Change is not a disruption of the path, but the very movement that reveals it.
We do not lose ourselves in the transition; we simply outgrow the versions of us that were never meant to stay.
Many great ideas never become real products. Others become digital tools people struggle to use.
What if turning ideas into functional digital products was easier?
In 10 days, we unveil something built for that.
#10DaysToGo#ChokmarhTechnologies
Last year a junior developer built an app that suddenly went viral.
Everything was working perfectly… until 200,000 users showed up at the same time.
The server crashed.
The database froze.
Users couldn’t log in.
The product died in 6 hours.
Weeks later he interviewed at a big tech company.
They asked him one question:
“How would you design a system that can handle 1 million users?”
He failed the interview.
Not because he couldn’t code.
Because he didn’t understand system design.
This thread will explain system design so simply that when you face this question in an interview, you’ll know exactly what to say.
Bookmark and retweet this. You’ll need it someday.
Coding games are the best way to learn coding.
From CSS, Python, JavaScript to Blockchain.
Here are 10 of the BEST online games to learn coding in 2026:
I used to write 400-word prompts begging AI not to sound like AI.
Still sounded like AI.
Then I stumbled on a 29-word fix that changed everything:
"Read my anti-AI writing style file first. It contains every known pattern of AI writing I want to avoid. Apply these as rules to everything you write for me."
That's the whole prompt.
But here's the setup nobody tells you:
Step 1. Go to Wikipedia
Step 2. Search "Signs of AI writing"
Step 3. Copy the entire page
Step 4. Paste into a Google Doc. Don't touch it.
Step 5. Name it "anti-ai-writing"
Step 6. Download my .md files. Ready to upload.
Step 7. That file is now your secret weapon
Here's why your current prompts are failing:
"Don't use jargon."
"Don't sound like an AI."
"Don't sound robotic."
"Be conversational."
You've written some version of this.
I know because I did too, for months.
The model reads it, nods, and still writes like a LinkedIn intern from 2019.
Why? You're listing 14 "don'ts." It forgets half by sentence three.
The fix is counterintuitive.
Stop telling the AI what to avoid.
Give it a file that shows what to avoid.
The model reads 1,168 lines of bad patterns, internalizes them, and writes clean.
400-word prompt → still robotic.
29 words + 1 file → people ask if you hired a ghostwriter
The file does the heavy lifting. Not your prompt.
Try it tonight and come back to tell me what changed.
Repost if this saves someone from writing another "don't sound like AI" prompt that sounds like AI.
Someone sent me this clip. He is a Kenyan gentleman, Hinn Welamond Walubengo. He uses @wofbec for a strategy session. I like some of the points he made particularly the first one.
It shows @wofbec is shaping culture.