Dammy
20.3K posts

Dammy
@dami19785
Learning Cloud development delves in crypto follow on base : https://t.co/zSDgobWUHI
Tham gia Haziran 2023
2.5K Đang theo dõi2.1K Người theo dõi
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Redis might be the greatest betrayal in open source history.
In 2009 an Italian developer named Salvatore Sanfilippo was building a startup and MySQL was too slow. So he built his own in-memory database in his spare time and open sourced it for free.
He called it Redis.
Twitter used it. GitHub used it. Snapchat used it. Stack Overflow used it. Every major tech company on earth ran Redis somewhere in their stack.
By 2020 Salvatore was burnt out after 11 years of maintaining it alone. He handed the project to Redis Labs and walked away.
Then in March 2024 Redis Labs changed the license.
Overnight Redis was no longer open source. Cloud providers could no longer offer it as a managed service without paying Redis Labs. The community that built it around Salvatore's code woke up locked out.
They did not argue. They did not write blog posts. They forked it.
Eight days later the Linux Foundation announced Valkey. Backed by AWS, Google, Oracle, Ericsson and Snap. Over 50 companies joined within weeks.
Within a year Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian and Arch all dropped Redis and made Valkey their default. AWS migrated millions of nodes to Valkey. Valkey hit 1.19 million requests per second. 230% faster than the version Redis abandoned.
Then Redis brought Salvatore back to win the community over.
He came back. He showed up on Hacker News defending the license change. He tried to rebuild trust.
The community had already moved on without him.
Redis built 15 years of open source trust. Tested it once. Lost it in 8 days.
In open source the community is not just the users.
The community is the moat.


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HURRAY!!!🪅🪅
Finally completed my CLOUD COMPUTING course @TechCrushHQ
Thanks to everyone Tutors and Fellow students alike that were supportive during this journey
Na job remain
HIRE ME

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someone with 6 months of experience just got paid $100,000 for a single bug bounty finding.
i'm at roughly that same point in my journey and haven't found anything yet.
no valid findings. no contest payouts. just months of studying, breaking things in practice environments, and slowly learning to read code the way an attacker would.
on the days it feels pointless, a post like that is the thing that resets the perspective.
because it proves the timeline isn't as long as it feels from inside the grind. 6 months is enough, if those months go into the right things. reading real code, not just tutorials. building the instinct, not just the knowledge.
i don't know when my first finding comes. but i know it's closer than it was yesterday.
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On March 9, I was accepted into the Uniswap Hook Incubator (@AtriumAcademy ) sponsored by @Uniswap Foundation.
As an IT student at FUTA juggling heavy coursework, I spent the last few months doing deep R&D on past hook designs.
Here's what I'm building: 👇 (1/5)
abrahamnavig@AbrahamNAVIG1
Super excited to announce that I’ve been selected for the Uniswap Hook Incubator (UHI10)! 🦄🪝. Can’t wait to dive deep into DeFi infrastructure and start building Uniswap v4 Hooks with some of the best developers in the space. Massive shoutout to @AtriumAcademy and @UniswapFND for the grant and the opportunity. Let’s build! 🛠️
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@stephdreals @arc Its already in motion with or without arc
Arc is welcomed rhough
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Can stablecoins improve cross-border payments in Nigeria?
After learning more about $USDC and stable-coins through the Programmable Money on @arc Bootcamp , i started thinking about their potential impact on cross-border payments in Nigeria.
Check out my thoughts on arc house. community.arc.io/home/clubs/nig…

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ANTHROPIC JUST TURNED CLAUDE INTO A FULL-TIME EMPLOYEE.
Anthropic just rolled out Claude Tag.
This AI agent integrates directly into Slack, where it keeps track of context, accesses company tools, collaborates with teams, and can autonomously tackle tasks for hours or even days.
All employees need to do is tag @Claude and get on with their day.
Claude takes care of the work quietly in the background.
The most important detail:
According to Anthropic, 65% of the code produced by its product team has already been generated by Claude using an internal version of the system.
And they aren't limiting its use to coding alone.
Claude is also being used to analyze metrics, handle support tickets, investigate bugs, conduct research, draft documents, and coordinate work across teams.
This fundamentally changes the role of AI.
Previously, AI was something employees opened when they needed help.
With Claude Tag, AI becomes part of the workflow itself.
It observes, remembers, follows up, and takes initiative.
That's a big deal because it means one person can potentially operate with the output of an entire team.
A founder can manage multiple projects.
A freelancer can serve more clients.
A creator can research, write, and publish at scale.
A small startup can automate work that once required several hires.
And here's the crazy part:
Access starts at about $20 per seat/month on Claude Team.
That's less than what many companies spend on a single SaaS subscription.
Anthropic isn't selling a chatbot here.
They're selling a digital employee.
This presents a serious challenge for any business built around routine knowledge work.
Why pay for multiple tools to manage projects, summarize meetings, draft reports, conduct research, and coordinate teams when an AI coworker can handle much of it from a single interface?
The real competition for many SaaS companies may not be another startup.
It may be a team of humans working alongside AI employees.

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This has to be a glitch I’m very sure
@ClaudeDevs do something

MystiqueMide@MystiqueMide
already used up 69% of my weekly credits and its just Tuesday. At this rate , it will get exhausted by tomorrow. Gotta complete these stuffs , no sleeping tonight.
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Nobody talks about this enough.
The internet has made us impatient with everything.
A video takes 3 seconds to load? We leave.
A website feels slow? We close it.
A skill takes months to learn? We quit.
A project doesn't grow in a week? We lose interest.
We're surrounded by people chasing shortcuts.
Which is exactly why patience has become such a competitive advantage.
Most people aren't failing because they're incapable.
They're failing because they stop too soon.

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