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  <title>404 Alphabet</title>
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  <description>Where broken links meet brilliant ideas.</description>
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    <title>So You Want to Blow Up Your Own App: A Beginner&#039;s Guide to Intentional Chaos</title>
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    <description>Breaking your application on purpose sounds like something you do at 2am after a bad sprint review. But chaos engineering is actually one of the most disciplined, methodical practices in modern software development — and frontend devs have been sleeping on it for too long. Here&#039;s how to start burning things down responsibly.</description>
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    <category>Development</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 10:39:01 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Digging Through Digital Dirt: The Archaeologists Who Love Your Broken Links</title>
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    <description>Every 404 error is a tombstone, and some very dedicated people are out there reading the inscriptions. From defunct GeoCities shrines to abandoned startup manifestos, the dead corners of the internet are turning out to be its most historically significant. Meet the digital archaeologists keeping the ghost towns alive.</description>
    <author>404 Alphabet</author>
    <category>Web Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 10:39:01 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Error Page Glow-Up: Why the Best Apps Make Failure Feel Like a Feature</title>
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    <description>Nobody plans for failure. But the most beloved apps on the internet treat their error states like first-class design citizens — and users notice. From Mailchimp&#039;s high-five monkey to Slack&#039;s surprisingly philosophical outage messages, there&#039;s a growing design movement that believes your 404 page says more about your brand than your homepage does.</description>
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    <category>Design</category>
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