|
ℹ️
|
If you’re interested in knowing more, please check the code. |
Nicolas Fränkel is a technologist focusing on cloud-native technologies, DevOps, CI/CD pipelines, and system observability. His focus revolves around creating technical content, delivering talks, and engaging with developer communities to promote the adoption of modern software practices. With a strong background in software, he has worked extensively with the JVM, applying his expertise across various industries. In addition to his technical work, he is the author of several books and regularly shares insights through his blog and open-source contributions.
- Seasons time-lapse - alignment (2026-05-24)
-
In the previous post, I described the Seasons project: a time-lapse of hundreds of pictures taken from nearly the same viewpoint over the years. The hardest challenge wasn’t taking the pictures or assembling them, but aligning them. You might have noticed the nearly part about viewpoint in the above paragraph. Indeed, it’s an approximation. I’m a human being, not a tripod. The position changes ever so slightly, and so does the exact angle.[…]
- Seasons time-lapse - the foundations (2026-05-17)
-
I live close to nature. I regularly go for a run in the countryside. Over several years, during my runs, I’ve taken pictures from the same position, always roughly the same angle. I had a vague idea in the back of my mind, as an 'artistic' project. One day, I’d turn those photos into a time-lapse video, one that would show the passage of seasons across a single place. Spoiler, here’s the work in progress: However, I knew that this project would take ages.[…]
- Tokensparsamkeit for coding assistants (2026-05-10)
-
Good engineers make decisions based on data. Most businesses assumed that the more data, the better the decision. Then, several factors put a halt to the hoarding of ever more data. GDPR and its localized counterparts, and the cost of storage. However, before the GDPR came into effect, the Datensparsamkeit approach already existed. Datensparsamkeit is a German word that’s difficult to translate properly into English.[…]






