Random Thoughts in Traffic

Where real traffic meets network traffic.

Main Menu

  • Home

Blog Calendar

April 2026
S M T W T F S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« Mar    

Meta Links

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • Frank Jamison, wearing medieval-inspired scholarly attire, sits at a wooden desk in a dimly lit library, holding an open book and looking forward with a focused, thoughtful expression. Warm candlelight illuminates shelves of old books, scrolls, and dice in the background, creating a D&D inspired atmosphere that reflects careful study and structured design.
    HTML Architecture

    The Full-Stack Campaign, Part II: The Bones of the Realm – Writing Semantic HTML That Holds

    April 8, 2026 / No Comments

    There is a moment in every campaign when the map stops being theory and becomes terrain. In Part I, I charted the world as the browser sees it, a living system that interprets, corrects, and occasionally forgives. That was the map. This is where I start building on it. A map without structure is just suggestion. If Part I defined the shape of the world, Part II defines what stands within it. This is where the bones of the realm are laid down. This is where intent becomes structure. This is where semantic HTML begins to matter in a way that no amount of styling can compensate for later. I…

    Read More
    Frank Jamison
  • 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.
    Web Development Fundamentals

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

    April 6, 2026 / No Comments

    Every campaign begins with a map. Not a perfect one or a complete one, but something reliable enough to take the first step without walking straight off a cliff. That is exactly how I learned to approach the browser, not as a mystery box, but as terrain that can be studied, understood, and navigated with intent. When I first started learning web development, I believed the map was the code itself. HTML, CSS, and JavaScript felt like the ground beneath my feet. If I could write them well, I assumed the world would simply appear the way I imagined it. It took some frustrating and very humbling moments to realize…

    Read More
    Frank Jamison

    Related Posts

    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
    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

Recent Posts

  • The Full-Stack Campaign, Part VI: The Cost of Power – From DOM Manipulation to Design
  • The Full-Stack Campaign, Part V: The Inventory System – Managing State Without Losing Control
  • The Full-Stack Campaign, Part IV: The First Spell – JavaScript and the Flow of Execution
  • The Full-Stack Campaign, Part III: Armor and Appearance – CSS Layout Without Chaos
  • The Full-Stack Campaign, Part II: The Bones of the Realm – Writing Semantic HTML That Holds

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
© 2026 Frank Jamison