Danish
59 posts

Danish
@TrendingOne7
👨💻Coding | Startup | AI 💼Building @alphaintern.in 🧠Entrepreneur | Engineer 🤖Learn AI @alphaintern.ai



Wishing you a Holi filled with laughter, joy, and beautiful colours that brighten your life 🌈✨ Few important calls after yesterday 👇🏼 > No more replies to randoms on X (most of them look for an opportunity to farm engagement). > Anything around my ID usually blows up (because of the reach), so we will avoid any kind of interaction specifically with unknown blue ticks who farm for payouts. > To be blunt, it all started with piracy (selling our content and making ~2L), and a few people then started engagement farming by giving controversial takes. > The channel down was not done for marketing. It was simply to let people know that free is actually not free. Someone somewhere pays the cost so millions can access it. Because of how many people depend on it, the message spread very fast. The moment we realised the scale, we called it off immediately. Never expected that people rely on it so much. > I love building, and I will keep doing that. We have taken TUF to 1.45M users on the platform and 1M subscribers on YouTube, purely through tech content. Controversies will always exist, but people don’t sign up or subscribe unless they actually get value. > I have always stood with almost every creator on X during their bad times, but unfortunately saw a few PR campaigns (have screenshots of pointers sent to accounts) where people tried promoting themselves using this moment. That honestly felt like a low ball. So creators are only creators to me from now, and not friends. Said that few took a stand, always grateful 🙏🏻 Over the last 6 years I have realised I have been too reachable and too engageable, which makes people think it is easy to farm reach around my name. That changes now. I won’t and will block rightaway (you may see few block ss around) and build this to 2M users in the next 3-4 months. Regarding the free channel being our pipeline - yes it is, and there is nothing wrong with that. When I started, I had zero idea that this could become a livelihood for so many people including me. If I teach, the quality never goes down, never ever, no matter it’s free or if it’s not. Now that it is, I will go to every step to protect it and build it further, focusing on the users who actually learn on the platform and not on public platforms who do it for payouts. Back to building. Keep learning, keep growing. 🚀










Leetcode is dead. Nobody writes code line by line anymore. Developers are orchestrating AI, debugging its output, catching when it goes wrong. We're building assessments that test fundamentals and AI fluency together. Not just memorized algorithms. Because that's the actual job now.


Marc Andreessen: AI coding doesn’t eliminate programmers — it redefines them. The job is no longer typing code line by line, it’s orchestrating 10 coding bots in parallel, arguing with them, debugging their output, changing the spec, and pushing them toward the right result. But here’s the catch: if you don’t understand how to write code yourself, you can’t evaluate what the AI gives you. The next layer of programming isn’t writing scripts — it’s supervising AI that writes them. Today’s best programmers spend their day jumping between terminals, managing multiple coding bots, fixing mistakes, and refining instructions. The irony? You still need deep fundamentals, because without them, you won’t know when the AI is wrong. The job of the programmer has changed. Now it’s about arguing with coding bots, debugging AI-generated code, and understanding why something doesn’t work or isn’t fast enough. AI abstracts the work — but only people who truly understand code can tell if the abstraction is doing the right thing. Programmers aren’t going away — they’re becoming 10x, 100x, even 1,000x more productive. Tasks are changing, the job is changing, but humans are still overseeing the process, evaluating results, fixing errors, and making judgment calls. AI changes how we code, not who is responsible. The future programmer isn’t replaced by AI — they’re upgraded by it. You still need to learn how to write and understand code, because when the AI gets it wrong, humans are the ones who have to know why. That up-leveling of capability is the real revolution.





petition for a coding livestream of @kirat_tw on valentines day.










