Mayur Shelke

25 posts

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Mayur Shelke

Mayur Shelke

@Smayur0

FullStack Developer

Pune, India Katılım Kasım 2017
437 Takip Edilen63 Takipçiler
Manali Mango
Manali Mango@mange_manali·
What job are you looking for?
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Team.Shiksha
Team.Shiksha@TeamShiksha·
🚀 TeamShiksha just got an upgrade! 🚀 Our onboarding for projects is now streamlined and fully automated. How to Join: - Select: Visit a project on our website and click "Join Project." - Task: Wait for the assignment to land in your inbox. - Submit: Turn in your work before the deadline. - Access: Once selected, you automatically get access to Discord channels and GitHub repos! ⚡️ What else is new? - Tech Insights: Explore the specific tech stack used in different projects. - Community: See who else is contributing and track your own progress alongside others. Start shipping today… link in bio.
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Mayur Shelke
Mayur Shelke@Smayur0·
Yesterday’s AWS session was pure fire! From spinning up EC2 instances to mastering EBS, NFS, IAM & tightening Security Groups — we went full hands-on with real deployments. Level up unlocked! Thanks @aps08__ @TeamShiksha @sunnykgupta
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Sunny R Gupta 🐰
Sunny R Gupta 🐰@sunnykgupta·
🧵 If you’re in your early 20s, hungry, and actively looking for hustle culture (with real upside, not fake “startup vibes”), here’s a 2026 list of companies I’d aim for from India. Remember, this isn’t a “safe” or “complete” list ;) 🔖 Bookmark for later
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SrinivasanSS
SrinivasanSS@SrinivasanSS52·
If you are MERN Stack developer Let's get connected
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Rudy
Rudy@rudythetechy·
No AI is replacing software engineers who have deep niche knowledge. Give me an example if it is replacing anyone like that before you come at me with the excuse, oh AI Is gonna take my job.
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Avinash Singh
Avinash Singh@AvinashSingh_20·
Do you shut down your laptop or just close the lid?
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Mayur Shelke
Mayur Shelke@Smayur0·
This session was the best one so far! 🚀 Really enjoyed the insights into how computers handle internal communication — especially understanding how RAM actually works with flip-flops, decoders, selectors, and true random-access addressing. @jatinkrmalik @TeamShiksha
Jatin K Malik@jatinkrmalik

Today’s CODE book reading session #9 @TeamShiksha was all about efficiency! Chapter 15 showed us why Hexadecimal is the "Goldilocks" base for humans, not too simple like binary, but perfectly aligned with how bytes are structured. Then, in Chapter 16, we looked at the circuitry of memory. We went from simple flip-flops to understanding how a computer can jump to any specific address in an assemblage of memory to retrieve a piece of data.

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Manoj Kumar
Manoj Kumar@manojdotdev·
you are GOATED, if you can understand this!
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Tejas
Tejas@taashuu_·
😭
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Yashas
Yashas@yashasvx·
@aps08__ @Smayur0 @TeamShiksha Really enjoyed the session, so I tried building a small URL shortener on my own. Sharing a quick demo here
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Team.Shiksha
Team.Shiksha@TeamShiksha·
At @TeamShiksha, we’ve just wrapped up our second session reading “Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software” by Charles Petzold together, and we’ve finished up to Chapter 4. Hosted by @jatinkrmalik, we have so far: - Explored how simple, real-world signalling systems (like friends sending each other messages at night using flashlights or other basic signals) naturally lead to the idea of codes and protocols. - Looked at codes and combinations, and how constrained channels force you to think carefully about what you encode, how you encode it, and how many unique symbols you can represent. - Connected this to Braille and binary-style encodings, seeing how information can be represented purely as patterns of “on/off” or presence/absence, and how that scales into more complex symbol sets. - Taken apart the “anatomy of a flashlight” as a gateway into circuits: switches, current, and the idea that something as mundane as turning a light on and off is already the foundation of digital signaling. In just four chapters, the participants have moved from “everyday objects and stories” to the brink of thinking like a computer from first principles... seeing that computers are not magic, but layers of very understandable ideas stacked carefully on top of each other. 📚 Next session: We start Chapter 5, where we push these ideas further and get closer to relays, telegraphs, and the building blocks of digital circuits... bridging the gap between abstract codes and physical hardware. If you’re excited by the idea of truly understanding how computers work under the hood (beyond frameworks and languages), and you’d like to join future reading sessions like this with the TeamShiksha community, join us today 😉.
Sunny R Gupta 🐰@sunnykgupta

Second session starting now, 10 pm, every Saturday only in @TeamShiksha Join via Zoom, link in Discord.

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Mayur Shelke
Mayur Shelke@Smayur0·
Joined @TeamShiksha as a contributor! Big shoutout to @sunnykgupta for building this incredible community and huge thanks to @realankush. Grateful & excited to be here — let’s work on some good projects!
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Manu Arora
Manu Arora@mannupaaji·
Is front-end engineering over? I answer this in my latest video, check it out! yt.openinapp.co/rwvmw
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Nitesh Singh
Nitesh Singh@nitesh_singh5·
Remote Job Opportunity 🚀 Role - Software Development Engineer I Est Salary - 15-30 LPA Experience - 0-3 years Let us know if you are Interested 👇
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Swapnil Agarwal 🌵
Swapnil Agarwal 🌵@SwapAgarwal·
This 1-page Interview Prep Tracker has helped devs clear interviews at 10+ companies. Today, I’m making it public. It’s not just any template. It’s a proven structured system that keeps your prep focused and consistent, so you can see actual growth and ace each interview level. Here’s why devs love it: - Tracks every application and interview stage in one place. - Turns your skill gaps into a clear, time-bound practice plan. - Builds daily prep consistency without overwhelm. - Helps you prepare like a product-first dev, not just a coder. - Works even if you don’t have a CS degree or a referral. If you’re job hunting and want to walk into interviews 100% ready, just drop a comment and I’ll share with you. Let’s get you hired. 💪
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