Danities

3.4K posts

Danities banner
Danities

Danities

@danitiestech

#JavaScriptdeveloper | failed 2 startups | Nodejs Dev | I Build Scalable Backend | Build backend of @BuildHubb & @SalesUnit_ | build @TenantAuth

Remote انضم Şubat 2011
2K يتبع662 المتابعون
تغريدة مثبتة
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
Hey! I'm Danities 👋 👨‍💻 Backend developer 💻 Love solving problems with codes ⚡️ Self taught 🎶 Love Chinese Jazz 📚 Books lover linktr.ee/Danities
English
0
0
13
0
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
@asemota Eppa... you are the reason why come to twitter each day. When I give my stories tomorrow, it can't be complete without mentioning you. All the books and podcasts you intentionally mentioned here i follow them like a blind mice. Thank you so much.
English
2
1
8
384
Osaretin Victor Asemota
When you’ve been poor and then rich, you can sometimes give good advice freely, but most of your advice would be wrong, as it discounts luck. When you have been rich and then poor, then rich again, you will learn not to give advice freely until you’ve listened to people carefully. It is very easy to listen to the rich man talk and believe that if you follow their path, you will likely become rich. The truth is that the path to wealth for everyone is unique and depends on how well they use their advantages. This morning I took my family out for brunch and met a guy who fixes ships and tankers. A very understated guy who helps others who take risks to build and protect their wealth. He told me of his current boss, who is on his 4th tanker and looking to do 20. His boss is 35 years old and a Nigerian of Indian origin. His own father is very wealthy. He can take advantage of his father’s wealth to grow because he learned from his dad how to avoid the risks and pitfalls. I thought about my life and realized that I saw those risks and pitfalls with my uncle, whom I lived with longer than I lived with my father, and who raised me, but it was Herbert who learned the most and became rich. My uncle used to tell us that there is no crime at all in being poor, and in fact, most poor people are the happiest. The greatest crime is being rich and being poor again. You destroy hope for so many people in the process. It is why he always fought back after every adversity and came back up. I realized that I learned that part very well from him. It is the most valuable gift he gave to me. Those who learned from him and just became rich didn't see the full life cycle. Henry Abebe, Aigboje, Herbert, and I did. It changed all of us in different ways. For them, it was about taking maximum risks and winning. For me, it was to play the long-term game while remaining functional. My uncle turns 70 this year, and I have been with him for more than half of his life. I have seen that many risks aren't worth it. Life is meant to be lived and not performed. My biggest mentor is 80 and lives in Cornwall, England. I can't wait to visit him this summer, as I learned a lot more from him about the long game than anyone else. A business he started after age 60 generates millions of pounds in profit each month and is still growing. He and his wife now follow their granddaughter, who plays Rugby for England, around the world while his son runs the business.
Osaretin Victor Asemota tweet mediaOsaretin Victor Asemota tweet media
English
34
189
772
22.6K
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
Monday is here.... deal with it. It is a beautiful day sha👌
English
0
0
0
11
FaveDev
FaveDev@Favedevv·
AI agents are not failing because they are dumb, they are failing because we build them without context and deploy them without visibility. Everyone talks about bigger models, few talk about grounding. Even fewer talk about observability. An agent can generate backend code in seconds, but if it does not understand your schema, retrieval layer, or vector search setup, it will hallucinate with confidence. Once your system is live, how do you even know what it is doing? What tools did it call? What context was injected? Why did it fail? Lately I have been experimenting with Opik and the biggest shift is this. - You stop guessing. - You see every trace. - Every tool call. - Every reasoning step. Context plus observability changes everything. The future of AI is not just smarter models, It is grounded agents with full visibility.
FaveDev tweet media
English
3
0
4
391
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
You cannot prompt your way into excellence
Danities tweet media
English
0
0
0
14
Olúwatósìn Olaseinde
Olúwatósìn Olaseinde@tosinolaseinde·
If you need to lock in with your finances next year. Pls type YES. We are embarking on a mission to teach 100,000 for FREE.
English
4.2K
401
4.9K
313.8K
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
At @gdg_uyo attending tech events Luke this allow me connect with lots of amazing people #devfestuyo2025
Uyo, Nigeria 🇳🇬 English
1
2
3
192
Danities أُعيد تغريده
Ibukun Amosu 🇳🇬🇬🇭
👋🏾 I’m looking for an intern to assist with building an offline-first Point of Sale (POS) system - it is a personal project. It’s a real production project. Not toy code and the intern will be working directly on the offline mode implementation (React + Node.js + Prisma stack). 🚀 React/Node.js Intern (with monthly stipends for data & power) We’re looking for a smart, curious intern who wants real-world experience building an offline-first POS system (React + Node.js + Prisma + PostgreSQL). You’ll work on: Implementing offline mode using IndexedDB/Dexie.js. Syncing local sales data to the backend when the internet returns. Testing edge cases and improving reliability. What we’re looking for: Familiarity with React hooks + async data flow. Basic understanding of REST APIs. Bonus: used IndexedDB, Dexie.js, or Service Workers before. Someone eager to learn and document what they do. Perks: Real production experience. Weekly mentorship & code reviews. Monthly stipend for data/power. How to Apply: Send a short message & GitHub link (or sample project) showing something you’ve built that works offline or stores data locally. to danitiestech@gmail.com
English
2
4
23
4K
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
Hey @Azure dev team: Your current logic for uploading env variables is incredibly frustrating 😩 & a terrible UX. Seriously, a single line of code could fix this & enable a simple, one-click upload. Please prioritize this simple quality-of-life fix! #AzureDev #DevOps
English
0
0
0
31
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
When you combine speed (vibe coding) with structure (governance, scalability, business insight)… You stop being a dev who just writes code. You become a builder of systems that last.
English
1
0
0
11
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
Last year, I built an #OpenSource #MultiTenant auth system, a project that could connect to multiple databases. I was deep in #VibeCoding : building fast, using AI tools, chasing momentum. And guess what? It worked... for a while. 🧵
Danities tweet media
English
1
0
0
19
Danities
Danities@danitiestech·
@Favedevv Boss nan, see as you look sweet
English
1
0
1
24