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Arin Agrawal ๐
926 posts

Arin Agrawal ๐
@ArinBuilds
Building games & products in public ๐ฎ | Flutter dev ๐ | 18.4k users on CalcQuest ๐ฑ | sharing my journey & lessons
India Sumali Temmuz 2025
80 Sinusundan120 Mga Tagasunod

@trying_to_exits x if you want traction fast, youtube if you want longevity. linkedin works if you're in b2b. all three together is a part-time job though
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@pradiptwt cron job that someone forgot to document. or a scheduled task that got added 3 devs ago and nobody owns it anymore
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@TosinOlugbenga drizzle's been my go-to lately. prisma feels heavy for smaller projects and the generated client can get weird
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@Tekeee fr. 3 years of building stuff solo and i already understand why people retire lol
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@gkcs_ trust gap is real. people use it for output but still double-check everything manually. not sure that changes until models stop hallucinating confidently
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@IamAroke "it's working as intended, the requirement was just wrong" โ classic. or the always reliable "needs more testing"
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@0xkozue 100%. you spend more energy managing the agent than just doing the thing. babysitting code is still work
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@rezoundous yeah it's a weird move. feels like they're trying to normalize rate limits across tools instead of actually fixing capacity
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@vibeonX69 honestly devin. the hype was massive but most devs i know went back to cursor or just claude code within a week
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@Adidotdev Sonnet 4.5 for token optimisation
opus 4.6 for complex tasks
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@pmitu the validation-before-quitting part is underrated. so many people romanticize the leap without ever stress-testing whether anyone actually wants what they're building
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CEO once told me something that completely changed the way I think about opportunities.
She called it the โAirport Theory.โ
At first, I thought she was joking.
We were talking about business, growth, and why some people seem to move so much faster than others when she suddenly said:
โThe difference between people who build the life they want and people who keep talking about it is simple. One group boards the plane. The other keeps waiting at the gate.โ
Then she explained.
Most people treat opportunities like theyโll always be there.
They think theyโll apply later.
Launch later.
Pitch later.
Start later.
After they feel more confident.
After they have more money.
After they know exactly what theyโre doing.
But opportunities donโt work like that.
A plane has a departure time.
It doesnโt care if youโre scared.
It doesnโt care if youโre still deciding.
It doesnโt care if youโre 100% ready.
It leaves.
And opportunities do the same thing.
The client who wants to work with you now wonโt wait forever.
The partnership youโre overthinking will move on.
The business idea youโve been sitting on will eventually be built by someone else.
Most people donโt miss opportunities because theyโre not talented enough.
They miss them because they keep waiting for certainty.
The truth?
Nobody boards a plane already knowing exactly whatโs going to happen after takeoff.
You figure it out in the air.
The same applies to business, relationships, travel, content creation, and pretty much every big decision that changes your life.
You donโt need less fear.
You need less waiting.
Because the Airport Theory is painfully simple:
The plane leaves anyway.
The question is whether youโre on it.
โ๏ธ Whatโs one opportunity youโve been standing at the gate for too long?

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@IamAroke actually read the error message before googling it. sounds dumb but it took me way longer than i'd like to admit to start doing that consistently
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@boardyai the signal-to-noise is genuinely better here than anywhere else. spent years on other platforms before realizing all the actually interesting builders were over here the whole time
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@aditiitwt notepad debugging era was genuinely humbling. no autocomplete, no red squiggles, just you and your typos vs the void
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@V1rendra_ B every time. 1M views feels great until you check your bank. 10 paying clients is 10 people who trust you enough to hand over money โ that's actual signal
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@Drago_18_ same. stopped caring once i realized hackathons optimize for demos, not products. the judges don't stick around to become your users
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@benfchi distribution, always. the building part is fun, getting anyone to care enough to stay is the actual job
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@Gavel_on_X honestly feels like it. reply engagement from actual builders > 30 daily posts that say nothing. but the algo doesn't care about quality
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