Spent the last couple of days Restructuring rentta's code and implementing the new UI.
one particular one was a code base that was about 200 lines of code refactored to about 88.
If you're a developer, it's helpful to understand at least the basics of computer networking.
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It covers topology and architecture, IPv4 addressing, subnetting, error control, routing, DNS, and lots more.
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Barnsforte Group is Hiring ‼️
Senior Java Development Engineer
💰 Pay: ₦400,000 - ₦900,000 monthly
🏠 Work type: Onsite / Hybrid | Abuja Location
Core Requirements:
- Bachelor's degree with 7–10+ years of deep experience in Java backend development.
-Proven track record building highly scalable enterprise-grade and distributed backend systems.
-Hands-on experience with microservices architecture and event-driven systems.
-Prior experience supporting complex fintech, enterprise, or government technology platforms.
What You'll Do:
-Drive backend engineering, distributed systems development, and cloud-native architectures.
-Build secure API integrations and design systems for large-scale transaction processing.
-Develop and maintain core enterprise-grade applications using modern Java technologies.
-Collaborate within Agile/Scrum software delivery environments to ship robust, reliable code.
How to Apply:
Send your CV and a detailed cover letter to [email protected] using the subject line: “Senior Java Development Engineer - Abuja”
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For f*ck sake. Be optimistic. Be extreme. Be relentless. The world is waiting for you to raise the bar and finally go all in. Execute. Inspire. Show us what’s possible.
In this situation, you and your neighbor should probably get smart meters. They let you consume electricity based on what you actually buy, and the power automatically cuts off for each apartment once the token runs out.
I use this for my apartment, and so does my neighbor.
I will never advise anybody to stay in an apartment where you share prepaid meter with neighbors.
Our light finished today, so I told my neighbor to contribute so we could recharge. She said she didn’t have money and she didn’t even need the light. I said no problem and used my own money to subscribe 2K just so I could manage till morning.
Later, I wanted to fetch water and noticed the tap was not rushing, I stepped outside only to discover madam has turned on her light, AC working perfectly, enjoying herself comfortably with the same light she claimed she didn’t need.
See ehn, it’s not even about the money alone. It’s the mindset. If you know you’ll still use the light, why not contribute from the beginning instead of pretending you’re not interested?
Should I go and knock at her door or do I just turn off her light? What would you do if you were me?
@LagosPresidentt I once saw some joggers that I liked sent the vendor screenshot of the joggers to ask if they were still available. Instead of a yes, no, or at least some kind of response, the vendor told me to save her number so I could view her status to know when products were available.
@Dominus_Kelvin It's time consuming, and becomes a distraction fast.
Instead of shipping the MVP, you spend weeks thinking about architecture for problems you don’t even have yet.
Keep it simple, write clean code, and improve it as the product grows.