Benjamin
266 posts

Benjamin
@benjaminhtr1
Freelance full-stack developer and designer
Hamburg, Deutschland Katılım Nisan 2019
300 Takip Edilen178 Takipçiler

What a wild ride this has been. Over 7 million messages backfilling on demand, with another 15 million on the way.
We did it. Everyone's now using the latest T3 Chat. I'm so relieved we finally shipped.
Theo - t3.gg@theo
I don't want to curse myself by celebrating too early, but... I think we just shipped the T3 Chat overhaul successfully 🫡
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Introducing dm.new, a quick way for people to slide in your X dm's. 📩
Just leave a comment with the URL you want and I'll create one for you eg. dm.new/tim
First come, first served!
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she's a 10 but she's using @mondaydotcom for project management. what is she?
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@thisisneoo + it's way more fun because building a serious business feels like a video game
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delete twitter if you wanna build a business
all you see is:
“here’s why {insert business model} is dead”
“this is how {absolutely random thing without any effect} is hurting your progress”
or “here’s how I got to {arbitrary amount of followers} in 7 days”
commit to one thing, get off socials and start building
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Benjamin retweetledi

You should learn how to code.
But not to build software.
Let me explain:
At its core, coding is decomposing a big problem into many small actionable steps.
Consider a website:
You don’t just type “website” in the text editor and magically get a nice-looking page.
Instead, you start with the end goal in mind.
You might realize that you want your page to have a navigation bar, a hero section, different text blocks & nice graphics.
Then, you go deeper into each of these elements:
The navigation might consist of a logo, 2-3 links and a button.
And that’s when you start writing the code.
You decompose a big problem (I want a website) into smaller problems (I need to build a navigation bar) and then get to work (I need to add a logo, links and a button).
See the process?
1. Big problem
2. Smaller problems
3. Actionable steps
Once you’ve internalized this thought process, you can apply it to any other area of life.
Want to build an audience on LinkedIn?
1. Big problem (= I want to grow on LinkedIn)
2. Smaller problems (= I need to build a strategy, I need to ideate topics, I need to write the copy, …)
3. Actionable steps (= I need to sit down for 60 minutes today & brainstorm topics)
Essentially, coding is clear thinking.
If you know how to code, you know how to think.
Now, I’m not saying you need to be an expert programmer. It’s about internalizing the core logic behind programming - and then applying it to other areas of life.
Because truth is – knowing how to think might be one of the most valuable skills to have these days. ^^

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@hieudinh_ I love the desktop Arc, but the mobile app feels a bit off
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@benjaminhtr1 Grew up with building Lego, now falling in love with building Components
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@EmyLascan If you use 1920px and design in XD without any guidelines you actually do print design or you’re a psycho
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Create amazing websites and more!
20 FREE background gradients crafted with #AI. I added prompt schema to create this.
Ideal for:
→ Websites
→ Social Media
→ and wherever you want
To get it:
1. Follow me (so I can DM you)
2. RT
3. Reply "✨"
#buildinpublic

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