E aí, gurizada! De uns tempos pra cá, tenho percebido uma mudança significativa na forma como a gente interage com a Inteligência Artificial. Não é mais só uma ferramenta que responde perguntas ou gera imagens; a parada tá ficando séria, com a IA assumindo um papel mais ativo, quase como um colega de trabalho. Foi pensando nisso que gravei um vídeo recentemente, e a repercussão me fez pensar: "Car
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Building a News Aggregator Without an Engagement Algorithm I have been building a project called WeSearch: https://wesearch.press It is a free news aggregator that pulls from hundreds of sources, keeps discovery mostly chronological, adds source/bias context where available, preserves permanent daily archives, and allows anonymous discussion on stories. The project started from a simple frustrat
A deep, opinionated, practical guide for the human running a software business alone. Hard-won lessons, decision frameworks, and the actual mechanics of going from idea → first dollar → first $10K MRR → first $1M ARR — without a co-founder, without a team for as long as possible, and without burning out. If you read only one section first, read §2 Mindset, §4 Validation, and §6 Distribution-First.
Three weeks ago I shipped IndieOps — a free invoicing and client management tool built specifically for freelancers. Here's the honest version of how it went. It handles the boring-but-critical stuff that eats freelancer time: creating professional invoices, collecting payments via Stripe, sending automatic payment reminders, and keeping a client directory. All free. No "upgrade to send more than
I used to send out application after application and hear nothing back. Not a single reply. At first, I thought my resume wasn't impressive enough. So I made it fancier. Added columns. Played with layouts. Tossed in some icons. Still nothing. Then I learned about Applicant Tracking Systems. Companies use software like Lever, Greenhouse, and Workday to scan resumes before a human ever sees them. If
For years I thought my only options were dual booting or using a clunky virtual machine. Dual boot meant constant reboots, and VirtualBox ate my RAM. Then I discovered Windows Subsystem for Linux 2, and honestly it changed how I work. Now I run a complete Ubuntu desktop right next to my Windows applications. I can code in a native Linux environment, test web servers, and even fire up Linux-only GU
I built Clever Deploy because every time I wanted to ship a small side project, the deploy story turned into a project of its own. 1. Surprise bills. I'd push a side project to a "free tier" 2. Complexity. I've setup Jenkins in Kubernetes for clients - believe me, you don't want that kind of complexity. What I wanted was simplicity and no unexpected bills. A deploy platform with two rules: Click D