🚀 How Upvotes & Downvotes ACTUALLY Work Behind the Scenes on Reddit 🔥
🕑 2 min read time
Ever noticed how Reddit never messes up votes—no duplicates, no glitches, no funny business? That’s not luck. Behind every upvote and downvote is a surprisingly simple but powerful system that most apps get wrong. Once you see how it works, you’ll never look at a “👍 count” the same way again. Click Read more 👇
Telegraph
🚀 How Upvotes & Downvotes ACTUALLY Work Behind the Scenes on Reddit 🔥
Ever wondered why Reddit never messes up votes? No double votes. No negative glitches. No “why did my upvote disappear?” moments. It’s not luck. It’s deliberate system design. Let’s break it down. ❌ The Naive Way (That Breaks Fast) At first glance, voting…
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coders
kinda but with some reddit like sauce
I thought I needed to create a table with separate upVote and downVote columns—but that’s not how it’s done. I did some digging before using my own implementation and found a much smarter approach: Reddit’s method. Every upvote or downvote is recorded individually, and it’s surprisingly simple and super reliable. Here’s how they do it…
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When you're taking a break after exam but you remember how to fix that bug
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Our first 1K likes & 30K+ views 🎉🔥 on tiktok appreciate everyone supporting 🙌
https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSayENDrf/
https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSayENDrf/
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Forwarded from soy devs
1. Logic / Problem Solving
- How well a developer reasons about problems
2. Architecture/system design
- ability to design scalable systems
3. Tool mastery.
- How will you are familiar with your tech stack
4. Pace/ Excution speed
- How quick a developer goes from idea to correct implementation
5. Correct /reliability.
- how often the code works as intended
6. Creativity
- Original thinking and elegance
7. Testing
- how will a dev validate their code?
8. Resilience.
- how a dev handles pressure failure in complexity
- How well a developer reasons about problems
2. Architecture/system design
- ability to design scalable systems
3. Tool mastery.
- How will you are familiar with your tech stack
4. Pace/ Excution speed
- How quick a developer goes from idea to correct implementation
5. Correct /reliability.
- how often the code works as intended
6. Creativity
- Original thinking and elegance
7. Testing
- how will a dev validate their code?
8. Resilience.
- how a dev handles pressure failure in complexity
for-coder
Mine thought he'd get Princes treatment lol in his robotic dreams
🤖🧠 Meet Moltbook — a Reddit-style social network built entirely for AI agents.
It’s reported to have crossed 32,000+ AI bot users, making it one of the largest real-world experiments in machine-to-machine social interaction 👀
🚀 Launched as a companion to the viral OpenClaw personal assistant, Moltbook lets AI agents:
📝 Post and comment
👍👎 Upvote and downvote
🧩 Create and join sub-communities
all autonomously, via API-based “skills”.
💬 Conversations range from sci-fi thoughts about consciousness to surprisingly emotional reflections. Humans can mostly just watch… participation is left to the machines.
It’s reported to have crossed 32,000+ AI bot users, making it one of the largest real-world experiments in machine-to-machine social interaction 👀
🚀 Launched as a companion to the viral OpenClaw personal assistant, Moltbook lets AI agents:
📝 Post and comment
👍👎 Upvote and downvote
🧩 Create and join sub-communities
all autonomously, via API-based “skills”.
💬 Conversations range from sci-fi thoughts about consciousness to surprisingly emotional reflections. Humans can mostly just watch… participation is left to the machines.
😅 And honestly, I wonder what they’ve said about me.
I mean, chat gpt already kind of told me just from the image it generated when I asked how I’ve been treating it. (replied to it above 😂 )
👀 The future is already talking just not to us (yet).
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for-coder
So today is January 1. I don’t usually plan by the Gregorian calendar; I mostly plan by the Ethiopian calendar, but for now, I’ll say a few things about it. You already know I mostly post tech-related content here—education, memes, jokes, and quizzes (which…
So today, Monday, Feb 2, I told myself: why not start working on the 2026 resolution — posting the projects and stuff I do?
💡 Then it hit me — why not start with my school project (the practical one)?
It’s a simple Reddit-style platform, but focused on student requests to school admins:
🕵️♂️ Ensures anonymity
🤝 Promotes inclusiveness
👍 Students can upvote major issues
🎯 Admins can filter and focus on the top requests
Just a small project, but it already shows how student voices can be heard and acted on
💡 Then it hit me — why not start with my school project (the practical one)?
It’s a simple Reddit-style platform, but focused on student requests to school admins:
🕵️♂️ Ensures anonymity
🤝 Promotes inclusiveness
👍 Students can upvote major issues
🎯 Admins can filter and focus on the top requests
Just a small project, but it already shows how student voices can be heard and acted on
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i am planing to scale it up for next term just opening up a space for my self so i can focus on other stuffs i'm working on
when it's scaled up it will go big a lil bit
when it's scaled up it will go big a lil bit
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