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  <title>Beermat Software</title>
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  <description>Big ideas, scribbled on small surfaces.</description>
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    <title>Genius in the Gaps: How Britain&#039;s Best Tech Ideas Are Born Between Meetings</title>
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    <description>Silicon Valley wants you to believe that breakthroughs happen in glass-walled war rooms with unlimited kombucha on tap. Britain knows better. Some of our finest technological thinking has happened on a District line train running twelve minutes late, or on the back of something that definitely wasn&#039;t meant to be a design document.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 01:55:33 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Skint and Shipping: How Being Broke Made British Software Better</title>
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    <description>There&#039;s a peculiar magic that happens when a British developer has a brilliant idea, a secondhand laptop, and approximately £200 left in the business account. Constraints, it turns out, are less a handicap and more a superpower — one the UK tech scene has been quietly wielding for decades. This is the story of how poverty of resource became richness of design.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Strategy</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 20:25:45 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Solving a Spreadsheet Problem with a Satellite: Britain&#039;s Glorious Tradition of Catastrophic Over-Engineering</title>
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    <description>Somewhere in a co-working space in Bristol, a developer is building a distributed microservices architecture to manage a mailing list of forty-three people. Nobody asked him to. He is, by all accounts, having the time of his life. This is the peculiar, expensive, and strangely loveable story of how British developers keep building Ferraris when the client needed a bicycle.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 12:16:02 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Kettle, Keyboard, Existential Crisis: The British Developer&#039;s Unlikely Journey Through Remote Work</title>
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    <description>When the nation&#039;s developers were sent home in 2020, the working assumption was that Britain&#039;s legendarily reserved tech workforce would crumble without the social scaffolding of the office. What actually happened was considerably stranger, more interesting, and in several documented cases, involved a suspicious amount of sourdough. Five years on, the story of remote work and the British developer is more complicated — and more human — than anyone predicted.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Opinion</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 12:16:02 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Taught the Wrong Tricks: How Britain&#039;s Tech Education Machine Is Producing Developers Nobody Can Hire</title>
    <link>https://www.beermatsoftware.com/taught-the-wrong-tricks-uk-tech-education-skills-gap/</link>
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    <description>Britain is producing more computer science graduates than ever, yet hiring managers across the UK tech sector are tearing their hair out trying to find developers who can actually do the job. Something has gone badly wrong between the classroom and the codebase, and it&#039;s costing everyone — students, companies, and frankly the entire British economy — rather a lot.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Opinion</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 08:15:54 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Quietly Brilliant: How British Developers Became the Unsung Heroes of the World&#039;s Open Source Stack</title>
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    <description>For a country that invented the World Wide Web, then spent thirty years largely failing to capitalise on it commercially, Britain has a rather extraordinary secret: its developers are, quietly and without much fuss, holding up enormous chunks of the global open source ecosystem. They&#039;re just too polite to mention it.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 08:15:54 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Please, Not Another Standup: The Case for Letting British Developers Actually Do Some Work</title>
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    <description>The daily standup was supposed to keep teams aligned. Instead, it&#039;s become the centrepiece of a meeting culture that&#039;s quietly strangling productivity in UK software shops. It&#039;s time for smaller teams to stop performing agility and start practising it — and that begins with cancelling a lot of calendar invites.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Opinion</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 04:15:47 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>No Plan, No Problem: The Brilliant Muddle Behind Britain&#039;s Most Successful Tech Founders</title>
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    <description>Forget the TED Talk origin story. Some of Britain&#039;s sharpest software founders had absolutely no idea what they were building — and that turned out to be rather the point. We spoke to the accidental architects of genuinely sustainable tech businesses to find out what happens when you swap the five-year plan for a pint and a willingness to listen.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 04:15:47 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Glorious Mess of a Great Idea: Inside Britain&#039;s Napkin-to-Product Pipeline</title>
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    <description>Some of Britain&#039;s most interesting software products began life as a scrawl on a pub receipt, a beermat, or the back of a Pret sandwich bag. We spoke to indie founders and small-team developers about the chaotic, brilliant, deeply unglamorous process of turning a rough sketch into something people actually pay for. Turns out, constraints aren&#039;t the enemy of creativity — they might just be the whole point.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 01:15:41 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Small on Purpose: The Quiet Superpower of Britain&#039;s Boutique Software Builders</title>
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    <description>While American tech firms race to hire thousands and burn through venture capital at breathtaking speed, a quietly confident cohort of British software companies is doing something radical: staying small, staying profitable, and — whisper it — actually enjoying themselves. This is an argument for the boutique, the niche, and the deliberately unglamorous business that turns a tidy profit without once appearing on a VC&#039;s radar.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Opinion</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 01:15:41 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>What Were They Thinking? The Great British Tech Naming Disaster Hall of Fame</title>
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    <description>Naming your software company is one of the most important decisions you&#039;ll make — and an alarming number of British founders are getting it spectacularly, sometimes hilariously, wrong. From domain names that accidentally spell something unspeakable to perfectly innocent words that mean something horrifying in American English, we&#039;ve rounded up the finest examples of nominal catastrophe the UK tech scene has to offer.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Branding &amp; Identity</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 00:15:49 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>From Pub Scribble to Pile of Ash: Why Your Big Idea Burned Through £50k Without Launching</title>
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    <description>Every great British tech startup begins the same way: a eureka moment, a biro, and the back of something disposable. But somewhere between that glorious scribble and a working product, thousands of founders watch their funding evaporate into thin air. We dig into why so many MVPs die before anyone gets to use them — and what you can actually do about it.</description>
    <author>Beermat Software</author>
    <category>Startup Strategy</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 00:15:49 GMT</pubDate>
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