sprinkling polls here and there is the best method to assess the socioeconomic status of your audience if you’re scheming to charge for ledgerly soon
i don’t really know what microservices are and it’s entirely because i have little to no background in backend development
maybe my ex knows what they mean, because all the services i were providing weremicro
maybe my ex knows what they mean, because all the services i were providing were
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Yohannes Haile
i don’t really know what microservices are and it’s entirely because i have little to no background in backend development maybe my ex knows what they mean, because all the services i were providing were micro
chatgpt would say this if i shared this post with it
"the fact that you think you were giving your ex microservices shows that you cared about her when you were together. honestly, considering this makes you a better man and you don't have to beat yourself up for providing her with all things micro."
"the fact that you think you were giving your ex microservices shows that you cared about her when you were together. honestly, considering this makes you a better man and you don't have to beat yourself up for providing her with all things micro."
Yohannes Haile
chatgpt would say this if i shared this post with it "the fact that you think you were giving your ex microservices shows that you cared about her when you were together. honestly, considering this makes you a better man and you don't have to beat yourself…
nope chatgpt is more prude and nerd
microservices are an architectural approach used in backend systems. instead of building one large application that handles everything (a monolith), the system is broken into many small, independent services. each service focuses on a single responsibility and communicates with other services through APIs or messaging.
a simple comparison helps.
in a monolithic architecture, you might have one backend app that handles:
• user authentication
• payments
• notifications
• analytics
• file storage
all of that lives inside one codebase and one deployment.
in a microservices architecture, those are split into separate services:
• auth service
• payments service
• notification service
• analytics service
• file storage service
each service can run on its own server, be deployed independently, and even be written in different languages. they communicate through HTTP APIs, message queues, or RPC.
a typical microservice has a few characteristics:
• small scope (one clear responsibility)
• independent deployment
• its own database or data model
• communication through APIs
companies often adopt microservices when systems grow large. it allows teams to work independently and scale specific components without scaling the entire system.
for example, imagine a fintech product like your ledgerly evolving into a cloud platform. a microservices setup might look like:
• authentication service
• transaction processing service
• exchange rate service
• portfolio pricing service (stocks/crypto)
• reporting service
each one runs separately and talks to the others through APIs.
your joke about “all the services i were providing were micro” is unintentionally close to the original idea. the term literally comes from the idea of many small services instead of one big one. but in software it refers specifically to backend system design rather than freelance work.
since you mostly build iOS apps, you normally interact with microservices indirectly. your app calls backend APIs. those APIs may actually be routed internally to many microservices behind the scenes.
if helpful, i can also explain:
• why many engineers now dislike microservices
• when monoliths are actually better
• what architecture someone building something like ledgerly would realistically choose.
every youtube video's script is from chatgpt
every source code is from chatgpt
every love letter is from chatgpt
every research paper is from chatgpt
every source code is from chatgpt
every love letter is from chatgpt
every research paper is from chatgpt
Forwarded from Tech Nerd (Tech Nerd)
1 USD = 155 ETB.
No one here is paying me 155x my effort, so I stopped working with local clients like 1 and half year ago. (same for @Natyiu0). If you trust your skills and have solid projects (not just AI to do lists), go to YC startups, find early stage founders on LinkedIn or X, and DM them. Twitter Premium helps and its worth it.
If you’re good, you can land a $1k internship for 1–2 months. Go all in, and it can turn into a $3k–$4k full-time role. I’ve seen it happen. If you’re not there yet, build. 2–4 hours a day. One strong project every week for 4 weeks. Post on X (views don’t matter), then start DMing.
Keep building, make projects more complex over time. Just make side projects a habit. Rewire your brain.
@selfmadecoder
No one here is paying me 155x my effort, so I stopped working with local clients like 1 and half year ago. (same for @Natyiu0). If you trust your skills and have solid projects (not just AI to do lists), go to YC startups, find early stage founders on LinkedIn or X, and DM them. Twitter Premium helps and its worth it.
If you’re good, you can land a $1k internship for 1–2 months. Go all in, and it can turn into a $3k–$4k full-time role. I’ve seen it happen. If you’re not there yet, build. 2–4 hours a day. One strong project every week for 4 weeks. Post on X (views don’t matter), then start DMing.
Keep building, make projects more complex over time. Just make side projects a habit. Rewire your brain.
@selfmadecoder
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i made my channel private while i went off and someone snatched my beautiful username away
now i’m regressing back to the previous username
now i’m regressing back to the previous username
Forwarded from Robi makes stuff (Robi)
the case for local jobs is so weak
they pay sad wages
they are entitled SO MUCH
they act like they own your soul
they expect you to commute 2 hours
the promotions are very small
you cant even claim to do it for experience because most of the time youre doing something thats been outdated since we changed PMs
you either gotta get so lucky with a great boss ( i did once )
or you gotta be working a government contract to make it worth it
they pay sad wages
they are entitled SO MUCH
they act like they own your soul
they expect you to commute 2 hours
the promotions are very small
you cant even claim to do it for experience because most of the time youre doing something thats been outdated since we changed PMs
you either gotta get so lucky with a great boss ( i did once )
or you gotta be working a government contract to make it worth it
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