Umesh

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Umesh

Umesh

@Umeshn22

Engineer.

Katılım Ocak 2025
60 Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
Simplicity is really hard.
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Marko Ilic
Marko Ilic@markoilico·
If you're now designing or redesigning a website, this will help you a lot. I recently curated the best hero sections, footers, social proof and other website parts because I got tired of having 15+ tabs open (even with Mobbin). Giving it away 100% free. Comment on this post, and I'll send a Figma link to your inbox!
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@stevie_builds @sawyerhood Yessz, you can absolutely group the tabs, and they appear like accordion in minimized vertical tabs
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stevie
stevie@stevie_builds·
@sawyerhood The big question…. Can you group the tabs? The moment them or another (decent) browser have this, I will leave arc behind
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Sawyer Hood
Sawyer Hood@sawyerhood·
wtf chrome has vertical tabs now. finally
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Nucleo Icons
Nucleo Icons@nucleoicons·
Introducing Nucleo Isometric! 120 free isometric icons with just the right level of detail Download ↓
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@theumoru Been looking for this kind of stuff from long time, finally found it. Great work Umoru, loved the shaderz.
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Umoru
Umoru@theumoru·
experimenting with shaders using webgl
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Lucas Jin
Lucas Jin@lucashjin·
we just built git for video editing.
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@0xlelouch_ Beautifully described what a real talent really looks like..
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Abhishek Singh
Abhishek Singh@0xlelouch_·
I remember a junior engineer I worked with who genuinely thought he was a bad software engineer. Not average. But Actually bad. Why? Because every ticket took him too long. He could not debug production issues fast. He got confused in code reviews. And whenever senior engineers spoke about caching, queues, indexing, retries, race conditions, he would just go silent. So naturally he made the worst conclusion possible: "Maybe I am just not smart enough for backend work." But that was not the real problem. The real problem was much simpler. He was missing a few boring prerequisite skills that nobody had properly taught him: 1. How HTTP actually works 2. How databases really read and write data 3. How logs are used to trace a bug 4. How to read an unfamiliar codebase without panicking 5. How to break a big problem into smaller checks 6. How async code fails in real systems That is it. Not talent or IQ. Just missing foundations. So instead of telling him to "work harder" or "be more confident", we fixed the inputs. For a few months he did very basic things: - wrote simple SQL queries by hand - debugged small bugs slowly and documented the path - learned API flow end to end - traced requests from load balancer to service to database - read old incident reports - picked one concept every week and went deep on it Nothing fancy. No 10x engineer nonsense. No fake motivation. Simply repetition on the right prerequisites. And things changed! The same guy who used to freeze during debugging started finding issues before others. The same guy who thought he was "bad at coding" started writing cleaner code reviews. He used to get stuck on every production issue and now became the person people tagged for backend bugs. A year later, new joiners thought he was naturally talented. He was not. He was finally practiced. This is something a lot of people in software do not understand: A weak foundation feels like low intelligence. A strong foundation feels like talent. Many people are failing because they are trying to do senior-level work without junior-level repetitions. And the opposite is also true. Some people think they are geniuses when really they just got early exposure: better college better peers better internship better manager better starting point That lead disappears very fast if they stop practicing. Software engineering is like that. Prerequisite knowledge is intellectual capital. It can take a person from: "Maybe I am not cut out for this" to "I can probably build this" And it can also take someone from: "I am the smartest guy here" to "why is everyone catching up to me so fast?" Do not judge yourself too early. Sometimes you do not need more confidence. You need more reps on the fundamentals.
Justin Skycak@justinskycak

It's so easy to think you're untalented, maybe even dumb, when really you're just unpracticed on some prerequisite skills. Reminds me of the time I tutored a Real Analysis student who hadn't gotten much practice with proof-writing beforehand. She thought she was gonna fail the class. She thought she might just not be cut out for it. But we just shored up some of those missing proof foundations and then she came out with a well-deserved A. And then she took Fourier Analysis the following year and crushed it. Didn't even need my help. There is also a flipside: it's very easy to think you're a genius, when really you're just better-practiced on prerequisite skills than everyone around you. That's actually a great situation to be in, provided that you recognize why things are going so well for you -- but if you conclude that "geniuses like me don't need much practice," then, well, your advantage is short-lived. The moral of this story is that prerequisite knowledge is intellectual capital and can take you from academic rags to riches -- or from riches to rags, if you squander it.

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Kree8
Kree8@letskree8·
Meet Kree8 2.0 🐸 We had to close the old chapter to open a new one. Kree8 had reach. People knew the name. But no one could *feel* it. That was the problem. It was a great run, we were beginners, made a lot of mistakes. But we learned fast, and this time we actually applied it. - better brand - better speed - same team (the best ones) - new goals Thanks to everyone who stayed with us through the journey. And yeah, sorry for the bait. But it was worth the wait. This chapter will hit different. We don’t quit that easily.
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@0xlelouch_ Of course we can, but one thing is data persistence on container restart, it's own network, and it's hell heavy than normal local setups, but atleast it's gonna run as it is in prod as well..
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Abhishek Singh
Abhishek Singh@0xlelouch_·
If Docker containers make deployments consistent across environments, why not Dockerize our entire development workflow including databases, caches, queues?
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@letskree8 Why I'm thinking, it's a rage bait 🙃😶
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Kree8
Kree8@letskree8·
It’s been an incredible journey, but every chapter has its end.
 kree8 will be closing its operations.
 over the last year, we’ve collaborated with 150+ teams and delivered over $500 k worth of design work.
 we sincerely appreciate every partnership, conversation, and opportunity along the way.
 thank you for being part of our journey.
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Satya
Satya@heysatya_·
after a lot of thinking, we’ve decided to shut down kree8. a year ago, jay and i started this from 0. just an idea, no plan. today it’s 50k+ followers, 150+ brands, and over $500 k in revenue. from the outside, it looks like growth. inside, it felt like 24/7. somewhere along the way, we realized, building something successful doesn’t always mean building something sustainable. so we’re choosing to let it go, and move towards a more structured life, with defined hours and space to breathe again. this wasn’t easy, but it feels right. grateful for everyone who was part of this.
Kree8@letskree8

It’s been an incredible journey, but every chapter has its end.
 kree8 will be closing its operations.
 over the last year, we’ve collaborated with 150+ teams and delivered over $500 k worth of design work.
 we sincerely appreciate every partnership, conversation, and opportunity along the way.
 thank you for being part of our journey.

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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@tmm1 Damn, didn't knew github is this much old
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Aman Karmani
Aman Karmani@tmm1·
I invested in the GitHub Series A, and all I got was this dumb tweet. I joined GH in 2011. The company was bootstrapped and already profitable. By 2012 everyone was talking about GitHub, and a16z convinced the founders to take a 100M investment. At the time this was an "eye-popping" Series A. On a whim I asked @mojombo to let me join the fundraising round. He agreed, and I put in a small check. This was probably a poor financial decision, because I paid a big premium for preferred shares. (The same check would have exercised significantly more employee common stock options). But there were upsides. I got to see all the Series A paperwork! My signature was required. I was technically a Preferred Stock Holder with additional rights. And I received a real paper stock certificate! One of my prized possessions for many years. Finally, in 2018 when Microsoft purchased GitHub, I was asked by the legal team to surrender my stock certificate. In exchange I received some shares of MSFT, and this fun story. > Pursuant to the requirements of the Merger Agreement between GitHub and Microsoft, GitHub is converting to uncertificated book-entry shares prior to Closing.  We are collecting and cancelling preferred stockcertificates that we have previously mailed out in connection with GitHub’s preferred stockfinancings.  > > We would appreciate the return of your Series A Preferred Stock certificate by the end of this week.
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Jay Dwivedi
Jay Dwivedi@jaydwivedi_·
What will you use if these fonts disappeared! I need suggestions..
Jay Dwivedi tweet mediaJay Dwivedi tweet mediaJay Dwivedi tweet mediaJay Dwivedi tweet media
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News Algebra
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND·
🚨 Mumbai Beach Viral : Man charges people to listen to problems. REPORTER : Do people come? 🤯 MAN : "Yes, For small troubles, ₹250. For bigger worries, ₹500, and to cry together, ₹1,000. I am here to listen to people’s problems" 😳
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
Those who have great taste will surpass mediocrity.
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Sentinels
Sentinels@Sentinels·
if you're from India you're gonna like this next post
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Umesh
Umesh@Umeshn22·
@amit25says Been working with them from long time, I noticed lots of things like resilience, patience, they see things from different POV, problem-solving etc
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Amitesh
Amitesh@amit25says·
There is something that IITians/NITians have which cannot be seen in Tier 3 students.. Do you know what?
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Shreyas Pandey
Shreyas Pandey@Shreyas_Pandeyy·
A lot of people have been asking me about my journey to getting into the European AI startup I’m currently working at - so here’s the honest, step-by-step story:
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