Iβm a manual supporter alwaysssss!
Sometimes I wish I had started coding before AI and all these advanced agent tools became a thing. I feel like I missed out on that raw experience, struggling through problems, especially DSA, step by step.
Getting stuck, thinking deeply, trying again, and finally having those βahaβ momentsβ¦ that just hits different. Honestly, devs from that era were kinda lucky π
That said, I do use AI a lot,I wonβt lie. Itβs super helpful and speeds things up.
But once Iβm more confident in my stack and have more time, I want to use AI only for automation and support.
At the end of the day, I just want to truly enjoy the process of figuring things out on my own first π
Sometimes I wish I had started coding before AI and all these advanced agent tools became a thing. I feel like I missed out on that raw experience, struggling through problems, especially DSA, step by step.
Getting stuck, thinking deeply, trying again, and finally having those βahaβ momentsβ¦ that just hits different. Honestly, devs from that era were kinda lucky π
That said, I do use AI a lot,I wonβt lie. Itβs super helpful and speeds things up.
But once Iβm more confident in my stack and have more time, I want to use AI only for automation and support.
At the end of the day, I just want to truly enjoy the process of figuring things out on my own first π
π2π₯°1
Harari: from my family
Amharic and afan oromo: from my friends and etc....
Arabic: I grew up watching arabic cartoons
English: it's obvious
The only language I really worked hard for was turkish.
some tips:
1. Try to engage yourself with the language daily(movies, books etc.....)
2. start journaling in that language(mixed or broken, it doesn't matter)
3. Try to practice talking to native speakers online
4. and of course, some YouTube courses for the grammar and vocab.
I hope this helpsπ
Amharic and afan oromo: from my friends and etc....
Arabic: I grew up watching arabic cartoons
English: it's obvious
The only language I really worked hard for was turkish.
some tips:
1. Try to engage yourself with the language daily(movies, books etc.....)
2. start journaling in that language(mixed or broken, it doesn't matter)
3. Try to practice talking to native speakers online
4. and of course, some YouTube courses for the grammar and vocab.
I hope this helpsπ
β€βπ₯1
It was really noiceeeee.
I enjoyed every bit of it.
I was in the organizer team as well as a participant plus it was at the end of exam week. :(
I was stressed, nervous, exhausted πbut at the same time I learned a lot of valuable thingsπ, met an incredible team, networked with a lot of people and had a great time at the game session.π
I enjoyed every bit of it.
I was in the organizer team as well as a participant plus it was at the end of exam week. :(
I was stressed, nervous, exhausted πbut at the same time I learned a lot of valuable thingsπ, met an incredible team, networked with a lot of people and had a great time at the game session.π
β€βπ₯1π1