@DhravyaShah wrote a blog back in the day, about how he built redis in golang.
That inspired me, and so I built it too, redis from scratch, in golang.
I wrote a blog about it too ๐
https://t.co/u7K4OacQbL
learnt a lot, hope u enjoy it โฅ๏ธ
how do developers juggle and manage so many tools at once?
is it not difficult? does tools like slack, linear, notion, github, not get hard to monitor as volume of work increases?
if you've experienced this, i would like to discuss about it with you
how do developers juggle and manage so many tools at once?
is it not difficult? does tools like slack, linear, notion, github, not get hard to monitor as volume of work increases?
if you've experienced this, i would like to discuss about it with you
Computer science is gradually returning to the domain of physicists, mathematicians, and electrical engineers as large language models automate much of what we currently call software engineering.
The fieldโs center of gravity is shifting away from manual code writing and toward deeper theoretical thinking, mathematical insight, and systems-level reasoning.
For context: I'm exploring an AI-first workspace where discussions automatically organize themselves, bring in relevant people, and extract actionable outcomes. No channels, no scattered info. Just clean communication and more.
Too crazy? Or exactly what small teams need?
Question for founders/CTOs running 10-50 person teams:
Your team discusses pricing in Slack, tracks it in JIRA, documents it in Notion, and someone still asks "what did we decide?" next week.
Sound familiar?
What's your biggest frustration with current collaboration tools?
Sam Altman and Alexander Wang think AGI is 1๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ2 years away.
Andrej Karpathy says itโs at least a decade out.
Theyโre all building the same thing โ how can their timelines be so different?
I think one should be proud to be an engineer.
Like literally, engineers are responsible for whatever we are using in our lives.
I mean whatever scientists, musicians and artists have in mind, technology brings it to life.
and who builds it?
Engineers.
One problem I face in my university is the immense scarcity of ambitious peers and the immense abundance of the opposite.
That's okay, until it affects the ambitious ones, like a virus.