Harsh Nesari
149 posts

Harsh Nesari
@HarshNesari
Web Developer || CSE Student
Belagavi Katılım Mart 2024
100 Takip Edilen9 Takipçiler

Happy to see new RCB
Old rcb will try to change this and bottle the top 2
#RCB
English

Here’s an amazing #internship opportunity, offering ₹50,000- ₹1,00,000 at #Bangalore !!
English

@HumansNoContext first 20+40 = 60
then 7+8 (sometimes 8 x 2 - 1) = 15
total = 75
English

@Priyansh_31Dec I’m graduating this year and wanted some advice on how to keep improving my problem-solving skills, especially in competitive programming. I have an average level of hands-on experience with DSA so far—what would be the best way to level up from here?
English

@Divyansh91565 In our clg if OA is online then i just lose all the hopes for that company 😑
English

@naiivememe @grok what is the name of the bgm used in this video?
English

@akshaymarch7 For a fresher any suggestion for wealth building from ur experience....
English

Let me be honest.
Right now, a lot of software engineers are not sleeping peacefully.
There’s this silent tension in the air… nobody says it loudly, but everyone is thinking the same thing, “What if I’m fired tomorrow?”
We all can see what’s happening. Layoffs. Hiring freezes. Fewer openings. Too many good engineers competing for very limited roles. And when the market slows down, the pressure is insane.
But what actually worries me more is not the layoffs.
It’s the lifestyle we have built around our salaries.
I know people who are earning well, but also spending at the same speed.
Buying overly expensive flats in Bangalore, HYD, Pune, Gurgaon.
Home loans running for 20–25 years.
Car loans and even personal loans.
EMIs running everywhere.
High rent + inflated cost of living.
International trips on EMI.
Credit Card Bills.
Expensive schools for kids.
Huge fixed monthly burn.
I know people who are earning well, but if the salary stops, they can barely manage 6–8 months without serious stress.
That is a scary place to be, even if your resume, skills and experience looks impressive.
And the funny thing is, we engineers are so smart when writing code.
We handle edge cases.
We think about worst case scenarios.
We write fallback logic.
But in real life, we never have a backup plan?
Just think for once,
What if you're fired tomorrow?
What if the market stays slow for one year?
What if your skills become irrelevant?
What if you just want to take a break but you can’t because EMI is waiting?
I’m not trying to spread fear. I’m just saying let’s be practical.
Enjoy your money, yes. You worked hard for it. But don’t increase your fixed expenses so much that your job becomes your only oxygen.
Build savings.
Keep upgrading yourself.
Avoid unnecessary loans.
Think long term.
Industries go up and down. That’s normal.
But your life should not shake during tough times, if it ever happens.
We prepare our softwares for failure.
Maybe we should prepare our lives also. Isn't it?
Just sharing what I’ve been observing around me.
Would genuinely like to know, are others feeling this too?
English

Catch us on Shark Tank India tonight on Sony Liv and Sony TV 🦈
Let’s make this interesting: we’re giving away Kreo Gaming Chairs worth INR 20,000
Before the episode airs, by 8PM today, comment with your closest guess:
How many total words will be spoken during our pitch? This is including sharks and us, both
From: WHEN we (Kreo) enter the tank to us (Kreo) exiting the tank (no interviews or ads included)
Last entry: 8:00 PM
Closest guess wins! Start counting, NOW

English














