Becoming a tech lead was the goal from pretty early in my career. I had a clear picture of what the role was. More responsibility, more influence over the work, more of the interesting problems landing on my desk because someone had to figure them out and that someone, finally, would be me. It read like the natural next step. The thing you graduate to once you're good enough. What that picture did
The first AI feature I shipped on a flat plan lost money on the third user who discovered it. Not slowly. Immediately. He was running a script through it on a loop because the UI did not stop him from doing that, and his single account burned through more in API costs that week than the feature was supposed to make in a month. I shipped the fix on a Sunday and rewrote the pricing on a Tuesday, and
_ Timeline - 2 Months _ PLAN DSA - C++ - Striver sheet , developer map for Leetcode. Development - Backend - JS ,MONGO - Developers roadmap for backend , Projects - Developers Roadmap. Low-Level - Rust - Developers Roadmap , Rust Book , Projects - CodeCrafter. Development - TS , SQL ,DOCKER , AWS, MY GITHUB MY LEETCODE
I have been meaning to upgrade my personal site to Astro 6 for a while. The release notes sat in my open tabs for weeks, and every time I sat down to do it, I found an excuse to work on something else. This week, I finally ran out of excuses. I carved out an afternoon, ran npx @astrojs/upgrade, crossed my fingers, and expected a smooth ride. The dev server crashed immediately with a cryptic error
For years, I called myself a web designer. Then a developer. Then a digital consultant. None of those titles ever felt quite right. Because clients weren't just asking me to build things. They were asking me to solve problems. Slow sites, broken checkouts, confusing navigation, teams that couldn't figure out how to update their own content. That's when I realized what a technology solutions profes
I've been working remotely for a while, and most of what I picked up in the first six months turned out to be wrong, or wildly overrated. Not bad advice exactly. Most of it sounds reasonable when you read it. It just isn't doing the work it claimed to. The "wake up at 5am, dedicate a workspace, use the Pomodoro technique, journal every morning" stack is a kind of theater. Some of it helps a little