2026-03-18 13:00:00
Most teams do not have a testing problem. They have a test data realism problem.
Locally, the app runs against [email protected], User 1, and a seed script nobody wants to maintain. In CI, fixtures slowly drift away from reality. Then the bugs show up after deploy:
NULL where your code assumed a stringIf that sounds familiar, the answer usually is not "write more tests." It is "stop testing against fake data."
What most teams actually want is not a full copy of production, not a giant pg_dump, and not another 400-line seed script. They want production-like data:
That is the gap most dev workflows never solve cleanly.
Seed scripts are fine when your app has five tables. They get painful when your schema grows:
You end up with a setup that is reproducible, but not especially useful. We wrote a deeper comparison of seed scripts vs production snapshots.
pg_dump is great for backups, not dev environments
pg_dump solves a different problem. It copies everything:
That is useful for backup and recovery. It is usually overkill for local development and CI.
For dev workflows, full dumps create new problems:
Most of the time, you do not need the entire database. You need the right slice of it. We wrote a full comparison of pg_dump vs Basecut if you want the details.
The workflow that makes sense looks more like this:
That gives you a connected, realistic, privacy-safe subset of production instead of a raw copy. This is the workflow we built Basecut around for PostgreSQL: FK-aware extraction, automatic PII anonymization, and one-command restores for local dev, CI, and debugging.
The reason this approach works is simple: it treats test data as a repeatable snapshot problem, not a hand-crafted fixture problem.
The phrase gets used loosely. In practice, production-like data should have four properties.
It should reflect the real relationships, optional fields, and edge cases in your schema.
If you copy one row from orders, you usually also need related rows from users, line_items, shipments, and whatever else your app expects to exist together.
Emails, names, phone numbers, addresses, and other sensitive fields need to be anonymized before the data lands on laptops, CI runners, or logs.
Developers need a predictable way to recreate the same kind of dataset without asking someone to send them a dump.
If any one of those is missing, the workflow gets shaky fast.
This is the part many DIY approaches get wrong. Randomly sampling rows from each table sounds easy until you restore them. Then you get:
A useful snapshot has to behave like a self-contained mini-version of production.
That is why FK-aware extraction matters. In Basecut, snapshots are built by following foreign keys in both directions and collecting a connected subgraph of your data. The result is something you can restore into an empty database without ending up with broken references.
That matters more than people think. It is the difference between:
The nice part is that this can stay simple. Basecut starts with a small YAML config that tells it:
Example:
version: '1'
name: 'dev-snapshot'
from:
- table: users
where: 'created_at > :since'
params:
since: '2026-01-01'
traverse:
parents: 5
children: 10
limits:
rows:
per_table: 1000
total: 50000
anonymize:
mode: auto
Then the workflow becomes:
basecut snapshot create \
--config basecut.yml \
--name "dev-snapshot" \
--source "$DATABASE_URL"
basecut snapshot restore dev-snapshot:latest \
--target "$LOCAL_DATABASE_URL"
That is the whole loop:
In practice, most teams can get from install to first snapshot in a few minutes. You can try this workflow with Basecut — the CLI is free for small teams.
One more requirement: privacy. If you are moving production-like data into dev and CI, PII handling cannot be a manual cleanup step.
At minimum, your workflow should:
Basecut handles this with automatic PII detection plus 30+ anonymization strategies. It also supports deterministic masking, which matters when the same source value needs to map to the same fake value across related tables.
If [email protected] turns into one fake email in users and a different fake email somewhere else, your data stops behaving like the real system. That is exactly the sort of detail that makes fake dev data feel fine right up until it is not.
This pattern is just as useful in CI as it is locally. Instead of checking brittle fixtures into the repo, you restore a realistic snapshot before the test suite runs.
For example:
name: Test
on: [push, pull_request]
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:15
env:
POSTGRES_USER: postgres
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
POSTGRES_DB: test_db
ports:
- 5432:5432
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Install Basecut CLI
run: |
curl -fsSL https://basecut.dev/install.sh | sh
echo "$HOME/.local/bin" >> $GITHUB_PATH
- name: Restore snapshot
env:
BASECUT_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.BASECUT_API_KEY }}
run: |
basecut snapshot restore test-data:latest \
--target "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test_db"
- name: Run tests
run: npm test
That gives your pipeline real shapes, real relationships, and realistic edge cases without restoring an entire production dump on every run. It also keeps snapshots small enough that restores stay fast. We go deeper in our CI/CD test data guide.
You probably want production-like snapshots if:
You might not need it yet if:
This is not about replacing every fixture in your test suite. Unit tests still benefit from tiny, explicit test data. The value here is in integration tests, local development, CI, onboarding, and debugging where data shape matters.
If you want to adopt this without overcomplicating it, start small.
Pick one painful workflow.
Usually local dev onboarding, shared staging, or CI integration tests.
Define a small snapshot.
Keep the restore fast. Start with a few root tables and sensible row limits.
Turn on anonymization from day one.
Do not leave this for later.
Restore it somewhere useful immediately.
Local dev DB or CI test DB is usually enough to prove the value.
Expand gradually.
Add more tables, better filters, and refresh automation once the loop is working.
That gets you to useful production-like data quickly without turning the whole thing into a platform project.
Most teams are not under-testing. They are testing against data that makes them feel safe. That is not the same thing.
If your local environments and CI pipelines run against tiny, stale, or fake data, they will keep giving you false confidence. Production-like snapshots are one of the highest-leverage ways to make development and testing feel closer to the real system without dragging raw production data everywhere.
If you want to try this with PostgreSQL, Basecut is free for small teams. Or dig into the quickstart guide and how FK-aware extraction works.
2026-03-18 12:53:56
Every time you upload an image to an online tool, you're trusting that server with your data. Your photos contain GPS coordinates, camera serial numbers, timestamps, and sometimes even facial recognition markers — all embedded as EXIF metadata that most people don't even know exists.
I wanted to build something different. A tool that processes images entirely in the browser, so your photos never leave your device.
Here's what I learned building PixelFresh, and the technical decisions behind it.
Before diving into the technical side, let's look at what's actually in your photos. A typical JPEG from a smartphone contains:
| EXIF Field | Privacy Risk |
|---|---|
| GPS Coordinates | Exact location where photo was taken |
| DateTime | When you were at that location |
| Camera Make/Model | Device fingerprinting |
| Serial Number | Unique device identifier |
| Thumbnail | May contain original crop before editing |
| Software | What apps you use |
A single photo can reveal where you live, work, and travel — and most image optimization tools upload these to their servers before processing.
The key insight is that the HTML5 Canvas API naturally strips EXIF metadata when you draw an image onto it. Here's the simplest version:
function stripExif(file) {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
const img = new Image();
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
img.onload = () => {
canvas.width = img.width;
canvas.height = img.height;
ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
canvas.toBlob((blob) => {
resolve(blob); // Clean image — no EXIF data
}, 'image/jpeg', 0.92);
};
img.src = URL.createObjectURL(file);
});
}
When you call canvas.toBlob(), the output contains only pixel data. No EXIF, no GPS, no camera info. It's the simplest and most reliable way to strip metadata without parsing binary EXIF structures.
Stripping EXIF is step one. But what if you need each processed image to have a unique file hash? This matters for:
Simply re-encoding a JPEG at the same quality produces the same file. To create genuinely unique files, I implemented what I call "AI pixel reconstruction":
function pixelReconstruct(ctx, width, height) {
const imageData = ctx.getImageData(0, 0, width, height);
const data = imageData.data;
// 1. Subtle gamma adjustment (random per invocation)
const gamma = 0.98 + Math.random() * 0.04; // 0.98–1.02
// 2. Micro channel mixing
const mix = (Math.random() - 0.5) * 2; // ±1 per channel
for (let i = 0; i < data.length; i += 4) {
// Apply gamma
data[i] = Math.pow(data[i] / 255, gamma) * 255; // R
data[i + 1] = Math.pow(data[i + 1] / 255, gamma) * 255; // G
data[i + 2] = Math.pow(data[i + 2] / 255, gamma) * 255; // B
// Add micro noise (imperceptible, ±1 value)
data[i] = Math.max(0, Math.min(255, data[i] + mix));
data[i + 1] = Math.max(0, Math.min(255, data[i + 1] + mix));
data[i + 2] = Math.max(0, Math.min(255, data[i + 2] + mix));
}
ctx.putImageData(imageData, 0, 0);
}
Each invocation uses different random seeds, producing images that:
Another feature I built was extracting key frames from video. Instead of capturing every frame (which would give you thousands of near-identical images), I implemented scene change detection:
async function detectScenes(video, threshold = 30) {
const scenes = [];
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
// Downsample for performance (160x90)
canvas.width = 160;
canvas.height = 90;
let prevFrame = null;
const duration = video.duration;
const interval = 0.5; // Check every 0.5 seconds
for (let sec = 0; sec < duration; sec += interval) {
video.currentTime = sec;
await new Promise(r => video.onseeked = r);
ctx.drawImage(video, 0, 0, 160, 90);
const frame = ctx.getImageData(0, 0, 160, 90).data;
if (prevFrame) {
let diff = 0;
for (let i = 0; i < frame.length; i += 4) {
diff += Math.abs(frame[i] - prevFrame[i]); // R
diff += Math.abs(frame[i+1] - prevFrame[i+1]); // G
diff += Math.abs(frame[i+2] - prevFrame[i+2]); // B
}
const avgDiff = diff / (160 * 90 * 3);
if (avgDiff > threshold) {
scenes.push(sec); // Scene change detected
}
}
prevFrame = new Uint8Array(frame);
}
return scenes;
}
The algorithm compares consecutive downscaled frames pixel-by-pixel. When the average difference exceeds a threshold, it marks a scene change. Then we capture at full resolution (1080p/4K) at those timestamps.
Processing images client-side has its challenges:
Memory management — Large images (4000×3000) consume significant memory. I process one image at a time and explicitly release ObjectURLs:
URL.revokeObjectURL(objectUrl); // Free memory after use
Web Workers — For batch processing, offloading pixel manipulation to a Web Worker prevents UI freezing. The main thread handles only the Canvas API calls (which must run on the main thread due to DOM access).
JPEG quality — I settled on 92% quality as the sweet spot. Below 90%, compression artifacts become noticeable. Above 95%, file sizes balloon with no perceptible improvement.
The entire app is a single HTML file with inline JavaScript — no build framework, no npm dependencies (at runtime), no backend:
index.html (~1500 lines)
├── HTML structure
├── Tailwind CSS (CDN)
├── i18n system (4 languages)
├── Image processing pipeline
├── Video scene detection
└── ZIP download (JSZip CDN)
This "zero-dependency" approach means:
Canvas toBlob() is your friend for metadata stripping. Don't try to parse and remove EXIF fields manually — just redraw the image.
Random seeds matter for unique file generation. Using Math.random() for gamma and noise values ensures every output is genuinely different.
Downsample for analysis, full-res for output. Scene detection at 160×90 is fast enough for real-time processing, but final captures should use the original video resolution.
Single-file architecture works for tools up to ~2000 lines. Beyond that, consider splitting — but don't split prematurely.
Privacy as a feature resonates strongly with users. "Your photos never leave your device" is a concrete, verifiable claim that builds trust.
PixelFresh is free, requires no sign-up, and works in any modern browser. The source is a single HTML file — you can literally view-source to verify that no data is sent anywhere.
If you're building browser-based tools, I'd love to hear about your approach to client-side processing. Drop a comment below!
This article was originally published on the PixelFresh blog.
2026-03-18 12:50:45
As developers, we’ve always lived by the mantra of "Open Source." But in 2026, the landscape has shifted. We're no longer just sharing code with other humans; we're providing high-quality training data for AI models and automated extraction scripts.
Standard licenses like MIT or GPL were built for a different era. They don't distinguish between a human reading your code to learn and an AI "digesting" your unique correlation methodologies to replicate them at scale.
That’s why I built RCF (Restricted Correlation Framework).
RCF is an author-defined licensing protocol that creates a clear boundary between Visibility and Usage Rights.
The core philosophy is simple: Visibility ≠ Rights.
It’s the first license designed to be AI-resistant while remaining Source-Visible.
We’ve just released RCF v1.2.7, and it brings a game-changing feature for protecting your IP: RCF-Audit.
You can now generate an immutable, cryptographically signed report of your project's compliance.
The rcf-cli audit tool creates a SHA-256 snapshot of all your protected assets, giving you a verifiable proof of ownership and protection status.
Whether you're in the Node.js or Python ecosystem, RCF is ready. We’ve synchronized version 1.2.7 across:
rcf-cli
Improved semantic markers for granular protection:
[RCF:PUBLIC] — Architecture and concepts.[RCF:PROTECTED] — Core methodologies (Visible, not replicable).[RCF:RESTRICTED] — Sensitive implementation details.Want to protect your next project?
# For Python
pip install rcf-cli --upgrade
# For Node.js (Global)
npm install -g rcf-protocol
rcf-cli init --project "My Secret Sauce" --author "Alice Developer"
This generates your NOTICE.md and .rcfignore.
rcf-cli audit . --license-key YOUR_KEY
Get your RCF-AUDIT-REPORT.json
and prove your methodology is protected.
We believe that specialized logic and unique correlation methodologies deserve protection without going into stealth mode. RCF lets you show the world what you've built without giving away how you did it to a bot.
Check out the full specification and grab a license at: 👉 rcf.aliyev.site
Let's write code that belongs to us.
2026-03-18 12:50:29
I wanted to know when my main competitor changed their pricing page. Not in a shady way — I just wanted to stop finding out weeks after the fact when someone mentioned it in a Slack thread.
The naive solution is bookmarking and checking manually. I did this for about two weeks before admitting it wasn't going to stick. What I actually wanted was to set it once and get notified when something changed.
Here's the script I wrote. It's about 30 lines.
SnapAPI's /v1/analyze endpoint returns structured data about any URL: the page type, the primary CTA, detected technologies, and more — from a real Chromium browser session. So instead of scraping HTML and parsing it, I can just ask "what's the CTA on this page right now?" and diff that against yesterday's answer.
No parsing. No XPath selectors that break when the site redesigns. Just a clean JSON field.
// competitor-monitor.js
// Polls a URL daily, alerts when the primary CTA or tech stack changes.
// Requirements: Node.js 18+ (built-in fetch), SNAPAPI_KEY env var.
const fs = require('fs');
const API_KEY = process.env.SNAPAPI_KEY;
const URL = process.env.MONITOR_URL || 'https://yourcompetitor.com';
const STATE = './monitor-state.json';
if (!API_KEY) {
console.error('Set SNAPAPI_KEY env var. Free key at https://snapapi.tech');
process.exit(1);
}
async function analyze(url) {
const res = await fetch(
`https://api.snapapi.tech/v1/analyze?url=${encodeURIComponent(url)}`,
{ headers: { 'x-api-key': API_KEY } }
);
if (!res.ok) throw new Error(`SnapAPI ${res.status}: ${await res.text()}`);
return res.json();
}
async function main() {
const current = await analyze(URL);
const snapshot = {
cta: current.primary_cta,
technologies: current.technologies.sort().join(','),
page_type: current.page_type,
checked_at: new Date().toISOString(),
};
// Load previous state
const prev = fs.existsSync(STATE)
? JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(STATE, 'utf8'))
: null;
if (prev) {
if (prev.cta !== snapshot.cta) {
console.log(`[CHANGE] CTA: "${prev.cta}" → "${snapshot.cta}"`);
}
if (prev.technologies !== snapshot.technologies) {
console.log(`[CHANGE] Tech stack changed`);
console.log(` Before: ${prev.technologies}`);
console.log(` After: ${snapshot.technologies}`);
}
if (prev.page_type !== snapshot.page_type) {
console.log(`[CHANGE] Page type: "${prev.page_type}" → "${snapshot.page_type}"`);
}
if (prev.cta === snapshot.cta && prev.technologies === snapshot.technologies) {
console.log(`[OK] No changes detected. CTA: "${snapshot.cta}"`);
}
} else {
console.log(`[INIT] Baseline set. CTA: "${snapshot.cta}"`);
}
fs.writeFileSync(STATE, JSON.stringify(snapshot, null, 2));
}
main().catch(err => { console.error(err.message); process.exit(1); });
Run it:
export SNAPAPI_KEY=your_key_here
export MONITOR_URL=https://competitor.com/pricing
node competitor-monitor.js
Set up a cron to run it daily:
0 9 * * * SNAPAPI_KEY=your_key MONITOR_URL=https://competitor.com/pricing node /path/to/competitor-monitor.js >> /var/log/monitor.log 2>&1
That's it. Every morning at 9am it checks the page, diffs against yesterday's state, and logs any changes.
This has been running against three competitor URLs for about six weeks. Things it's caught so far:
None of these would have made it into my RSS feed or Twitter alerts.
Slack alerts: Replace the console.log calls with a fetch to a Slack webhook URL:
async function alert(message) {
await fetch(process.env.SLACK_WEBHOOK, {
method: 'POST',
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
body: JSON.stringify({ text: message }),
});
}
Multiple URLs: Wrap the main() logic in a loop over an array of URLs. Each call uses one API credit. With the free tier (100/month), you can monitor 3 URLs daily with room to spare. The $9/month Starter plan covers 33 URLs/day.
Store history: Instead of overwriting monitor-state.json, append to a history.jsonl file (one JSON object per line). Gives you a full audit trail to diff across time.
Visual diff: Add ?screenshot=true to the analyze URL and save each screenshot to disk. Now you have a visual history alongside the structural diff — useful for catching layout or design changes that don't show up in the text fields.
100 API calls/month, no credit card, active in 30 seconds.
2026-03-18 12:50:05
Automate screenshots, metadata checks, and OG audits — no code required.
Zapier connects apps with "if this, then that" workflows called Zaps. Connect it to SnapAPI and you can:
og:image is missingNone of these require writing code. Zapier's built-in Webhooks action handles the SnapAPI call.
This example Zap screenshots any new Google Form response URL and saves the image to Google Drive. Adapt the trigger to whatever fits your workflow.
Go to zapier.com/app/zaps and click + Create Zap.
Choose your trigger app and event. For this example:
Connect your Google account and select the spreadsheet. In the "Set up trigger" step, map which column contains the URL you want to screenshot.
Click + to add an action step.
Click Continue.
In the Set up action panel:
https://api.snapapi.tech/v1/screenshot
Query String Params — add two rows:
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| url | {{your URL field from the trigger}} |
| format | png |
Headers — add one row:
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| x-api-key | YOUR_SNAPAPI_KEY |
Response Type: File
Click Test step. Zapier will make a live request to SnapAPI. If successful, you'll see a file object in the response — that's your screenshot.
Add another action after the Webhooks step:
Click Publish. The Zap runs automatically from now on.
If you need the JSON metadata (og:title, og:image, etc.) rather than the image file, use Code by Zapier instead of Webhooks:
Paste this code, substituting your API key:
const url = inputData.pageUrl; // mapped from your trigger
const apiKey = 'YOUR_SNAPAPI_KEY';
const res = await fetch(
`https://api.snapapi.tech/v1/metadata?url=${encodeURIComponent(url)}`,
{ headers: { 'x-api-key': apiKey } }
);
const data = await res.json();
return {
title: data.og_title || data.title,
description: data.og_description || data.description,
og_image: data.og_image,
missing_og: !data.og_image ? 'YES' : 'NO'
};
The output fields (title, description, og_image, missing_og) become available in downstream steps — pipe them into Slack, Notion, or a Google Sheet.
Zap 1 — Screenshot new leads automatically
https://api.snapapi.tech/v1/screenshot?url={{Column B}}&format=png with x-api-key headerZap 2 — OG tag alert on new blog posts
inputData.pageUrl = RSS Item URL
missing_og equals YES
Zap 3 — Weekly competitor screenshot archive
100 API calls/month, no credit card, active in 30 seconds.
2026-03-18 12:49:41
Content marketers and bloggers spend hours writing SEO-optimized articles. I built WriteKit to cut that down to 60 seconds.
You enter a keyword and select your preferences:
Hit "Generate" and get a complete, SEO-optimized article with:
| Layer | Technology |
|---|---|
| Framework | Next.js 14 (App Router) |
| AI Engine | OpenAI GPT-4o-mini |
| Auth | NextAuth.js (GitHub + Google) |
| Database | Supabase (Postgres) |
| Payments | LemonSqueezy |
| Deployment | Vercel |
The core is a carefully crafted prompt that instructs GPT-4o-mini to:
The response streams in real-time using ReadableStream, so you see the article being written character by character — like watching a fast typist.
Check out the live demo: WriteKit
What content creation pain points do you face? Would love to hear what features matter most to you.