Planning My Publishing Rhythm
After almost a month of using this space to collect and structure my thoughts, I’ve realised how much I enjoy bundling everything here — and how easily I get lost in ideas.
To keep that energy focused, I’m setting a simple publishing rhythm: roughly every three weeks I’ll publish a more substantial update, plus ad-hoc posts whenever I come across something truly noteworthy from the AI world that I want to pass on.
One of the next planned posts will cover the latest updates to ChatGPT 5.1 and Google Gemini Pro 3 and what they mean for my workflows.
Beyond that, I’m planning the following updates:
- An overview of what the Polarion 2512 release might bring, which features it adds, and how they can be used in practice. As usual, new features deserve a critical look first. I will explore the release and publish an update shortly after it comes out, as these changes are directly relevant to my daily work.
- My findings and a solution for starting Polarion from VS Code, enabling a “VS Code only” development setup. See also my latest post to get an impression about this topic: https://polarion.boesger.com/why-i-develop-polarion-mostly-with-vs-code/
- A deep dive into Copilot in VS Code: its modes and useful open-source extensions to maximise its potential and make development significantly easier, faster, and more secure.
This way I keep a steady cadence without forcing it and still leave room for spontaneous deep dives when something important drops.