codethenic

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codethenic

@codethenic

On a mission to build 100 apps → most will flop, one will change everything.

Katılım Haziran 2024
240 Takip Edilen820 Takipçiler
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
TL;DR & why I’m here In 2022, I completed my B.Tech in Computer Science Engineering. From 2022 to 2024, I worked as a mobile application developer, building apps for clients and learning the ropes of real-world development. Those two years taught me discipline, deadlines, and the grind of making other people’s visions come to life. In 2024, I started freelancing working on projects for multiple clients, juggling tasks, and understanding what it really takes to run your own ship. I learned a ton, but I also realized something important: building for others is great, but it doesn’t fulfill me. So, in 2025, I decided to shift gears. Now, I’m building products for myself projects that reflect my ideas, my experiments, and my vision. Every line of code I write now is for something I truly care about, and it’s an entirely different kind of thrill. I’m still figuring it all out, but that’s the point. This is my journey of learning, experimenting, failing, and creating on my own terms. Own it. Ship it. Show it. Nobody else will live your story for you, so make it loud and proud.
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
TL;DR & why I’m here In 2022, I completed my B.Tech in Computer Science Engineering. From 2022 to 2024, I worked as a mobile application developer, building apps for clients and learning the ropes of real-world development. Those two years taught me discipline, deadlines, and the grind of making other people’s visions come to life. In 2024, I started freelancing working on projects for multiple clients, juggling tasks, and understanding what it really takes to run your own ship. I learned a ton, but I also realized something important: building for others is great, but it doesn’t fulfill me. So, in 2025, I decided to shift gears. Now, I’m building products for myself projects that reflect my ideas, my experiments, and my vision. Every line of code I write now is for something I truly care about, and it’s an entirely different kind of thrill. I’m still figuring it all out, but that’s the point. This is my journey of learning, experimenting, failing, and creating on my own terms. Own it. Ship it. Show it. Nobody else will live your story for you, so make it loud and proud.
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Your life isn’t stuck. You’re just quitting too early. You expect results in days From habits that need months Stay longer That’s the difference
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
You’re acting like: “I worked hard → I deserve results” Reality is: “Market doesn’t care about effort” It only rewards: •attention •distribution •solving real pain
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Most solo devs chase the "perfect" stack or feature I wasted months on fancy animations nobody cared about Then one brutal truth hit: Users don't pay for code-they pay for solved problems Now I ask "Who wants this?" before I code it Changed everything #IndieDev #BuildInPublic
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
There was a time I thought I was behind in life Everyone seemed to be moving faster getting results figuring things out And I was just… trying Trying ideas trying routines trying to make something work Nothing clicked For a long time it felt like wasted effort
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
@priyankapudi Most journeys look slow until they suddenly spike The grind is invisible until it works
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Priyanka Pudi
Priyanka Pudi@priyankapudi·
4 years. One guy. One game. $245K in a week. No shortcuts. No hacks. Just head down, doing the work. Every success story on social media looks fancy from the outside. But you never see the years of grinding behind it. This guy worked alone for 4 years. Nobody cared. Nobody was watching. We only found out about him the day he succeeded. That's the unspoken truth about every "overnight success" you only hear about them after the hard part is over.
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benja
benja@benjaminakar·
we're hiring builders. don't send a cv. send what you’ve shipped. projects. products. design. github. show taste. show ownership. late nights. early mornings. you only get a few real shots. if you believe in what we're building, message me. remote in europe + north america. bonus if you grew up on minecraft.
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
But looking back That phase wasn’t failure It was training Learning how to sit in uncertainty how to keep going without proof how to build without validation Now I see it differently You’re not behind You’re just in the part where it doesn’t make sense yet
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
@shubh19 I have felt that loop too Things changed when I stayed with one idea longer
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Shubh Jain
Shubh Jain@shubh19·
@codethenic i've been there too switching between projects feeling like nothing's working stuck in this cycle it's hard to admit but it takes patience to see anything through
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Most people don’t fail because they are not capable They fail because they keep switching New idea New plan New goal Every few weeks They never stay long enough to see something actually work Consistency feels boring So they escape it But boring is where results come from
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Ryo Lu
Ryo Lu@ryolu_·
keep struggling when things come too easy, you don’t exercise the brain nor the emotions. ease can feel like progress, but it often skips the reps that actually change you. growth is usually a loop, not a straight line – you take passes. you try, you fail, you reframe. you come back with a slightly better model, a slightly calmer nervous system, a slightly wider range of what you can handle. hardship isn’t the goal. but friction is gold. it shows you where your understanding is thin, where your habits are brittle, where your ego is doing the steering. the struggle is the curriculum. agents are making things easier, and that’s good. but don’t confuse speed with depth. use AI to remove busywork, then spend the saved energy on the parts that still hurt a little: the unclear problem, the uncomfortable conversation, the hard tradeoffs, the things you can’t yet explain in words. instead of putting all your wishes into the black box, actually keep thinking, and seeing things fully. keep the difficulty where it matters. outsource the tedious, keep the meaningful resistance. that’s how we keep learning – and how we stay human while your tools get superhuman.
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Ben Lang
Ben Lang@benln·
One of the all-time great cold emails:
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Zack Hargett
Zack Hargett@zackhargett·
Updates: Happy to share Coconote has been acquired by Quizlet! • $6.7m ARR • ~50% ebitda • 1 billion+ organic views on social • $0 raised
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
@YouTubeCreators I build app and trying speaking to camera and about to reach 50 subscribers thank you all @codethenic?si=Zx9CBFdGVqFFe6M6" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@codethenic?si…
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YouTube Creators
YouTube Creators@YouTubeCreators·
don't forget to celebrate your progress 💖
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Param
Param@Param_eth·
Most vibe coders are iOS developers, not Android.
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Just… slowly disappearing So if you felt like “this changes everything” You were right It just didn’t belong there The future is still coming Just not inside the App Store
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Updates blocked features restricted rules suddenly matter again Because platforms were never built for apps that can change themselves What felt like freedom started looking like risk And just like that the window starts closing Not loudly not officially
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
@paulg Users care about value Not resumes
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Someone asked if it's a good idea to start a startup when you have nothing notable on your resume. Absolutely. All that matters in a startup is whether users like the product, and users don't care (either way) what's on your resume.
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codethenic
codethenic@codethenic·
Pick one thing Stay with it Longer than it feels comfortable That’s where things start compounding
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