As an undergraduate studying Entrepreneurship, one thing that has always stood out to me is the difference between an entrepreneur and a business person.
A business person is primarily concerned with the profit to be made. An entrepreneur, on the other hand, is obsessed with identifying problems, discovering gaps, and creating solutions that deliver lasting value.
Where most people see obstacles, entrepreneurs see opportunities.
The more I study entrepreneurship, the more I realize that some of the most impactful ideas were born from people paying attention to problems others ignored. They weren't simply chasing what was popular at the time; they were focused on building something useful enough to make a difference.
That perspective is one of the reasons projects like @wallchain resonate with me. In a space where many are focused on short term gains, @wallchain is addressing real inefficiencies and building solutions around them. To me, that's what entrepreneurship is really about; creating value by solving problems.
Whether it's in business, technology, or everyday life, the people who consistently create value are usually the ones willing to look deeper, ask better questions, and challenge the way things have always been done.
As we step into a new month and a new week, it's a reminder to look beyond immediate rewards and focus on creating impact that lasts.
Here's to building, learning, and spotting opportunities where others see challenges.
Welcome to June FAM 💙
Most people won’t understand what @CoditanOfficial is yet.
And that’s exactly the point.
They are at a stage where the product isn’t even public…
Why Coditan?
→ Remove friction from coding
→ Give builders tools that actually work under pressure
→ And quietly fix problems other AI coding tools still struggle with
If you’ve spent time using tools like Claude Code, you already know the pain points: rate limits, inconsistency, and moments where things just… break.
@CoditanOfficial is clearly leaning into that gap.
Just a simple message: “anyone can code with the right tools”
$50 GIVEAWAY ‼️
- like, rt & follow @UsdUSD7
- join their TG (link in cs)
- show proof & drop solana wallets
- tag 5 people in the comments
2 winners | 12 HRS. ⏰ GL
"Mum, there's nothing to eat."
I heard my elder brother say that days ago.
Mum didn't even answer immediately.
She just opened the fridge.
Looked at him.
Then looked back into the fridge.
"Nothing to eat?"
There were eggs.
Vegetables.
Rice.
Leftover chicken.
A few things in the freezer.
The fridge wasn't empty.
We just didn't know what to do with what was inside it.
Looking back, that scene played out more times than I can count.
We'd spend 20 minutes deciding what to cook.
Another 10 minutes checking what ingredients were available.
Then someone would suggest buying something else.
Weeks later, we'd discover ingredients that had quietly expired while waiting to be used.
Food wasted.
Money wasted.
Time wasted.
I recently discovered about @foodmatesmart .
While reading about it, I realized they're not really building a recipe app.
They're tackling that exact moment most households know too well:
Standing in front of a fridge full of food and still asking,
"So... what are we going to cook?"
Instead of making you search endlessly, FoodMate starts with what you already have.
What's in your kitchen.
What's close to expiring.
What you're trying to achieve.
Then it helps you figure out what actually makes sense to cook next.
Such a simple idea.
Yet when you think about how much food gets wasted and how much money disappears because of poor meal decisions, it starts to feel like a much bigger problem than most people realize.
The best products often come from moments people have normalized.
Moments they experience so often that they stop questioning them.
@foodmatesmart feels like it was built from one of those moments.
And honestly?
I think a lot of families would relate.