Forwarded from Dagmawi Babi
Forwarded from Ethiopian Cursor Community
Cursor's agent now uses dynamic context for all models.
It's more intelligent about how context is filled while maintaining the same quality. This reduces total tokens by 46.9% when using multiple MCP servers.
Read more
It's more intelligent about how context is filled while maintaining the same quality. This reduces total tokens by 46.9% when using multiple MCP servers.
Read more
Forwarded from Frectonz
YouTube
Devtopia - E07 - Rasmic (YouTuber & Developer at Convex)
Yafet and Fraol sit down with Michael 'Rasmic' Shimeles to map his unique trajectory from his early years jailbreaking phones to his current role at Convex.
0:00 - Into
1:43 - How did you get started programming
12:09 - What happened with your interest inβ¦
0:00 - Into
1:43 - How did you get started programming
12:09 - What happened with your interest inβ¦
CodeJournal _ mah
π New challenge unlocked! Iβve decided to push myself and build a high-level AI project from scratch β basically a βSenior Architectβ in your pocket π What Iβll be sharing here: βNo boring tutorials β just real progress βHonest βaha!β moments (and strugglesβ¦
Tip: Signal vs. Noise π‘οΈ
When building AI-powered tools, never feed the LLM raw repo data.
Sending node_modules, lockfiles, or build artifacts is just "noise"βit drains your budget, slows the app, and leads to AI hallucinations.
The Secret: Build a pre-filter to strip the junk and only send the "signal" (the actual logic). Clean data = faster audits and 10x cheaper scaling. π§
https://t.me/code_journall
When building AI-powered tools, never feed the LLM raw repo data.
Sending node_modules, lockfiles, or build artifacts is just "noise"βit drains your budget, slows the app, and leads to AI hallucinations.
The Secret: Build a pre-filter to strip the junk and only send the "signal" (the actual logic). Clean data = faster audits and 10x cheaper scaling. π§
https://t.me/code_journall
π₯2
Forwarded from HUDC-Haramaya University Developers Community
Literally this our current situation
π3
Deeply saddened by passing of Netsanet Workneh.
He was the best.ππ
He was the best.ππ
π1
α’α¨α±α΅α α¨α°α αα α αα αα²α«α α¨αα αα£α€ α₯αααα₯ α°αα«α΅ α°α¨αα± α¨α₯ααα α₯ααα αααα΅ α₯αα° ααα₯ α²ααα΅ α α₯αα± ααα α²αα£ α α¨α€
α₯αααα₯ α΅αα α¨α°αα«α΅ αα₯αΆα’ α α₯αα± α°α΅ α¨ααα α¨ααα°α αα αα αα α αα’ αα΄.3α₯16-17
α₯αααα₯ α΅αα α¨α°αα«α΅ αα₯αΆα’ α α₯αα± α°α΅ α¨ααα α¨ααα°α αα αα αα α αα’ αα΄.3α₯16-17
Any unwillingness to learn new things today can greatly restrict your possibilities tomorrow.
https://t.me/code_journall
https://t.me/code_journall
π2
Hey everyone! π
Just wanted to share a recent project assignment we have done , Personality Test App using Java RMI (Remote Method Invocation).
What does it do?
Itβs a simple web app where you answer 10 questions to get a personality profile. The cool part is the architecture: the "brain" that calculates your results is a remote Java server. We used RMI to let the web-front talk to the Java-back as if they were one single unit.
How it works:
UI: Just Simple HTML/JS interface.
Bridge: A Java WebBridge that handles the browser requests.
Logic: An RMI Server that processes the data and sends back the result.
It was a great way to see how distributed computing works in the real world!
Check it out on GitHub: If you're curious about the code or want to see the RMI setup, everything is here: πhttps://github.com/mah12-ops/Personality_Test.git
https://t.me/code_journall
Just wanted to share a recent project assignment we have done , Personality Test App using Java RMI (Remote Method Invocation).
What does it do?
Itβs a simple web app where you answer 10 questions to get a personality profile. The cool part is the architecture: the "brain" that calculates your results is a remote Java server. We used RMI to let the web-front talk to the Java-back as if they were one single unit.
How it works:
UI: Just Simple HTML/JS interface.
Bridge: A Java WebBridge that handles the browser requests.
Logic: An RMI Server that processes the data and sends back the result.
It was a great way to see how distributed computing works in the real world!
Check it out on GitHub: If you're curious about the code or want to see the RMI setup, everything is here: πhttps://github.com/mah12-ops/Personality_Test.git
https://t.me/code_journall
GitHub
GitHub - mah12-ops/Personality_Test
Contribute to mah12-ops/Personality_Test development by creating an account on GitHub.
π₯1
1. The Mindset
Time is everything: If you can't manage your time, you can't work
Stay tough: You need patience and consistency. Itβs worth it!
2. Before Starting (The Research)
Audit yourself: What skills do I actually have?
Stalk the pros: Look at successful freelancers in my niche. What are they doing?
Know the cost: Check the job titles and what they require.
3. Setting Up
Keep the title simple: Don't list 50 skills. Pick one clear job title.
The Profile Photo: Must look professional.
The Bio: Donβt just talk about yourself. Write about how you help the client.
4. Landing the Job
Read carefully: Check the country and language rules before clicking "Apply."
Be real: No "copy-paste" proposals. Keep it personalized.
The First Win: The first job is the hardest, but it's the most important.
5. Growth in up work
Learn from "No": If you get rejected, find out why
Invest a little: Youβll need to spend a bit on "Connects" and ID verification to start
Friend Group: Stay around friends who encourage you so you don't quit.
https://t.me/code_journall
Time is everything: If you can't manage your time, you can't work
Stay tough: You need patience and consistency. Itβs worth it!
2. Before Starting (The Research)
Audit yourself: What skills do I actually have?
Stalk the pros: Look at successful freelancers in my niche. What are they doing?
Know the cost: Check the job titles and what they require.
3. Setting Up
Keep the title simple: Don't list 50 skills. Pick one clear job title.
The Profile Photo: Must look professional.
The Bio: Donβt just talk about yourself. Write about how you help the client.
4. Landing the Job
Read carefully: Check the country and language rules before clicking "Apply."
Be real: No "copy-paste" proposals. Keep it personalized.
The First Win: The first job is the hardest, but it's the most important.
5. Growth in up work
Learn from "No": If you get rejected, find out why
Invest a little: Youβll need to spend a bit on "Connects" and ID verification to start
Friend Group: Stay around friends who encourage you so you don't quit.
https://t.me/code_journall
π2π₯1
Yesterday i was in the event prepared by hucisa ,there were cool speakers who tell us how we gonna got our first job while we are in university , and here are some points i got.π
β€3
HUCISA - Haramaya University Computing and Informatics Students' Association
Upwork, Explained.pdf
π Winning on Upwork: The 10 Essentials Every Beginner Needs
Starting Upwork can feel confusing, overwhelming, and competitive β especially as a beginner.
This file breaks it down into 10 practical essentials that cover:
β’ mindset
β’ profile setup
β’ job selection
β’ proposals
β’ growth & real challenges
π Read it carefully. Apply consistently. Be patient.
Starting Upwork can feel confusing, overwhelming, and competitive β especially as a beginner.
This file breaks it down into 10 practical essentials that cover:
β’ mindset
β’ profile setup
β’ job selection
β’ proposals
β’ growth & real challenges
π Read it carefully. Apply consistently. Be patient.
Forwarded from Luna's pathwayπ€ (Luna)
Yesterday, someone said βwomen in tech and cretors are kind of rareβand that they donβt really see many women in the field.
And honestly⦠I get why it can feel that way sometimes....then I decided to do something simple: share a few women creators I enjoy following, who bring different perspectives, energy, and stories in tech and beyond.
This is just a list & love post π€
No comparisons I Just want ti give them a little appreciation.π₯°
Here is a Women creators I enjoy learning from and cheering for:
β’ @debuggingepohul
β’ @Merrys_Journey
β’ @kalltech
β’ @dot_ruth
β’ @not_eldad
β’ @aydus_journal
β’ @edemy251
β’ @lydiasjournal
β’ @studyvibewithnova β my sis π«Ά
β’ @nirvanaland7
β’ @Meron_Birhanu
β’ @bytesize_insights
β’ @MissTechTg
β’ @ruhambek
β’ @Austererie
β’ @visioninbyte
β’ @hilusjourney
β’ @shegocodes
β’ @sorted0
β’ @medd_et
β’ @tech_world_o1
β’ @HanixJourney
β’ @techStepsHub
β’ @codeandcoffee1
β’ @new_newbie
β’ @me_says
So my people Women in tech donβt show up in one way some teach, some build, some document, some question, some are just figuring it out in public. And all of that counts.
If you know creators I forget to mention or didn't follow yet please send me here Letβs keep supporting each other a little louder π
And honestly⦠I get why it can feel that way sometimes....then I decided to do something simple: share a few women creators I enjoy following, who bring different perspectives, energy, and stories in tech and beyond.
This is just a list & love post π€
No comparisons I Just want ti give them a little appreciation.
Here is a Women creators I enjoy learning from and cheering for:
β’ @debuggingepohul
β’ @Merrys_Journey
β’ @kalltech
β’ @dot_ruth
β’ @not_eldad
β’ @aydus_journal
β’ @edemy251
β’ @lydiasjournal
β’ @studyvibewithnova β my sis π«Ά
β’ @nirvanaland7
β’ @Meron_Birhanu
β’ @bytesize_insights
β’ @MissTechTg
β’ @ruhambek
β’ @Austererie
β’ @visioninbyte
β’ @hilusjourney
β’ @shegocodes
β’ @sorted0
β’ @medd_et
β’ @tech_world_o1
β’ @HanixJourney
β’ @techStepsHub
β’ @codeandcoffee1
β’ @new_newbie
β’ @me_says
So my people Women in tech donβt show up in one way some teach, some build, some document, some question, some are just figuring it out in public. And all of that counts.
If you know creators I forget to mention or didn't follow yet please send me here Letβs keep supporting each other a little louder π
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