Solutions that don’t get lost
This series documents real problems I’ve run into in day-to-day work with digital tools. These situations required time, trial and error, and hours of searching until I found a solution that actually worked. The purpose is simple: to put those solutions in writing and share them so they can be consulted and reused when they’re needed again.
Many technical issues don’t show up in manuals or in clear step-by-step tutorials. They appear in real use: when a program stops opening, when a platform behaves unexpectedly, or when an update breaks something that used to work.
You fix the problem, you keep working… and the solution stays in your memory. Over time, that memory fails. This series exists to prevent that.
Purpose of the series
Real problems and documented solutions brings together concrete cases related to software, educational platforms, digital work environments, and practical tools used in real contexts.
Main goal
Preserve solutions that already worked and shouldn’t be lost.
Who it’s for
People who work with technology and prefer clear routes over endless guesswork.
How it’s written
Minimum context, defined problem, step-by-step solution, verification, and takeaways.
What this series is not
Not a list of quick hacks or opinions without verification.
Editorial note
The tone is deliberately sober. What matters here is that the solution is clear—not that the text “shines.”
How to use this page
This post works as the living front page of the series. As new articles are published, they will appear in the list below. If you’re looking for the latest, start with the first links.
Published articles
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Critical error in Dragon NaturallySpeaking due to user profile corruption
Restoring a trained profile when Dragon fails to start due to language model corruption.
Conclusion
Over time, this space will become an organized technical memory: a repository of verified solutions that prevents repeated attempts, saves hours of work, and turns experience into reusable knowledge.
