@Ekalavya230 thanks to arranged marriage, men like you, who have zero idea of how to interact with and respect women and just want a caretaker as a wife. And then have the audacity to complain why women don’t work as carpenters because they are busy taking care of your dumbass while you work.
How to build a thriving open source community by writing code like bacteria do 🦠. Bacterial code (genomes) are:
- small (each line of code costs energy)
- modular (organized into groups of swappable operons)
- self-contained (easily "copy paste-able" via horizontal gene transfer)
If chunks of code are small, modular, self-contained and trivial to copy-and-paste, the community can thrive via horizontal gene transfer. For any function (gene) or class (operon) that you write: can you imagine someone going "yoink" without knowing the rest of your code or having to import anything new, to gain a benefit? Could your code be a trending GitHub gist?
This coding style guide has allowed bacteria to colonize every ecological nook from cold to hot to acidic or alkaline in the depths of the Earth and the vacuum of space, along with an insane diversity of carbon anabolism, energy metabolism, etc. It excels at rapid prototyping but... it can't build complex life. By comparison, the eukaryotic genome is a significantly larger, more complex, organized and coupled monorepo. Significantly less inventive but necessary for complex life - for building entire organs and coordinating their activity. With our advantage of intelligent design, it should possible to take advantage of both. Build a eukaryotic monorepo backbone if you have to, but maximize bacterial DNA.
@_raghuvamsi hey! great work!! this is a much needed and good product. Personally I will find it much useful for cleaning my instagram feed. also, is it fullproof or still some unwanted posts seep through?
@i_rebel_aj Thanks for the advice bhai
Yes i think working in a startup is something which intrigues me. You are right, i need to interact with founders more now.
I would love to catch up with you!
PS: I love the career trajectory you took after college, it’s inspiring :)
They move from product to product, and everything is same to them because it just the same basket of tools and framework being used over and over. At each product, they learn something niche about the tool or framework which gives some intellectual high to them, and that's all
which give them instant intellectual stimulation and some sense of learning and growth, while being completely detached from the other parts. Most people have the mental framework of viewing the business product they work on as a bunch of micro services and nothing more.
@pragdua@miranetwork Hey! I don't have experience with product design but have experience as a dev. I am interested in product design. Since it is internship, would it be good for someone with no experience?