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Frank Jamison

Frank Jamison is a web developer and educator who writes about structure, systems, and scalable design. With a background in mathematics, technical support, and software development, he brings analytical discipline and practical clarity to modern web architecture. His work emphasizes performance, maintainability, and understanding the foundational rules that govern the web.

  • Middle-aged developer portrayed as a resting fantasy adventurer, seated against a stone wall in a torch-lit dungeon, eyes closed during a quiet moment of reflection, symbolizing taking a long rest and refocusing on fundamentals.
    Career Development

    The Long Rest I Needed: Why I Stopped Chasing “Advanced” Topics

    February 13, 2026 / No Comments

    For a long time, I treated learning like an endless dungeon crawl. No rests. No pauses. Just door after door, room after room, always pushing forward. If something was labeled advanced, I assumed that’s where I should be heading next. Anything else felt like backtracking – or worse, like I was wasting time. So I skipped ahead. Advanced JavaScript. Advanced frameworks. Advanced patterns. If the topic sounded difficult, prestigious, or slightly intimidating, I convinced myself it was necessary. That’s where real developers lived, right? High-level characters throwing fireballs while I pretended I wasn’t still squinting at the rules. I wasn’t learning badly. I was learning exhausted. And like any party…

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    Frank Jamison dressed as a medieval adventurer holding a blue twenty sided die toward the camera while reading from an open leather bound book, standing in front of a stone castle and village backdrop.

    Confidence Gaps: The Silent Saving Throws of a Growing Developer

    March 6, 2026
  • Portrait of a software developer in thoughtful focus, dressed in fantasy-inspired attire, symbolizing the process of debugging a tricky layout issue.
    Web Development Fundamentals

    Debugging a Layout Bug That Wasn’t CSS

    February 11, 2026 / No Comments

    I thought it was CSS.Of course I did. When a layout breaks, CSS is the usual suspect—the rogue with its hood up, pretending it didn’t touch anything. Margins collapse, flex items misbehave, something refuses to center even though you swear it’s centered. We’ve all been there, tightening selectors and muttering !important like a forbidden incantation. This time, the UI looked wrong in a way that felt familiar. A component was shifting unexpectedly. Spacing felt off. Elements that should have been aligned were… not. The kind of visual wrongness that whispers, “Your box model is haunted.” So I did what any seasoned adventurer does at the start of a dungeon: I…

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    Frank Jamison

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    Portrait of Frank Jamison dressed as a hooded fantasy mage, seated at a wooden table in a candlelit study, holding an open spellbook glowing with blue magical energy, with bookshelves and a twenty-sided die visible in the background.

    The Full-Stack Campaign, Part IV: The First Spell – JavaScript and the Flow of Execution

    April 13, 2026
    Portrait of a web developer depicted as a calm, confident guide, holding a glowing book and staff, symbolizing reliability and structure in front-end development.

    Bootstrap: The Reliable Cleric of Front-End Frameworks

    February 7, 2026
    Frank Jamison stands facing forward with a level gaze, wearing dark indigo robes with subtle bronze accents. He is set against a dim, library-like background with warm candlelight, faint grid lines, and a subtle blueprint texture that gives the scene a disciplined, scholarly atmosphere.

    The CSS Codex: Mastering the Rules of the Realm

    March 7, 2026
  • Portrait of a web developer seated at a candlelit desk, holding a twenty-sided die beside an open book showing HTML code in a medieval-style study.
    Web Development Fundamentals

    HTML: Structure Is a Contract

    February 9, 2026 / No Comments

    I didn’t fall in love with HTML.I tolerated it. Like a lot of developers, I treated HTML as the tutorial zone. The place you pass through on your way to the real game – JavaScript, frameworks, flashy interactions, dragons that breathe async fire. HTML felt like the character sheet you fill out quickly so you can start rolling initiative. That was a mistake. Over time – through teaching, debugging, accessibility audits, and rebuilding things I swore I’d never rebuild – I realized something quietly profound: HTML isn’t just structure. It’s a contract. A contract between you and the browser.Between your code and assistive technologies.Between your present self and future-you at…

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    Frank Jamison

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    Portrait of a web developer depicted as a calm, confident guide, holding a glowing book and staff, symbolizing reliability and structure in front-end development.

    Bootstrap: The Reliable Cleric of Front-End Frameworks

    February 7, 2026
    Frank Jamison stands facing forward with a level gaze, wearing dark indigo robes with subtle bronze accents. He is set against a dim, library-like background with warm candlelight, faint grid lines, and a subtle blueprint texture that gives the scene a disciplined, scholarly atmosphere.

    The CSS Codex: Mastering the Rules of the Realm

    March 7, 2026
    Frank Jamison sits at a wooden desk in a medieval inspired study, wearing chainmail and leather armor, looking directly at the camera while holding a quill over a parchment flowchart labeled with software principles like Clear Functions, Tests, Documentation, and Maintainable. A laptop displaying code, polyhedral dice, sticky notes about readability and simplicity, a shield, sword, candles, and a mountain castle backdrop reinforce the theme of reliable, maintainable code in a fantasy setting.

    The Case for the Reliable Fighter: Why Boring Code Is Underrated

    February 27, 2026
  • Portrait of a web developer depicted as a calm, confident guide, holding a glowing book and staff, symbolizing reliability and structure in front-end development.
    Web Development Fundamentals

    Bootstrap: The Reliable Cleric of Front-End Frameworks

    February 7, 2026 / No Comments

    Every party needs one. Not the flashiest character. Not the one critting for 80 damage every round. The one who quietly keeps everyone alive, patches mistakes, and somehow makes the whole dungeon run smoother without demanding attention. In front-end development, that character is Bootstrap. Bootstrap isn’t trendy. It doesn’t promise enlightenment or rewrite the rules of the universe. It just… works. And in a profession where half your bugs come from things not behaving the way you expected, that’s a superpower. This article is for developers who already know HTML and CSS, maybe dabble in JavaScript, and want to understand what Bootstrap actually gives you, why it still matters, and…

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    Frank Jamison

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    Frank Jamison dressed as a medieval adventurer stands on a stone road at sunset, struggling to close an overfilled leather pack stuffed with glowing red and blue potions, scrolls, coins, and gear, with a castle rising in the distance behind him.

    One More Potion in the Pack: The Performance Cost of One Extra Image

    February 25, 2026
    Web developer working with JavaScript at a laptop, shown in a fantasy-inspired setting with dice and scrolls representing JavaScript as the support class of web applications.

    JavaScript: The Support Class That Runs the Game

    February 6, 2026
    Portrait of Frank Jamison dressed as a fantasy mapmaker seated at a wooden table, wearing a cloak and leather armor, looking directly at the viewer while studying a parchment map, with warm candlelight illuminating a medieval room filled with books, maps, and artifacts, evoking the theme of a web developer exploring how the browser shapes the digital world.

    The Full-Stack Campaign, Part I: The First Map – How the Browser Shapes the World

    April 6, 2026
  • Web developer working with JavaScript at a laptop, shown in a fantasy-inspired setting with dice and scrolls representing JavaScript as the support class of web applications.
    Web Development Fundamentals

    JavaScript: The Support Class That Runs the Game

    February 6, 2026 / No Comments

    If you’d asked me years ago what JavaScript was for, I would’ve answered the same way most people do. Buttons.Animations.Stuff that happens when you click things. That answer isn’t wrong – but it’s incomplete in the way early character builds usually are. You understand the surface mechanics, but not the role the class actually plays once the campaign gets serious. The longer I’ve worked with JavaScript, the more I’ve realized it isn’t the flashy class at the table. It’s not there to steal the spotlight or post big damage numbers. JavaScript is the support class. The one quietly managing state, timing, rules, and consequences — making sure the entire system…

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    Frank Jamison

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    Frank Jamison dressed in medieval fantasy attire studies a tabletop role playing game map while moving a miniature figure, holding an open campaign log book, surrounded by dice, candles, and a chalkboard labeled inventory system in a richly detailed Dungeons and Dragons setting.

    The Full-Stack Campaign, Part V: The Inventory System – Managing State Without Losing Control

    April 15, 2026
    Frank Jamison seated at a wooden table in a medieval styled setting, wearing dark leather armor and a cloak, with an open book, polyhedral dice, and a lit candle in front of him against a warm stone background.

    The DOM Without Magic: Rolling for Initiative in the Browser

    March 2, 2026
    Web developer portrait with blurred HTML code in the background, representing front-end and web development fundamentals.

    HTML: The Quiet Backbone of the Web

    January 27, 2026
  • Web developer portrait with CSS code and website wireframes in the background, representing modern front-end web development and design systems
    Web Development Fundamentals

    The Quiet Power of CSS

    February 1, 2026 / No Comments

    CSS has a reputation problem – and for a long time, I bought into it. Early on, I treated CSS as “just styling.” Something you learn first, use constantly, and rarely revisit with much intention. JavaScript felt like the real work. Frameworks felt like progress. CSS was just… there. Until something broke, at which point it somehow became the problem. Over time, I realized that view was backwards. Modern CSS isn’t a grab bag of tricks. It’s a system. Layered. Predictable. Governed by rules that actually make sense once you stop fighting them and start reading them the way they were designed to be read. If HTML gives structure and…

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    Frank Jamison

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    Web developer portrait with blurred HTML code in the background, representing front-end and web development fundamentals.

    HTML: The Quiet Backbone of the Web

    January 27, 2026
    Portrait of a web developer depicted as a calm, confident guide, holding a glowing book and staff, symbolizing reliability and structure in front-end development.

    Bootstrap: The Reliable Cleric of Front-End Frameworks

    February 7, 2026
    Portrait of Frank Jamison dressed as a fantasy mapmaker seated at a wooden table, wearing a cloak and leather armor, looking directly at the viewer while studying a parchment map, with warm candlelight illuminating a medieval room filled with books, maps, and artifacts, evoking the theme of a web developer exploring how the browser shapes the digital world.

    The Full-Stack Campaign, Part I: The First Map – How the Browser Shapes the World

    April 6, 2026
  • Web developer portrait with blurred HTML code in the background, representing front-end and web development fundamentals.
    Web Development Fundamentals

    HTML: The Quiet Backbone of the Web

    January 27, 2026 / No Comments

    HTML is almost always the first thing people encounter when learning web development — and almost always the first thing they rush past. It’s understandable. HTML doesn’t animate, calculate, or react. It doesn’t feel powerful in the same way JavaScript does, and it doesn’t provide the immediate visual reward of CSS. You can write a page full of HTML and feel like nothing exciting happened. But HTML is doing something far more important than excitement. It defines structure.It gives content meaning.It tells the browser — and the people using it — how information is organized. Every website, no matter how modern, complicated, or framework-heavy, begins with HTML. Before styling. Before…

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    Frank Jamison

    Related Posts

    Portrait of a software developer in thoughtful focus, dressed in fantasy-inspired attire, symbolizing the process of debugging a tricky layout issue.

    Debugging a Layout Bug That Wasn’t CSS

    February 11, 2026
    Web developer portrait with CSS code and website wireframes in the background, representing modern front-end web development and design systems

    The Quiet Power of CSS

    February 1, 2026
    Portrait of a web developer depicted as a calm, confident guide, holding a glowing book and staff, symbolizing reliability and structure in front-end development.

    Bootstrap: The Reliable Cleric of Front-End Frameworks

    February 7, 2026
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© 2026 Frank Jamison