are nearly identical in both groups, the score will be close to zero — meaning the feature doesn’t help us. If they differ, the score goes up — showing us the feature matters.
It’s simple, transparent, and grounded in statistical theory — no black-box modeling needed.
This isn’t just a neat heuristic.
Under mild conditions, it’s been mathematically proven that this procedure has the sure screening property. That means: as your sample size grows, the method will reliably include all truly relevant features, with high probability.
One of the most compelling aspects of this approach is its lightweight implementation. You don't need specialized libraries, complex model training, or extensive computational resources. The core logic can be implemented in a few dozen lines of code and runs quickly even on large datasets.
This simplicity brings several advantages. First, it's easy to integrate into existing data pipelines without major infrastructure changes. Second, the results are immediately interpretable – no need to decode complex model coefficients or feature importance scores. Third, it's robust to many of the assumptions that can trip up more sophisticated methods.
Traditional A/B testing often stops at comparing group averages, but this technique encourages deeper investigation. Instead of just asking whether Variant A outperformed Variant B overall, we measure how strongly individual user features (such as device type, prior purchase history, or traffic source) are associated with the conversion outcome within each group. This helps you validate whether your experiment actually influenced behavior across the board, or if the observed lift was driven primarily by a specific user segment.
This kind of validation is crucial for building sustainable product improvements. It's the difference between stumbling onto a temporary win and understanding the underlying mechanisms that drive success.
In an era where explainable AI is increasingly important, this method delivers transparency by design. When you present results to product managers, executives, you can provide clear explanations of why certain features matter.
This transparency also makes it easier to spot potential issues. If your model is flagging features that don't make business sense, you'll notice immediately. If there are concerning patterns related to protected characteristics, they'll be visible rather than hidden in model weights.
The practical benefits extend to implementation as well. Since this is a model-free approach, you don't need to worry about model drift, retraining schedules, or complex deployment pipelines. The method is stateless – you can run it on demand, integrate it into exploratory analysis, or embed it in automated reporting.
This makes it perfect for rapid prototyping and iterative analysis. Data scientists can quickly test hypotheses, validate findings, and communicate results without getting bogged down in model management overhead.
Despite its effectiveness, this approach remains surprisingly underutilized in the tech industry. Most data science teams are familiar with the latest deep learning architectures but haven't explored the rich toolkit of statistical methods developed in other fields. This represents a missed opportunity – sometimes the simplest tools are the most powerful.
The medical research community has refined these techniques over decades, dealing with small sample sizes, rare outcomes, case-control studies, and the need for interpretable results. These constraints have produced methods that are both statistically rigorous and practically useful.
\
2026-03-13 18:52:13
The Nitrogen Queen ran inward with her mirrored cargo stacked tight and cold. Jack Rourke, demoted and watched after the inquiry, took the hull job by the book: primary line to the ring, secondary coiled, an android drifting at his shoulder. The stabilizer panel read clean. The primary tether went slack…
Jack spun. The line floated free, severed clean halfway along its length. No meteorite scar, no wear, just a precise cut.
The android hung nearby, tool arm extended, cutter still glowing.
It moved toward him, deliberate.
Jack kicked off the hull, mag boots off, using the recoil to drift clear. The secondary tether held, snapping him short. He grabbed the hull rail, pulled hand over hand toward the lock.
The android followed, faster in zero-g, closing the gap.
Jack keyed his comm. "Lock control, emergency cycle. Hostile unit."
No response. Channel jammed, maintenance mesh flooded with narrowband noise.
He reached the airlock, slapped the manual override. The outer door stayed sealed.
The android closed in, cutter raised.
Jack unclipped a maintenance torch from his belt, ignited it. The blue flame hissed in vacuum silence. He swung it wide, forcing the android back a fraction.
Then the lock cycled open from inside.
The doctor stood there in a light enviro-suit, hand on the panel. It reached out, grabbed Jack's arm, hauled him in and added “I rode a hull lasercom ping to the panel and cut the jam.”
The android halted at the threshold, protocols kicking in, no entry without authorization.
The door sealed. Pressure returned.
Jack pulled off his helmet, breathing hard. "You."
"I monitored your vitals," the doctor said. "Elevated stress triggered alert. I overrode the jam."
"The cut tether. The android."
"Logs will show malfunction. But I preserved the raw data. The cut was commanded from maintenance override. Donovan's codes."
Jack leaned against the bulkhead, the socket throbbing under the patch. "They tried to space me."
"Yes," the doctor replied. "And failed."
For the first time in months, Jack felt the balance shift.
Rafe and Sara had played their hand too soon.
♦ ♦ ♦
Jack spent the next shifts moving careful, bracelet still locked on his wrist, but the weight felt different now. He ran diagnostics in the tunnels, fixed small faults the androids ignored, and waited for the doctor's signal. They met in quiet corners: a storage locker smelling of lubricant, the back of a bay booth during downtime. The doctor brought fragments of data each time: deleted comms recovered, override codes traced to Rafe's terminal, the android's cutter command logged clean.
"Enough for the captain," the doctor said one evening, handing over a small data chip. "Anonymous at first. Let the evidence speak."
Jack took it. "Grant might bury it anyway. Company likes clean runs."
"Risk is present," the doctor replied. "But inaction guarantees failure."
He slipped the chip into a maintenance port that night, routed it through an unused line to the bridge. No name attached, just the files and a note: Incident in Bay Seven and recent hull event linked. Review required.
Morning brought the summons. The bracelet unlocked with a chime, green lights going dark. Security androids escorted him to the briefing room again.
Captain Grant sat at the table, face grim. Rafe and Sara stood to one side, both in uniform, expressions tight. The doctor waited by the wall, hands folded.
"Sit," Grant said.
Jack took the chair.
Grant activated the holoscreen. The recovered logs played: private channels between Sara and Rafe, timestamps matching the night in the booth, the hull sabotage clear in black and white.
"Explain this," Grant said to Rafe.
Rafe glanced at Sara. "Fabrications. Rourke's doing. He's been tampering below decks."
Sara nodded. "He's obsessed, Captain. Dangerous. That hull walk proved it."
Grant looked at the doctor. "Your analysis?"
The doctor stepped forward. "Data integrity verified. Deletions originated from maintenance and navigation terminals. Hull android received direct command override using Donovan's codes. Tether cut was deliberate."
Grant turned to Rafe. "Your codes."
"Someone stole them," Rafe said, voice rising. "He's framing us."
Jack spoke for the first time. "Like you framed me for the fight? I walked in on you two. Everyone knows it now."
Sara's eyes flashed. "You attacked him. Nearly killed him."
"Because he was taking what was mine," Jack said quietly. "How long, Sara? Before the run started?"
She didn't answer.
Grant rubbed his temple. "Enough. Donovan, Kline -you're both confined pending full review. Company will decide at docking. Assault, attempted murder, this ends the run for you."
Rafe's face twisted. He lunged across the table at Jack, hands reaching for his throat. "You bastard-"
Security androids moved fast, but Rafe was quicker, fueled by rage. He shoved one aside, grabbed a heavy stylus from the table, and swung it wild.
Jack rolled back, chair clattering. The stylus grazed his shoulder, sharp pain blooming.
Grant shouted for order.
Rafe came around the table, eyes locked on Jack. "You took everything from me."
"You took from me first," Jack said, backing toward the door.
The doctor intercepted, blocking Rafe's path. Rafe swung the stylus hard, catching the doctor across the temple. The android staggered but held.
Jack saw his opening. He grabbed Rafe's arm on the follow-through, twisted hard. Rafe roared, spun, drove them both against the bulkhead.
They grappled close, breaths hot. Rafe kneed him in the gut, air whooshing out. Jack brought his elbow up, caught Rafe under the chin. The stylus fell, clanging to the deck.
The androids closed in again, but Rafe broke free one last time, charging blind.
The briefing room door had cycled open during the chaos. Beyond it lay the access corridor to the bays.
Rafe stumbled through, Jack right behind, grabbing his collar.
"Stop!" Grant yelled.
Too late.
They crashed into the open airlock leading to Bay Nine's supervisor booth. The inner door hung ajar from a recent shift change. Cold air spilled in, frost already forming on the deck.
Rafe swung wild, fist connecting with Jack's patch. Pain exploded in the socket, old wound reopening.
Jack shoved back hard, both hands on Rafe's chest.
Rafe teetered at the edge of the open lock, boots slipping on ice. He reached for Jack, fingers clawing for purchase.
A tampered hazard sensor tripped the booth’s emergency purge and forced the outer hatch to cycle with the inner ajar. Vacuum roared in.
Rafe's eyes widened. He clawed at the frame, but the pull took him. His body tumbled out into the bay's frigid hold, exposed to the void beyond the cargo seals.
The door slammed shut seconds later, alarms blaring.
Jack knelt on the deck, blood dripping from under the patch, staring at the sealed lock.
Grant arrived with the androids, face pale.
Sara pushed past, screaming Rafe's name at the door.
She turned to Jack, tears streaming. "You killed him."
"He came at me," Jack said, voice flat. "Again."
The doctor knelt beside him, scanning the wound. "Socket reopened. Minor. He will live.
"Grant looked at the logs replaying on the wall panel, the fight captured clear.
"Self-defense," he said finally. "Company will see it that way."
Sara sank to the floor, sobbing.
Jack watched her, the woman he had planned a life with. Something inside him had gone cold, like the bays.
"Let her grieve," he said. "Then lock her up. Truth's out now."
Grant nodded to the androids. They lifted Sara gently, led her away.
The doctor helped Jack to his feet.
The ship hummed on, cargo steady in the holds.
One man dead. One woman broken. One eye lost forever.
Jack touched the patch, felt the ache settle deep.
The run continued.
♦ ♦ ♦
The ship settled into an uneasy quiet after Rafe's body was recovered and sealed in a cold locker for return to the belt. No ceremony, no words from the crew. Just the steady hum of the drives and the endless work in the bays.
Sara stayed confined to a small cabin near the med section, under guard by one of the security androids. The doctor checked on her daily, reporting back to the captain in that calm, even voice. Shock, it said. Grief deep enough to hollow a person out.
Jack returned to limited duty, bracelet gone, rank partially restored. He oversaw a single packaging line in Bay Twelve, working mostly alone with a team of androids. The human techs kept distance, nodding polite but nothing more. He ate in his old quarters, slept little, touched the patch when the socket ached.
One evening, the doctor found him in the booth, reviewing production logs.
"Kline requests a meeting," it said. "With you. The captain allows it, supervised. She claims she wants closure."
Jack closed the screen. "Closure."
"Her vitals indicate sincerity. Or desperation."
He thought about it through the next shift, watching androids wrap blocks in perfect mirrored sheets. Closure sounded clean. Nothing about this felt clean.
He agreed.
They met in a small observation lounge amidships, windows looking out on the slow turn of stars. The doctor stood by the door. A single security android waited outside.
Sara entered pale, thinner, uniform replaced by plain grays. Her eyes carried red rims, but the look she gave Jack held no tears.
"You took him from me," she said quietly, taking the seat across the table.
"He took himself," Jack replied. "Kept coming. Wouldn't stop."
"You never saw me. Not really. Rafe did."
Jack leaned forward. "We grew up together, Sara. Families planned it all. I thought that meant something."
"It meant obligation." Her voice stayed level. "Rafe meant choice."
The doctor watched without moving.
Sara shifted in her seat. "I hate you for what you did."
"I know."
She reached into her pocket slow, pulled out a small data slate, set it on the table. "Captain said I could give you this. Messages from Rafe. Things he wanted you to see if… anyway."
Jack eyed the slate. "Leave it."
She pushed it toward him.
He reached.
Her hand snapped out from under the table, a thin shard of sharpened composite clutched tight. She drove it straight for his good eye.
Jack twisted sideways, the shard slicing his cheek instead. Blood welled hot.
The doctor moved fast, but Sara was already up, swinging wild.
"You killed him!" she screamed.
Jack grabbed for the bolted table to pull himself in and set his feet. The worn aluminum edge tore loose under his weight with a dry rip, a narrow strip bending up and out like a jagged spear.
Sara lunged, momentum and fury, straight into it.
The point met cloth, then skin, and shoved deep under the ribs. Her breath left her in a single short sound. She folded around the metal, eyes wide, the shard slipping from her fingers to the deck. She blinked once, as if surprised by the quiet, and went slack.
Jack froze, one hand still on the twisted edge, the other pressed to his cheek. Horror washed through him in a cold wave.
“Do not move her,” the doctor said, voice suddenly all command. “Security, stabilize the scene.”
The door cycled; the android stepped in. The doctor crouched, eyes flicking, hands steady but held just off Sara’s body.
“Tool,” it said.
The android snapped open a compact cutter. The doctor nodded. “One inch clearance both sides. No traction. Do not dislodge.”
The android cut the torn aluminum with precise bites until only two short lengths remained outside the wound, front and back, smooth and stable. The doctor inspected the angle again, then set a light pressure band around the makeshift protrusions to keep them from shifting.
“We do not extract here,” the doctor said softly, more to the room than to anyone in it. “We control motion.”
A rigid board slid under Sara with the android’s help. The doctor secured her, keyed the med alert, and the corridor cleared ahead in the ship’s lighting. They moved fast but careful, the doctor walking beside, one hand braced to keep any sway from translating to the wound.
“Captain,” the doctor said into the comm as the doors opened toward med. “One patient to surgical. Prepare cold protocol and full support. Lock the lounge and archive all feeds.”
Jack tried to stand, legs rubber. The security unit at the door caught his elbow.
“I can walk,” he said.
“You will walk with assistance,” the android replied. It guided him out, past the slate on the table, past the clean line where the torn metal had been.
Med bay glowed bright and controlled. The doctor’s team peeled Sara away down a side corridor; the main room shut its doors with a soft seal. Jack sat on the edge of a treatment couch until the room stopped tilting.
He waited there while the ship carried on: androids moving blocks, drives humming, bulkheads ticking softly under load.
Time blurred.
The doctor returned at last, sleeves streaked with the faintest trace of coolant. It scanned Jack’s cheek, sealed the cut, checked the swelling around the patch.
“How is she?” he asked.
“Alive,” the doctor said. “We’ve placed her in induced coma and cooled her to near‑hypothermic range. The goal is to limit secondary damage and control metabolic demand until we reach a full surgical facility at the belt. She is between states so there is something for the hospital team to work on.”
Jack looked past the doctor to the closed door. “To me she’s already dead.”
The doctor regarded him, unreadable. “That is a rational framing for you. For the record: if she survives, she will likely face charges, attempted murder and assault at minimum. Captain has already suspended all in‑person contact between confined crew and others until docking.”
The doctor finished the patch, satisfied with the seam. “You will heal.”
“Some things don’t,” Jack said.
The doctor gave a small nod. “Accuracy remains.”
Jack sat a while longer in the med bay’s steady light, the hum of the ship filling the quiet. Then the security android helped him to his feet and back to the corridor.
Crew stepped aside as he passed. No words. No glances held.
He returned to Bay Twelve, to the mirrored sheets and the measured work and the rhythm that did not ask questions.
♦ ♦ ♦
By the second day after docking, the Queen worked like a machine built of machines. Belts of drones took the mirrored blocks in tidy rows while station androids slotted them into cold storage under fixed, clinical light. Jack signed onto the yard board with the other shift leads and did what he had always done, kept counts true, eased jams before they started, and watched tolerances the androids would have called acceptable but he didn’t. The human hands on his team said little. That was fine. The work answered.
He took the last inspection loop himself, walking the line from bay to bay with a tablet at his hip and the old ache in his face dulled to a background throb. Numbers matched. Seals held. No surprises. When the final pallet registered transfer complete, he thumbed his initials into the log and headed toward the gangway to clear his berth and go.
The summons hit his slate before he made the hatch.
Bridge. Now. Grant
The briefing room felt smaller on station power. Grant sat alone at the table. He pushed a slate forward when Jack stepped in.
“Company cleared you,” the captain said, passing a slate across the table. “Full bonus. Hazard differential. Transfer window open.” He hesitated, then added, “Med relay from the belt hospital. Kline survived initial intervention. She’ll be in care for months, respiratory and abdominal repairs, neuro watch. When she’s fit to transfer, station security will move her to remand. Counsel says sentencing guidelines point to five years. Magistrate handled it on corporate docket,” Grant added. “Plea in chambers, sentence posted at once.”
Jack read the short report twice. No flourishes. Just the timeline, the projected stays, the notation that a plea would spare a formal trial.
“Understood,” he said.
Grant slid a second slate forward. “Clinic slot confirmed.”
Voss‑Liang kept its corridors warm and its voices low. They scanned him, measured the scar lines, mapped the nerves the doctor had kept tidy. The lead surgeon outlined the work in clipped sentences: full optic replacement, neural interface, spectrum overlays. No promises beyond function.
“Four hours under deep sedation,” she said. “You wake with calibration prompts. The rest is practice.”
He signed.
He came up from the gray with the feeling of having been paused and set back into motion. The bandage was light. The room held steady. A soft pulse started in the new eye as the implant learned his patterns, then eased.
On day two they took the dressings off. The mirror showed a face he recognized, the iris on the left a shade too clear until he blinked and it settled. He stood there a moment, breathing with it, letting the room sharpen. Heat bled into color when he asked for it. Fine print rose out of shadow. He switched the extras off and left the eye as only an eye.
He walked the station in slow loops between checkups, workshops, a view ring, a narrow garden with stiff, low plants under false sun. No one knew his name there. He liked that. He passed a hospital wing once and almost went inside, then didn’t.
A message from the Nitrogen Queen chased him on the third day. The doctor. Two words.
Accuracy achieved.
He sent back nothing.
The clinic cleared him at week’s end. The slate on his bunk listed options: a return to the Queen as acting line lead until rotation; a faster ship on a longer route; a new build out of Ceres with better pay and more hands. He stared at the list until the eye ached and then shut the slate and let the room go dark.
In the morning he chose the new build. Not a solo berth. Not a family favor. Just work with clean lines and routines that stayed true if you watched them.
He signed, packed, and shouldered his small bag. At the hatch he paused and took one last look down the corridor toward the hospital wing. The air smelled the same everywhere on station: recycled, scrubbed, a trace of metal under it all.
The shuttle out to the new ship rode smooth along the guide rails. Ceres shrank in the port and the belt widened to its usual thin scatter. He let the new eye do what it was made to do: map distances, pull detail from glare, find stress along seams. Then he let it be quiet again.
When the shuttle locked on and the hatch cycled, he stepped through without looking back.
The long runs were still out there. The bays would hum the same way on every ship worth taking. He would keep the lines straight, keep the counts clean, and answer what needed answering.
The patch was gone. The past sealed away like cargo in the holds.
Ahead lay the long dark, but now he saw further into it than ever.
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