One of the biggest lessons in product building isn't launching a product—it's learning to reject your own ideas after honestly identifying their flaws. That's where real learning happens.
#product#ProductManagement#BuildinPublic#founders
Whether you're in school, college, preparing for exams, or working—what's one thing you wish you could get help with right now to make your career journey easier?
#CareerGrowth#CareerGuidance#BuildInPublic
"Everything will go according to plan."
What if it doesn't?
Preparing for uncertainty isn't pessimism—it's wisdom.
I wrote a reflection on perfection, failure, and why excellence matters more than flawless outcomes.
👇
https://t.co/2v5IDI8Qvb
AI is great for project setup, boilerplate, component planning, and workflow ideas.
But real refinement still requires human understanding and connection with the code.
What difficulties have you faced while coding with AI?
I thought using AI for frontend development would make things faster.
Instead, I slowly stopped understanding my own code.
My honest experience with Figma-to-code struggles, SVGs, AI tools, and learning real frontend workflows
https://t.co/Xo93Nhfgyt
#Frontend#Programming
Sometimes humans — and even AI — get “Lost in the Middle.”
I wrote about this strange connection between real life and LLM prompts.
Read here: https://t.co/0DqKKdaT96
#AI#LLM#LifesGood
Every product declines eventually.
What truly matters is:
Did it ever reach maturity and create impact?
Maybe humans follow the same Product Life Cycle too.
Wrote about this idea 👇
https://t.co/9DdZKEFbFA
Started designing the system for PathPilot Labs.
Realized something important:
Students don’t need more options -
they need better ways to evaluate them.
Trying to solve that.
Trying to understand this better—
What’s the most confusing part about choosing a career for you right now?
Too many options, no clear path, or something else?
@softspoken04@mannan_pathan This seems like a very common confusion.
I feel many students start with “which stream has scope,” but maybe clarity comes more from understanding what kind of work they might enjoy, and exploring that a bit.
@kingarthur6r You still have options.
It’s not as late as it feels. Try starting small: what kind of work or direction are you even slightly interested in?
@army_sehar@wthkii__02 That’s completely understandable, a lot of people feel this after a drop year.
You don’t have to figure everything out at once, what’s been the most confusing part for you right now?
@ojiniezinne That’s completely understandable.
Instead of finding the “right mentor” first, it might help to get clarity on what areas you want to explore—then the right guidance becomes easier to find.