Gaurang kaushik

175 posts

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Gaurang kaushik

Gaurang kaushik

@fadebeyond

Connoisseur of @nigmagalaxy Love to code.

Katılım Ocak 2020
199 Takip Edilen19 Takipçiler
Akshay Saini
Akshay Saini@akshaymarch7·
Hey @grok , who was the most famous person to visit my profile? It doesn't need to be a mutual, don't tag them, just say who it was
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ORM 𝕏
ORM 𝕏@_ObomheseR·
When your code works but you don't know why 😂😅😂
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Gaurang kaushik
Gaurang kaushik@fadebeyond·
@striver_79 Can you add like Java fundamentals not the basics but the fundamentals stuff like top 50 Java based questions but with your twist on it like you do always?
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Striver | Building takeUforward
TUF+ is growing! 🔥🚀 We are on our way to become India’s one stop place to prepare. Yesterday, we recorded our 3rd highest daily revenue. The 1st and 2nd highest were recorded during the initial release, so this is a big W. I am open to feedbacks, please feel free to drop in whatever you don’t like, we will make sure, if this is a common issue, our team will fix it 😄
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‎Wojak Codes
‎Wojak Codes@wojakcodes·
4 years back, I thought my life was over because I fucked up JEE and couldn't get into a good college... I was broke, my family wasn't rich... and (apparently) I blew up my only way of building a decent career. I was straight out of school, couldn't get into a public university and a pvt college was just too expensive. So I did what I could... Applied to jobs like cable TV installation. Worked on a data entry job for a couple of months. Got scammed. Couldn't figure out what to do. I almost gave up... But then...somehow I got started with freelancing... Did some small gigs. And gradually built a stable career. I still don't like myself and I'm still not where I wanted to be, but I'm content with how I 'fixed' my life despite the odds. Today, as I turn 22, I feel so glad that I didn't give up...Happy birthday to myself!
‎Wojak Codes@wojakcodes

If you think your life is messed up beyond repair, then you need to think long term. People overestimate what they can do in 6 months but underestimate what they can do in 6 years. It's never too late to take a hold of your life. You just need consistency and compounding.

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Supabase
Supabase@supabase·
senior: hey are you done with the feature? me:
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iceiceice
iceiceice@iceiceicedota·
Anyone has good burger bun recipe?
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Aman
Aman@Amandeep_twt·
@sde_ray Core concepts and system design... I asked for any good free resource
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313@313formation·
how is this app free
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Gaurang kaushik
Gaurang kaushik@fadebeyond·
@neembu_paani31 I think he said " le de diya PPO "with this. Maybe the only PPO he could have offered when he indeed wanted to give you one but HR did not support it.
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tomato 🍅
tomato 🍅@neembu_paani31·
on my farewell at microsoft my manager gifted me table tennis and PPO written on it, i still can't decode that ☠️
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Gaurang kaushik
Gaurang kaushik@fadebeyond·
Bro Zuckerberg kinda changed over the years.
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
How to use GitHub Actions to build a pipeline that tests your code, trains a model, and publishes a new version of it. Bonus: I let GitHub Workspace Copilot do a lot of the work. (This is the best "AI developer" I've tested so far by a mile.) Here is the full video:
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Jigar Suthar
Jigar Suthar@jigarsu62383444·
Hello, everyone! currently doing web 3 with harkirat greate work done by harkirat! Hey,Harkirat i have question at this point if there is a two fork of a blockchain and the longer one exist in future, then what will happen to data of the second fork It will be lost @kirat_tw
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Shobhit Shrivastava
Shobhit Shrivastava@shri_shobhit·
Posting in the hope that it might help someone: People have already cracked the code of system design interviews, and you can be very methodical about it. Unlike coding rounds, raw intelligence isn't the key factor here. I cleared system design interviews at Microsoft and Google using the following method. I had certain advantages, like working at Amazon before, so YMMV. More importantly, preparing well for these interviews will definitely make you a better engineer. First, buy physical copies of the two books by Alex Xu and read them as if your life depends on it. It actually does. Read both books. You might not understand many concepts initially, but do whatever it takes to grasp them. Start with your favorite LLM. Read articles and papers on the topics. Create prototypes and build them on your laptop until you can explain the concepts to anyone. You should know enough that, if needed, you could build a project around it. I did this to understand t-digest in PostgreSQL. Understand the trade-offs explained. Write them down and ponder over them for days. It’s nearly impossible to think of a system design question that doesn't overlap with a question from these books. Second, watch some YouTube videos of people giving mock interviews. This is essential because some people know a lot but still fumble during actual interviews. Learn to pace yourself. You’ve got 45 minutes, and you need to cover 10 pages of content. Learn to impress your interviewer. Time yourself to spend 5 minutes understanding the problem, 10 minutes identifying the components, 10 for interaction, and so on. The numbers are indicative, but remember, it’s a performance. Stick to the script. You are not that random shooter from Turkey who won silver at the Olympics. Nobody is that cool in front of a Google interviewer who has asked the same question to 100 people before. Shooting in the Olympics doesn't have moving targets. Interviews do. Third, find two different people to do 3-5 mock interviews with. You don’t want to get blindsided. You might be overlooking something. Practice your act. Find people who are already working in similar companies. Don't ask me. I don’t do 1:1 coaching; I don’t have that patience. Fourth, this step is optional. I didn’t do it, but you can if you need some extra confidence. Interview at a few related companies to get some live practice. You might even get a great offer, so there’s no downside. Please don’t overdo it. Don't let the results of those interviews—both positive and negative—affect you too much. Stick to the process. It might take 6 months to a year, but it will happen if you persist. Don’t fool yourself; your competition is working even harder, for longer. Again, you are not that cool; system design interviews are an act, and they can be perfected. And if you do the preparation well, believe me, you WILL become a better engineer. I still see problems where I build an analogy with something I learned while preparing. Good luck, and have fun!
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