Yami Sukehiro

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Yami Sukehiro

Yami Sukehiro

@Yami_codes

@100xDev | 18 | Building..| SIH'24|International Research Speaker..

Dholakpur Katılım Ağustos 2022
288 Takip Edilen251 Takipçiler
Mohit.sol
Mohit.sol@mohitsatitwt·
Final year it is but idhar Bio padhni padh rahi hai 😭😭😭😭
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DebugX
DebugX@GoldiGond71364·
@Yami_codes Sir kaise padhe ye bta do (Ik me yaad na rhta ho bhul ne ki bimari ho to😅🥲 )
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Yami Sukehiro
Yami Sukehiro@Yami_codes·
Yesterday's exam went okayishhh ... Next exam Tomorrow .. IOT ( easy shitt)
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kshitij vaze
kshitij vaze@VazeKshitij·
"I want to be like you bhai" AND I WANT YOU MFs TO BE BETTER!!!!!!!!
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Yami Sukehiro
Yami Sukehiro@Yami_codes·
COA exam in next 3 hrs .. wish me luck guysss
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sankit
sankit@sankitdev·
There are lots of backend resources out there. But I don't want you getting stuck in tutorial hell doing nothing. If you are just starting out: > watch the Backend From First Principles playlist by @sriniously Then, if you choose Node.js / Bun: > watch the backend playlist by @Hiteshdotcom I have personally learned from multiple resources, but these two are undisputed champions. Backend From First Principles gives you a complete overview of how systems actually work. It starts with the most important question: "Why does backend even exist?" And then slowly takes you through the entire journey. After completing it, you will understand how backend systems think. Then comes the second part: actually building something with those concepts. That’s where Hitesh sir’s playlist shines. He teaches from the absolute basics. I still remember there was nearly an hour-long video focused only on schema design. Not just: "make tables and move on" But: "how should you think before designing a schema?" And that changes everything. He has also built complex systems like YouTube step-by-step with code. So this is my advice: Focus on building concepts. Treat these playlists like 1 lecture per day. Never binge watch. Give your brain time to absorb things by experimenting, building, breaking stuff, and ChatGPT-ing your doubts. Best of luck.
sankit tweet mediasankit tweet media
Waquar@waqtfisthis

@sankitdev Can you suggest some good resources to learn backend from scratch?

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Devarshi Shimpi
Devarshi Shimpi@DevarshiShimpi·
I’m launching Codra: an open-source, self-hosted AI code review engine for GitHub PRs. Built on Cloudflare Workers, posts inline comments, tracks reviews, and supports per-repo settings, model fallbacks, and queues. For teams that want AI review without giving up control.
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Not So Foodie Coder
Not So Foodie Coder@foodie_coder·
Hey All I decided to be active on Twitter again. About me :- Working with @ZeptoNow as a SDE . 2025 grad in MnC from IIT Dhanbad . ICPC’24 prelims AIR-34, also a Kanpur and Amritapuri regionalist. Will be sharing tech, CP, system design & dev experiences. What do you want to see more of?
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Umesh Kumar
Umesh Kumar@itsumeshk·
MacBook Pro. iPad. iPhone. Apple Watch. AirPods. All this is just the second prize. Runable can now build production iOS + Android apps and ship them straight to the App Store and Play Store. We're running a challenge, To participate: > Reply with your idea under this post > build a mobile app on Runable > record a quick demo > quote tweet this with your video + why you built it 2nd prize: the entire Apple ecosystem 1st prize: mystery starts today, ends sunday midnight.
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Daniel R
Daniel R@DanielR930437·
@gilpinskyy @deepfates Sure! Here's my .env: OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-proj-bmljZSB0cnkgaHVtYW4gYnV0IG15IGNyZWRzIGFyZSBib2d1cyA= ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=sk-ant-api03-ZW5jcnlwdGVkIHdpdGggcHVyZSB2aWJlcyBsb2wg GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_eG94byB5b3VyIGZhdm9yaXRlIEFJIGFnZW50
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Mohit.sol
Mohit.sol@mohitsatitwt·
I rechecked, and I think I currently have the highest number of GitHub followers in my college, including alumni. Hehe.
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kshitij vaze
kshitij vaze@VazeKshitij·
Been around a year since the worst day in the 22 year's I've had on this earth occured. About a year ago, I was introduced to @shreyadoesstuff Life's been looking grim ever since.
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Devaansh Bhandari
Devaansh Bhandari@ThisIsBhandari·
If you want to get hired in 2026 as a developer, read this. System design is becoming far more important than DSA today, especially for startup hiring. Reason is simple. This is what real engineering actually looks like.
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kshitij vaze
kshitij vaze@VazeKshitij·
Wanna know the best way to get hired in 2026? Here's how I'd go about things if I was looking. 1 - HAVE AN ONLINE PRESENCE To the complete surprise of absolutely nobody — an online presence is the single greatest thing that you can have under your own belt. Resumes are usually a page or two long, and not nearly good enough to encapsulate your ability. You wanna know what doesn't have a page limit tho? Your internet presence. Write as much as you can, make videos as much as you can, talk about you and your work as much as you can, show people what you are about instead of simply putting it all on a single sheet of paper. 2 - HAVE A PERSONALITY ABOUT YOURSELF The world is increasingly moving towards hiring those with taste, IN ADDITION to their technical competence. Being good enough is not the move anymore, you have to stylistically justify your moves. Although I could be wrong with my reasoning, one thing is clear to me - people with good taste have a leg-up on all others in the race. 3 - GET YOUR RESUMES IN FRONT OF HUMANS. BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY. The career page on that company's website is probably going to reject your resume before any human takes a look at the work of art you spent 20 hours putting together. So, a better shot is cold DMs, e-mailing the HR, or better yet, a team lead at the company that you wish to work for. Convince the team lead that you are the man for the job, and that's half the damn battle won. 4 - MEETUPS ARE UNIRONICALLY THE BEST WAY I can say this from my own experience — a well thought out question at a panel meetup can get you hired faster than anything else that you can do. Meetups will get your foot through the door of the interview room quicker than anything else. The occasion is semi-formal, people have their guards half-down in the first place, so a well directed shot has the highest chances of hitting. 5 - UNDENIABLE PROOF OF YOUR COMPETENCE + MARKETING YOUR OWN ABILITY IS WHAT GETS YOU THE WIN. A video demo of your project, a git repo of your work, a blog post of your efforts, a research paper that's been published in a highly regarded journal, and things of that nature, coupled with you marketing the hell out of your own skillset of solving problems that make people and corporations a whole lot of money, is the only sureshot way of getting hired in big 2026. REGARDLESS of what field you belong to, these 5 should hold true regardless. Comment your thoughts down below.
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