@dZ'Hēr0y

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@dZ'Hēr0y

@DeepakRoy_58

✍When someone we love keeps a condition , even a reasonable one ,it can slowly create fear. Not because they’re wrong… but because we want certainty.

Uttarakhand,India Katılım Ağustos 2022
131 Takip Edilen5 Takipçiler
Techjunkie Aman
Techjunkie Aman@Techjunkie_Aman·
They don’t want you using these apps. Because they can’t track you. • Bitwarden — encrypted password manager • Signal — end-to-end private messaging • Brave — blocks ads + trackers by default • Proton Mail — zero-knowledge encrypted email • Ente — end-to-end encrypted photo backup • Filen — private cloud with no file scanning • Tuta — encrypted calendar + planner • dDocs — private, encrypted documents • Obscura VPN — hides your IP + traffic No ads. No tracking. No data harvesting. Built on encryption. Designed for privacy. Be honest— How many of these do you actually use?
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Karthik
Karthik@karthikponna19·
Perplexity founder, @AravSrinivas shares the one piece of career advice from @sama he never forgots
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divyansh
divyansh@Divyansh91565·
What if? I permanently delete my X account? Will anyone miss me 🥺
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Jahir Sheikh
Jahir Sheikh@jahirsheikh8·
@DeepakRoy_58 not that much long video like 1-2 hours video it will support upto 20-30 minutes hope, i will see to expand it more as people like it 🙏😄
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Jahir Sheikh
Jahir Sheikh@jahirsheikh8·
Introducing Screenmint. A free screen recorder that looks like you paid for it. • buttery smooth recordings • clean, aesthetic output • no paywalls, no watermark, no license • will be available for macOS, Windows, and Linux Built this over 3 months pushing my limits. Thought of charging for it… but remembered why I started. This should be free for everyone. 100% Open source and completely free. Coming soon 🚀.
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Shreya
Shreya@Oblivious9021·
YouTube = blockable Hotstar = untouchable What's Hotstar doing differently??
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Ding
Ding@dingyi·
竟然连 TUI 设计工具都出现了。 tui.studio
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blue
blue@bluewmist·
all you need is one good year. one year of obsession, focus, and sacrifice. train like a machine. stack your money. build your name. expand your network. outgrow everyone. after that, life shifts. you'll know what winning feels like. you'll carry yourself differently. you'll move with purpose. one good year can change EVERYTHING
Johan@Adityapandeydev

"It takes one big win to cancel all the losses. Just one win."

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Digi (Delusional)
Digi (Delusional)@digiii·
just delusional enough to win
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Tech with Mak
Tech with Mak@techNmak·
Found a UI library that made me mass mass mass mass mass angry. Angry that this isn't how everything works. Oat: → 6KB CSS + 2.2KB JS → Zero dependencies → No framework required → No build step → Semantic HTML only You write
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D4rsh🦅
D4rsh🦅@d4rsh_tw·
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Akhilesh Mishra
Akhilesh Mishra@livingdevops·
These Linux commands helped me most in last 13 years of IT career Daily stuff: • ps aux | grep {process} - Find that sneaky process • lsof -i :{port} - Who's hogging that port? • df -h - The classic "we're out of space" checker • netstat -tulpn - Network connection detective • kubectl get pods | grep -i error - K8s trouble finder Log related commands: • tail -f /var/log/* - Real-time log watcher • journalctl -fu service-name - SystemD log stalker • grep -r "error" . - The error hunter • zcat access.log.gz | grep "500" - Compressed log ninja • less +F - The better tail command Container cli: • docker ps --format '{{.Names}} {{.Status}}' - Clean status check • docker stats --no-stream - Quick resource check • crictl logs {container} - Raw container stories • docker exec -it - The container backdoor • podman top - Process peek inside containers System Detectives: • htop - System resource storyteller • iostat -xz 1 - Disk performance poet • free -h - Memory mystery solver • vmstat 1 - System vital signs • dmesg -T | tail - Kernel's recent gossip Network stuff: • curl -v - HTTP conversation debugger • dig +short - Quick DNS lookup • ss -tunlp - Socket statistics simplified • iptables -L - Firewall rule reader • traceroute - Path finder File and stuff: • find . -name "*.yaml" -type f - YAML hunter • rsync -avz - Better file copier • tar -xvf - The unzipper (yes, we all google this) • ln -s - Symlink wizard • chmod +x - Make it executable Performance: • strace -p {pid} - System call spy • tcpdump -i any - Network packet sniffer • sar -n DEV 1 - Network stats watch • uptime - Load average at a glance • top -c - Classic process viewer Git Essentials: • git log --oneline - History simplified • git reset --hard HEAD^ - The "oops" eraser • git stash - The work hider • git diff --cached - What's staged? • git blame - The "who did this?" resolver Quick Fixes: • sudo !! - Run last command with sudo • ctrl+r - Command history search • history | grep - Command time machine • alias - Command shortcut maker • watch - Command repeater
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ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ
ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ@hamptonism·
distance, silence, peace. distance, silence, peace. distance, silence, peace.
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ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ
ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ@hamptonism·
Every finance person needs to watch this episode from season 4 of Industry:
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divyansh
divyansh@Divyansh91565·
Few things I understood after solving more than 1500 problems on LeetCode and Codeforces: - Topic-wise practice is good only for learning something new. After that, most practice should be done without looking at problem tags - the real learning happens there. - No matter how much you practice, there will always be some topics you struggle with. It's very individual. The only solution is practice, practice, practice until it becomes obvious. - There is no such thing as pattern-wise learning. A single problem can be solved in many different ways, so forcing patterns doesn't really make sense. - LeetCode Medium problems are mostly about knowing that particular topic and having good implementation skills. - The difference between LeetCode Medium and Hard is much bigger than the difference between Easy and Medium. - Being a LeetCode Knight is easier than you think. All you need is to consistently come around top 3k in contests (you would be 1900+ easily then). - No matter what anyone says, AtCoder beats LeetCode and Codeforces in terms of overall quality. - Learning from blogs, problems, and reading resources beats learning from YouTube tutorials (unless it's from a CF Master or above). - If you give CodeChef contests, I'd say first reach CF Pupil - after that, reaching ⭐⭐⭐ on CodeChef becomes much easier. - USACO is good, but definitely not beginner-friendly in terms of problems. The theory, however, is excellent - you can even skip the problems and still learn a lot. - Always analyze the expected time complexity before solving a problem. - The easiest way to increase CF rating is by attempting Div-3 and Div-4, but one should never skip Div-2 if aiming for a stable Expert (I'm not a Specialist yet, but this seems to be the way). - Consistency matters more than you think. - Sublime Text + infinite loop can literally cook your system xd - Don't skip development completely, especially if you're from a tier-3 college. At least 2 hours daily for dev should be part of your schedule. All the best :)
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divyansh
divyansh@Divyansh91565·
Practice. Practice. Practice. Until it stops feeling hard and starts feeling obvious.
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ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ
ₕₐₘₚₜₒₙ@hamptonism·
Your brain doesn’t need creatine, it needs constant exposure to: - Statistics - Linear Algebra - Game Theory - Differential Equations - Thermodynamics - Derivatives - Quantitative Research Thank me later.
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yashaswi.
yashaswi.@pixperk·
i started technical reading in 2025, mid may. early on i read a blog on multithreading and really liked how much info was packed into a short blog. later i started reading for fun. it was passive, but it tuned my mind. i started translating those aggregated ideas into code, and that is what helped me build a foundational intuition, especially around architectural concepts. i also read some books, but those were skims. in 2026, i picked up reading again and started analysing more. i now attach a plain page to every page of the writing and jot down my ideas first from a fast skim. then i do a deeper analysis of the page, draw diagrams, write pseudocode, and think through solutions. i have picked up foundational database and distributed systems papers to start with. i also thought to give database internals another shot, since it is one of my favourites, but this time reading it actively from an implementation mindset. i am planning to cover bigtable next and move on to a dynamo implementation soon. i said 80 percent earlier, but work and academics took some of my time. moreover, reading reduces my anxiety, improves my focus and helps me think better. more on my implementation approach later.
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