Vishal Sharma

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Vishal Sharma

Vishal Sharma

@sharma_188

Building https://t.co/c8WGPUnMIl ($3MRR) Exploring the World of Tech with light of curiosity.

India Katılım Kasım 2021
423 Takip Edilen102 Takipçiler
Arpit Bhayani
Arpit Bhayani@arpit_bhayani·
wait... so... a database is just a global variable?
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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
People don't remember you because of your hard work but they do for your one risky step that you take.
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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
Real Engineers don't need a degree.
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Vishal Sharma retweetledi
Aditya Raj Kaul
Aditya Raj Kaul@AdityaRajKaul·
Indian Army’s Kargil War Veteran and MahaVir Chakra awardee Col. Sonam Wangchuk passes away in Ladakh. He was known as the Lion of Ladakh. Salute the hero of India! 🇮🇳🙏 This is how his Mahavir Chakra Citation read: “On 30 May 1999, Major Sonam Wangchuk was leading a column of The Indus Wing, Ladakh Scouts as a part of ongoing operations in Op VIJAY in the Batalik Sector. The column was tasked to occupy Ridge Line on the Line of Control in a glaciated area at a height of about 5,500 metres. This was essential so as to pre-empt its occupation by the enemy and any subsequent infiltration. While moving towards the Line of Control, the enemy ambushed the column by firing from a vantage position. In the process, one NCO[5] of The Ladakh Scouts was killed. Major Sonam Wangchuk held his column together and in a daring counter ambush, led a raid on the enemy position from a flank, killing two enemy soldiers. The officer also recovered one heavy machine gun and one Universal machine gun, ammunition, controlled stores and three dead bodies of the enemy personnel. Thereafter, the officer took stock of all forces along the Chorbatla axis in the Batalik Sector and cleared the axis up to the Line of Control of all enemy intrusions at great risk to his life. Major Sonam Wangchuk displayed exceptional bravery and gallantry of the highest order in the presence of enemy fire and in extreme climatic conditions in the glaciated area.”
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Shadan
Shadan@skshadan_·
I just gave Claude Code a rooted Android phone… It autonomously reverse-engineered Subway Surfers, hooked the coin logic, bypassed the anti-cheat, and gave itself UNLIMITED coins in ONE session.
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Arpit Bhayani
Arpit Bhayani@arpit_bhayani·
Distributed systems (or even entangled microservices) are difficult to debug, and to be honest, you almost always learn something new doing it. Some classic examples: - zombie worker processing a job twice - split-brain during leader election - clock skew causing 'causal violations' - cascading timeout misconfiguration, and so many more Now, to debug issues effectively, what I feel is that we need to hold and work with two mental models at once, and constantly context-switch between two very different perspectives - the global view and the local view. The global view shows you the overall architecture - how services talk to each other, what the data flow looks like, and what guarantees the system is supposed to provide. This is the map. It tells you where everything should be. The local view is where you actually live during an incident. You are looking at a single node's state, its message queue, its retry logic, and its clock. You are asking: what does this component think is true right now? What makes this interesting is that these two views do not always agree. A service can believe it is healthy while the global system is only semi-functional. A network partition can make two nodes each think they are the leader. A queue consumer can be processing messages in a perfectly valid local order that violates the global processing guarantees you care about. This is why distributed systems are hard to reason about. The bugs almost never live in a single component. They live in the gap between components :) So, if you work with distributed systems, develop the habit of deliberately flipping between these views. When something breaks, first ask "what does the global state look like?" and then immediately follow with "what does each node think the global state looks like?" The mismatch between those two answers is almost always where the problem hides. Hope this helps.
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Arpit Bhayani
Arpit Bhayani@arpit_bhayani·
Claude limit reached before lunch. It's not even half day. Ape sad. Ape confused. Ape understand nothing. Ape consider touching grass. Ape stay inside.
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Harkirat Singh
Harkirat Singh@kirat_tw·
the claude code hack has unlocked a hidden achievement: 10,000 developers who have never touched a sourcemap in their lives now have Very Strong Opinions about sourcemaps
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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
Make product photoshoot hassle free and easy for small businesses and online sellers. shootcraft.app
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saksham
saksham@saksham_sarda·
I'm hiring curious and exceptional engineers at @runable_hq shoot me a message!
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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
@KreatelyMedia It's amazing to see that those who were abusing Gandhi until yesterday are at least remembering his name now.
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Kreately.in
Kreately.in@KreatelyMedia·
Bapu 😭
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Ghar Ke Kalesh
Ghar Ke Kalesh@gharkekalesh·
MAN FLEXES EV ELECTRIC SCOOTER AT PETROL PUMP DURING FUEL SHORTAGE
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Khushiii
Khushiii@KhushiMhasange·
Guys we still haven't found anyone for this role, we literally took more than 150 interviews. If you have a technical background and you think you can handle clients, I am talking CEO's, CXO's here , post your pow in comments. Anyone from our team will directly reach out. Also apply on well found, link in comments, just to keep track of applicants.
Khushiii@KhushiMhasange

@getalchemyst is hiring: Engineer - Product Success We’re looking for someone who can help our clients turn AI systems into real outcomes. This role sits between product, engineering, and customers. You’ll work with founders, developers, and enterprise teams to deploy AI systems, translate business needs into technical workflows, and make sure things actually work in the real world. If you enjoy solving problems, working closely with clients, and using AI to improve how businesses operate we’d love to talk. Apply via the link in comments.

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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
@vineetwts I saw something similar on reddit with some vulgar sound on slap.
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Vishal Sharma
Vishal Sharma@sharma_188·
@hey_yogini OpenClaw is like an iPhone for tokens, overpriced and hard to justify, but you use it anyway because it's the 'cool' thing to do.
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