Recent posts
Page 15 of 17 · 203 posts
Posted Mar 9
real
Posted Mar 4
typical day of coding with Cursor
Posted Feb 28
Nick Bilton (MFM) - Brain Chesky (Fortune) - Oscar Pierre (20VC) Pods that I have watched recently - till the end @bahodirajabov
Posted Feb 25
Software engineers: Big tech moves slow, so your job’s safe for a bit. Startups push hard, then cut jobs quick to save cash—you need to shine to stick around. Or build your own thing before AI takes over. @bahodirajabov
Posted Feb 18
Poland>>> source
Posted Feb 11
Posted Feb 3
Issue with the platform? Need help? Sent a message to support… still waiting. ❌ Emailed the CEO… got a reply. ✅ Life’s too short for ticket numbers! p.s: CEO of fresha.com ($650mln company)
Posted Feb 3
Tip: Crypto’s fine, but put more into stocks to make life easier. Hang tight, crypto bros—bounce back soon!
Posted Feb 1
Yess
Posted Feb 1
It took me 1 year, 6 months, and 7 days to get my driver’s license after finishing my studies. • 1 year and 6 months of procrastination, hesitation, and excuses—until I finally realized I had to take it seriously. • 6 days of intense focus, learning the…
Posted Feb 1
It took me 1 year, 6 months, and 7 days to get my driver’s license after finishing my studies. • 1 year and 6 months of procrastination, hesitation, and excuses—until I finally realized I had to take it seriously. • 6 days of intense focus, learning the rules, and preparing for the exam. • 1 day to pass. “You may delay, but time will not.” — Benjamin Franklin Stop procrastinating. Start doing. @bahodiRajabov
Posted Jan 31
Want to Learn HowToCode? Build Stuff. Now. Forget endless tutorials. Want to actually learn to code? Build something you care about. Here's the no-BS way: 1. Pick a Project: A website, an app, whatever. Having a goal focuses your learning. Example: "I want to build a to-do list app." 2. Learn Just Enough: Figure out the bare minimum you need for your project. Google it. Use AI like Claude or Cursor to help you write code. You don't need to be an expert on everything, just the thing you need to complete the task. Example: Need a button? Learn how to make a button in React. 3. Build, Break, Fix, Repeat: You'll mess up. That's how you learn. Fix it, and keep building. 4. Use the Right Tools: If you want to build for web and mobile, learn Javascript, React, Next.js (for web), and React Native (for mobile). They're popular for a reason. Skip the Fluff: Don't get lost in details you don't need yet. Focus on getting your project working. Think of it like fixing a car: You don't need to be a master mechanic. You just need to know how to fix your specific problem. Most importantly: Stop planning and start doing. You'll learn more from building one real project than from a dozen tutorials. Go build something.Thank me later😎 Pro Tip: Build an AI wrapper. Leverage OpenAI's APIs to create something unique. Put it on the App Store. Launch it on Product Hunt. You might even make some money. @bahodiRajabov