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Kash
231 posts

Kash
@Kashhtwts
22. Sharing life, learnings & everything in between.
Katılım Mart 2026
86 Takip Edilen14 Takipçiler

@0x_Kapoor People often mistake “debugging for hours” as a skill issue.
Half the time it’s just a knowledge gap and figuring out which tool/workflow actually fits the problem.
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AI automation is that one industry in which a builder can sit for hours and debug workflows, still might end up with something that just barely works.
And to tell you that it's not a skill issue, it's just a knowledge gap that someone might have while building that particular automation.
I spend like hours if not days, on a single automation to build for my workflow or even my clients, and still I hit walls and roam in circles to fix because I didn't know which technology to use to fix this particular step efficiently.
So here's an example:
> I was building an automation where I had to make a AI SEO building processor within a landing page with detailed keyword research, competitor research, human-style writing and whatnot.
> For that, I needed to convert YouTube videos to blogs so I needed to clip out small clips to add in that blog structure.
> And I was just circling this to use which technology for this entire process of clipping.
> And after spending a day on all of this, I figured out that ffmpeg with a custom backend might be a better and fast option here.
> So yeah this knowledge gap got covered when I researched in depth on what tech I can use effectively to build this part and what others are using, which was all manual research.
So you can still spend hours on making that little automation and nothing might work out effectively until you do the research and try to turn down that vast knowledge gap manually and by just barely thinking in the right direction.
This automation inspired me to build a product out of this on which I am currently working, and it's coming out great.
So you never know what a particular knowledge enhancement can do in your life, and it might help your future customers.
Go folks, learn new things every day in your niche.
Spend time on learning, because you can't skip this.
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@kunalsvault Mummas are the cutest.
My mum did this 4 years ago for me as well.
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Very well said 😭
Execution is what actually matters.
I once had someone ask me to become a co-founder before even telling me the idea.
Meanwhile I was just trying to figure out whether I could even help with it or not 💀
Moin @ wit.works@tlcright
Conversation with every new founder like - - can you keep my idea secret? - Yes, I can, but how does this help you? I suggest, spread the word way before writing your first code. Let people copy, try & fail. Idea doesn't matter, validation & execution matters.
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Vibe coding since forever and calling myself a developer every single day.
@levelsio@levelsio
I don't write code anymore I haven't written code in I think 6 months? I think everyone is like this no?
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@0x_Kapoor Never knew such commands existed.
Thanks for sharing this cheat sheet🫡
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It was 2 AM on a Tuesday, and I was three hours into a debugging session that should have taken 30 minutes.
My Claude Code chat window was a sprawling mess of 147 messages, context window overflowing, responses getting slower by the minute.
I was copy-pasting code between tabs, losing my train of thought, and feeling like I was fighting my tools instead of building something great.
That’s when my senior developer friend casually mentioned, “Have you tried /compact?"
I stared at him. “Tried what?”
He typed three characters into his Claude session. The entire conversation condensed into a clean summary.
Context freed up.
We kept working without skipping a beat.
In that moment, I realised something embarrassing:
I had been using Claude Code for six months, knowing only one command. Just typing code and hoping for the best.
Meanwhile, an entire ecosystem of 14 productivity multipliers sat hidden in plain sight.
Over the next few weeks, I discovered these commands that would save me 200+ hours. This is the guide I wish someone had handed me on day one.
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@priyankapudi Absolutely!
AI should be used as an assistant to help us with our day to day work and make it faster.
It should not be seen as a replacement for human beings, in the end we are the one that's providing it with prompts for the info we need.
Other times it just hallucinates.
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