Biome (Rome’s Rust-born reincarnation) formats, lints, and types at warp speed.
JS in 2025 is fast, typed, distributed. And we’re just getting started.
Forget Webpack. The new tooling gods are Vite, SWC, Turbopack, and Biome.
Vite + esbuild = near-instant dev servers.
Turbopack (from the Next.js team) is Webpack’s spiritual successor—rebuilt from scratch for speed.
Absolutely. If you're willing to master time management, embrace rapid iteration, and become a generalist. It's about building something you control fully, on your terms.
Is indie hacking the future of tech entrepreneurship or already the present?
Let us know what you think.
Indie hacking is quietly reshaping the startup game, no VC, no blitzscaling, just raw independence.
Solo founders making millions, hidden in plain sight.
Here's why it matters more than you think:
#IndieHacking#StartupSuccess#ATDEVTalent#TechEntrepreneur
First: Monetize early. Indie hackers live or die by cash flow, subscriptions, one-time sales, or memberships. Next: Build in public. Share every milestone, win, or fail transparently, creating loyal fans who pay.
But can anyone actually do it?
Smarter solutions exist.
But unless ISPs and courts evolve their approach, expect more collateral damage.
The war on piracy shouldn’t take the open web hostage.
The only reliable workaround right now is a VPN.
By tunneling traffic through a non-Spanish IP, users can access the “blocked” internet again.
But should regular users need VPNs just to reach legal content?