I noticed that I come to understand some things only by getting older. Yesterday was my birthday and Iβm now 24.
I used to think that making perfect decisions and caring about what everybody thinks is important.
But years go by, Iβm not getting any younger and following the former approach never helped with anything.
Our twenties is the best time to take the biggest risks for the best fate of our family and ourselves.
I used to think that making perfect decisions and caring about what everybody thinks is important.
But years go by, Iβm not getting any younger and following the former approach never helped with anything.
Our twenties is the best time to take the biggest risks for the best fate of our family and ourselves.
π₯15π4
We out here with my boy ChatGPT sipping green tea and working on the MVP
β‘19π5πΎ5π₯4
I got through two fears past week:
1. Fear of heights.
I had to get on the roof of our 4 story apartment building to see where the leak is coming from and how to fix it. Climbing up the second time was way more easier. Even though I had more confidence in the second climb, I was still extra-extra careful.
2. Fear of deploying my project to production.
I was scared that everything might go wrong on the day of launch (my hands were shaking tbh). I prepared by setting up logs, settings up rollbacks, setting up testing and carefully testing the MVP manually.
With all of that, the first day of launching @JonliChatBot's MVP went good. All systems were stable, there were minimal runtime issues and people seemed to like the idea (which I really appreciate).
My thought after these experiences:
Be a blind optimist.
Be an extra cautious pessimist.
Be a realistically optimistic pessimist.
Perplexity's view on "Optmistic Pessimism":
1. Fear of heights.
I had to get on the roof of our 4 story apartment building to see where the leak is coming from and how to fix it. Climbing up the second time was way more easier. Even though I had more confidence in the second climb, I was still extra-extra careful.
2. Fear of deploying my project to production.
I was scared that everything might go wrong on the day of launch (my hands were shaking tbh). I prepared by setting up logs, settings up rollbacks, setting up testing and carefully testing the MVP manually.
With all of that, the first day of launching @JonliChatBot's MVP went good. All systems were stable, there were minimal runtime issues and people seemed to like the idea (which I really appreciate).
My thought after these experiences:
Be a realistically optimistic pessimist.
Perplexity's view on "Optmistic Pessimism":
Being a realistic optimistic pessimist means embracing a balanced viewpoint that recognizes life's complexities while fostering hope and resilience. This mindset allows individuals to face challenges head-on while maintaining a belief in their capacity for growth and success.
π4β€3β€βπ₯1
Gentlemen (and very few ladies) β we must start taking more risks in the coming year and getting out of the comfort zone
β€12β€βπ₯5β‘2π―1
It's exactly 1 week until the end of the year. What will you do differently next year?
β€4π΄2π¨βπ»2
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Perhaps a beginning of a new era?
π₯6π3
Btw Iβve deleted Instagram and it somewhat helps to focus more on courses that I bought. Another reason why Iβm not active there
π13π7π±3π€2β€1
If you're interested, you can follow me on x.com/ramzcoder or threads.net/@ramzcoder
π5β€1
Iβve planned out all the courses Iβll watch over the next 6 months.
The first course, called Docker mastery is 21 hours long. Iβve been trying to spend an hour a day on average to watch and practice.
Iβm combing video lessons with docs, youtube videos, articles, perplexity and claude.
Iβve reached Docker Swarm section and Iβm now learning how to orchestrate containers on multiple nodes.
Iβve also switched to Neovim and Iβll be exclusively coding on it for the whole year (except for unusual circumstances, if such will happen for unknown reasons).
Iβm also re-reading Clean Architecture and tbh, Iβm now understanding far more than when I partially read it the first time.
Iβm refactoring Jonli Chat too, although not as fast as a month ago. But Iβll get to it.
So thatβs where Iβm at. And yes, I still spend more time on X and Threads than anywhere else.
The first course, called Docker mastery is 21 hours long. Iβve been trying to spend an hour a day on average to watch and practice.
Iβm combing video lessons with docs, youtube videos, articles, perplexity and claude.
Iβve reached Docker Swarm section and Iβm now learning how to orchestrate containers on multiple nodes.
Iβve also switched to Neovim and Iβll be exclusively coding on it for the whole year (except for unusual circumstances, if such will happen for unknown reasons).
Iβm also re-reading Clean Architecture and tbh, Iβm now understanding far more than when I partially read it the first time.
Iβm refactoring Jonli Chat too, although not as fast as a month ago. But Iβll get to it.
So thatβs where Iβm at. And yes, I still spend more time on X and Threads than anywhere else.
π₯7π3β‘1π1