Chris Gardner
15.4K posts

Chris Gardner
@freestylecoder
Speaker, Twitch affiliate, @devspaceconf organizer. I do strange things with C# and F#. I'm like the Digital Lorax. I speak for the binary trees. He/Him
Huntsville, AL เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2010
458 กำลังติดตาม1K ผู้ติดตาม

@saltnburnem @quorralyne it's fundamentally impossible to share snacks remotely. 1 of my favorite parts of irl interaction is finding out who doesn't like coconut or really can't eat without a particular brand of ketchup
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@quorralyne Then, I don't know. Anytime it's happened to me, is because of my weird, special orders. Of course, I also only get fast food about once a year, ssooo....
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@freestylecoder There was literally no one in the drive thru behind me and that's often the case.
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@majornelson Biggest problem with running ethernet is interference from electrical wires. I'm about to run a fiber between stories in the house, so I can run it with electrical, and then patch out with Cat6, where I can more easily keep things separated in the attic and crawl space.
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@donasarkar @RegularITguy Most of my team is already using AI heavily, but I'm the hold out. For me, the coding (aka: digging into the problem, figuring things out, learning, hands on keyboard) is the fun part of my job, and I'm not giving it up. I told them I'll send an AI to meetings, but they said no.
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So yesterday @RegularITguy and I got into the arena (office) and had an epic battle (loud conversation) about what each of our communities are dealing with thanks to the gloom-and-doom of “AI will kill off all jobs including your babysitter”
For IT folks, they know they need to migrate their estateswhile staying secure and ofc zero downtime. Oh they also need to “do AI”.
For dev/builder folks, they know they need to modernize their apps to the latest version of whatever …with zero downtime ofc and they BETTER BE “doing AI”.
And in the middle of this chaos, vibe coded apps off twitter are apparently taking our jobs 🧐
QUESTION: For all of you out there, what are they main AI Adoption blockers you all are seeing in your biz?
Rick and I have a scheme debuting soon 👀

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@tdesseyn Could be. Tasting better than an original Oreo is a VERY low bar
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Finally made it out to @HattieBs to try the Shut the Cluck Up sandwich. I can see why a normal person would have problems with it. Of course, I had no problem.
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If you needed something happy to look at today,
Kiddo painted a picture of @TC_Johnson and I as dragons for our anniversary, and she kinda nailed it!!

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@quorralyne If there is a feature I need, as soon as available. If not, stable/general.
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Labelled break and continue statements in C# 👀
This is currently a champion proposal (link in 2nd tweet)
#dotnet

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@quorralyne It's cool, I forgot to open and check both equally...
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Chris Gardner รีทวีตแล้ว

I almost called the police that night. That’s the instinct when you see a seven-year-old boy sitting alone on a curb at 8:00 p.m. soaked by freezing rain, no adult in sight, clutching a backpack like it’s the only thing keeping him upright.
I was pumping gas at a rundown station on the edge of town. Flickering lights. Buzzing signs. The kind of place people don’t linger.
But I couldn’t ignore him.
He sat perfectly still, hoodie plastered to his skin, shivering, staring across the lot at the glowing 24-hour store beside a massive warehouse. Too small. Too quiet. Too alone.
At 68, my knees ache in the cold and I don’t move fast anymore. But I move when it matters.
I walked over slowly.
“Hey, buddy. You okay? Waiting for someone?”
He jumped, eyes wide.
“My mom said stay right here. Don’t move. Don’t talk to strangers.”
“In this rain? Where’s your mom?”
He pointed at the warehouse.
“She’s working overtime. If she leaves early, they fire her. She said it would be quick.”
He said it calmly, like someone repeating rules they learned too early. No complaints. Just facts. It hit me hard.
“Come inside,” I said. “You can’t sit out here like this.”
I bought him hot cocoa and a warm sandwich. We sat by the window on those uncomfortable stools, watching rain pound the pavement.
“I’m Frank,” I said.
“Leo,” he whispered, cupping the mug.
We talked. He loved Minecraft. Hated math because “numbers don’t make sense.” Wanted to be an astronaut.
“Up there,” he said, “it’s quiet. No one yells.”
Around 10:30, a woman burst through the door, drenched and frantic in a warehouse uniform. Sarah. She grabbed Leo, checking him over, crying as rain mixed with tears.
Then she saw me.
Panic flashed across her face.
“Please don’t call anyone. I’m a good mom. The sitter canceled. I tried everyone. If I miss a shift, we lose the apartment. Rent’s almost $2,000. Childcare is impossible. I had no choice.”
She braced for judgment.
“Easy,” I said, raising my hands. “No one’s calling anyone.”
I saw my younger self in her. The exhaustion. The fear. Parents today juggling impossible costs with no room to breathe.
“I’m retired,” I told her. “Old mechanic. My days are long and quiet. Here’s my number. Next emergency, call me. I’ll watch him. Help with homework. No charge.”
She stared at the napkin.
“Why would you help us?”
“Because no child should sit in the rain,” I said. “And no parent should have to choose between a paycheck and their kid.”
That was over a year ago.
Now I pick Leo up from school a couple days a week. We hit the library. Build things inspired by Minecraft. Work through math problems. When he gets one right, his whole face lights up. Sarah joins us for dinner when her shift ends.
But the ripple didn’t stop there.
I told the story at the VFW. Retired guys. Veterans. Men who thought their useful years were behind them.
Now we’ve got an informal “Grandpa Network.”
Mike drives a neighbor’s daughter to dance.
Dave watches the bus stop for a single dad.
Others tutor, fix bikes, offer safe porches and steady eyes.
No titles. No applause. Just filling gaps in a system that leaves families stretched thin and silent.
Sarah recently got a better job. Day shifts. No warehouse. She hugged me and said, “You changed everything.”
I shook my head.
“I just noticed.”
That’s the first lesson. Notice.
Look up. See the quiet struggles.
Second. Small acts multiply. One cup of cocoa. One offer. One umbrella.
Third. Community still works. We just forgot how to build it.
Fourth. Judgment shuts doors. Grace opens them.
Fifth. Purpose doesn’t expire. Helping others gave my days meaning again.
There are Leos everywhere.
There are Sarahs everywhere.
You don’t need money or authority.
Just the courage to care.
Look around.
Ask if someone’s okay.
Offer help.
Rebuild the village.
One child.
One act.
One umbrella at a time.

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Chris Gardner รีทวีตแล้ว






