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Surya Moorthy
2K posts

Surya Moorthy
@suryabuilds
20 | 2026 CS Grad | First Principle thinking | Focusing on backend and system design
vellore Katılım Eylül 2023
229 Takip Edilen149 Takipçiler

@Taniyatweets_ Should have install 26.04, it is better than the current you are using..
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@suryabuilds Hey Surya 👋.
Connected! Hoping to keep in touch and share each other's work.
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Hey Friends,
I am very close to 400.
Can we make it happen today?
If you are
Founder
Developer
UI/UX designer
Engineer
Indie hacker
Coffee lover 😉
Musice Enthusiasts
Please drop a Hi 👋
I will connect.
#buildinpublic

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@chipro Looking cool , feels like an idea from Social Network Movie!!
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Looking to connect with builders, founders, developers & ambitious people on @X
Interested in:
• AI
• SaaS
• Startups
• Coding
• Web Development
• Machine Learning
• Automation
• Content Creation
What are you building right now?
Let's connect 🤝✨
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@avrldotdev Gonna work on go + concurrency next month, the Raft blueprint is more useful to follow man
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Users who interact with a misleading post that is subsequently corrected by @CommunityNotes will receive an 𝕏 Chat message of the CN to correct any misperception
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@Abhishekcur True
Like a tree map, you wanna find the road but obstacles might make you stand, actually they are steps that can be even effective, they can be long or short but it will eventually move where you wanna go.
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i’ve realized that in every learning journey, the biggest lessons rarely come from success. they come from failure. every mistake, setback, and wrong turn forces you to see things more clearly, question your assumptions, and understand what actually works. failures teach lessons that no book, course, mentor, or tutorial can fully teach. if you pay attention to them instead of running from them, they become one of the most powerful teachers you’ll ever have.
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Was randomly scrolling and somehow landed on Worldometer today.
I genuinely didn't know something like this even existed.
Watching the population, births, deaths, internet users, and dozens of other counters increase every second got me thinking:
How is this system actually implemented?
Are these numbers truly being tracked in real time?
Or is there some clever engineering behind the scenes using projections, caching, and periodic data updates?
The more I looked at it, the more interesting the engineering became than the numbers themselves.
Now I'm curious:
If you were asked to build Worldometer, how would you design it?

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Become a Top 1% Developer 🚀
Stage 1:
Learn to Code
Stage 2:
Build Small Projects
Stage 3:
Learn Git + GitHub
Stage 4:
Break Things
Stage 5:
Learn Debugging
Stage 6:
Build Real Projects
Stage 7:
Learn System Design
Stage 8:
Deploy to Production
Stage 9:
Contribute to Open Source
Stage 10:
Teach Others
Most people quit around Stage 4.
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@haukejung When it is not useful for the users or have a better alternative or so...
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System level are amazing.
Rust is one of the language that reduces cpu usage since it has near communication with low level and also OG platform independent too.
Python has as interpreted needs an interpreter to review and convert the code into machine level.
No wonder rust face max performance than python here..
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Wasmer ported their 7-year-old Django backend to Rust. The results are hard to ignore. 🦀
Before vs After:
→ 220 CPUs → 24 CPUs (-89%)
→ 800 GB RAM → 64 GB RAM (-92%)
→ p95 API latency: 120ms → 30ms (-75%)
→ Startup time: 60s → 1s
→ DB connections: thousands → hundreds
One engineer. Three months. AI-assisted migration.
They're honest about the tradeoffs : longer build times, no `manage.py shell` for quick prod fixes, and SQLite/Postgres dual support was painful.
And they're clear: this wasn't "Django is bad." Django served them well for 7 years. The rewrite made sense because their entire stack was already Rust-heavy.
Full writeup worth reading 👇
🔗 wasmer.io/posts/ported-w…
#Rust #RustLang #Django #Python #WebDevelopment #OpenSource #BackendEngineering

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@thdxr Point 3 feels more technical since we combine components of everything into a product, nice points
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