Software Engineer GMT 3

Joined April 2012
28 Photos and videos
Odera retweeted
How to grow your iOS app to $ 10K/month: 1. Go to Higgsfield’s Marketing Studio 2. Paste your app link and generate a UGC-style video 3. Upload it to Meta, TikTok, and Google Ads Manager 4. Set your audience: → Location: USA → Operating system: iOS only → Detailed targeting: your niche frequent travellers 5. Don’t run awareness campaigns 6. Choose App Promotion with a conversion goal (in-app purchase events) 7. Set a $30 budget per platform 8. Run for 3 days 9. Whatever sticks, double down on it
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Odera retweeted
If you run ads, you need to watch Dara Denney on YouTube. Her breakdowns of ad accounts and creative strategy are free masterclasses. Every DTC operator should be subscribed. Start with her creative strategy videos. Thank me later.
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Odera retweeted
DJs in Kenya will now be required to pay Sh20,000 every year to get a license. This license allows them to play music at events, clubs, and other public places, in a move to ensure artists are paid royalties for public performances.
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Odera retweeted
If you are a Software Engineer pivot to Cyber Software Engineering, Embedded Software Engineering, or FPGA Engineering.
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Odera retweeted
Replying to @ChaneyTrades
thats was me... hahaha x.com/Tradesdontlie/status/2…

Claude controlling @tradingview live — switching symbols, writing Pine Script, batch scanning futures, replay trading, drawing levels. All from the terminal. Still rough edges but the vision is clear.
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Odera retweeted
Vibe coders are winning in these iOS niches: - AI Recipe Planners $65k MRR - Focus Timer Apps $80k MRR - Mood Trackers $50k MRR - Pet Health Loggers $55k MRR No big team needed. Just the right niche. Check Niches Hunter for more ideas!🔥
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Odera retweeted
How to promote your business for free: 1. Go to HackerNews. 2. Make an account and tap Submit. 3. Write a description of your business. 4. Include your website URL. 5. Submit. Repeat twice a month...
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Odera retweeted
this guy built 65 "boring" apps none of them went viral... but together they make $50,000/year here’s how he did it:
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Odera retweeted
What happens when you let AI run your Instagram? I gave Claude access—and in 10 days: 30.1M views. No face cam. No trends. No daily posts. Only AI copy. USE THE GOLDEN RESPONSE: 
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Odera retweeted
Professor Jiang explains "How to Win any Game" using the universal law of game theory
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Odera retweeted
This is one of the most eloquent explanations of how successful people use Game Theory to their advantage.

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Odera retweeted
the full openclaw setup nobody explains: 1. get a VPS ($5/month hetzner or any linux box) 2. install node 18 3. npm install -g openclaw 4. openclaw onboard (follow the wizard) 5. connect telegram as your chat interface 6. create 3 files in your workspace: SOUL.md → personality & rules AGENTS.md → how it operates & uses memory USER.md → who you are & what you do 7. add claude max oauth ($0 API costs) 8. set up 3 cron jobs: → morning briefing (calendar email priorities) → evening CRM review (pipeline updates) → git backup every 2 hours that's it. 30 minutes. now you have an AI employee that knows your business, runs 24/7, and messages you on telegram.
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Odera retweeted
This guy literally explained why some people become successful while others stay average. The reason is uncomfortable. Game Theory

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Odera retweeted
Best reddit communities for builders & vibe coders: AI builders • r/AI_Agents - tools, agents, workflows • r/AgentsOfAI - builders sharing experiments • r/AIBuilders - shipping AI apps • r/AIAssisted - using AI for real work Vibe coding • r/vibecoding - AI-first coding culture • r/AskVibecoders - setups & struggles • r/cursor - coding with AI tools • r/ClaudeAI - Claude-focused builders Startups • r/startups - real founder lessons • r/indiehackers - building profitable projects • r/buildinpublic - share progress • r/roastmystartup - honest feedback SaaS • r/SaaS - pricing & growth • r/ShowMeYourSaaS - demos & feedback • r/SaaSDevelopers - dev discussions • r/microsaas - small SaaS, real revenue
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Odera retweeted
Anthropic has launched free courses to master AI with certificates for $0.00 anthropic.skilljar.com
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Odera retweeted
I created my LinkedIn account 63 weeks ago. Since then I’ve added $320,000 in direct rev from LinkedIn and 14,000 followers. Easiest algo to crack by a country mile. Also the single best social media for signing enterprise clients. Here is the exact framework I’m using right now... Oh, and if you want my full unfiltered cheat sheet with engagement group templates, carousel structures, DM workflows, and my posting system, follow me, repost this, and reply “LinkedIn Growth Guide.” You must do all 3 to receive the DM. Let me start with what remains true after 63 weeks of daily testing: Proof-based content continues to outperform everything else. By proof-based, I mean posts that show a real metric, revenue, traffic, pipeline, booked calls, etc. and then add tight context with a clear business takeaway. Use real numbers whenever possible. Dwell time still plays a major role too. If people read the entire post, swipe through multiple carousel slides, or pause on video, the post continues circulating longer. First-hour replies from people outside your immediate network are still one of the strongest distribution signals you can influence. On-platform formats beat outbound links in almost every case. Text posts, carousels and native short video outperform link posts on average. Link posts without setup consistently stall. That said, a lower-reach link post with strong intent can still outperform in revenue. Distribution and conversion are different games. If you include a link, deliver value first and either modify the preview image or drop the link in the comments. Topic consistency builds on itself over time. Posting repeatedly around the same core theme strengthens how LinkedIn categorizes your profile. Your content then gets shown to people already engaging with that topic. That improves early engagement quality and comment depth. Cross-niche engagement still expands reach. Engaging consistently in two to three adjacent industries pushes your profile into overlapping networks. Generic likes do almost nothing. Thoughtful comments that add insight create second-level engagement and extend reach. Reposting with a new hook still works extremely well. Most of your followers never saw the original post. Repost after one to three weeks with a sharper angle, updated numbers, or a clearer outcome. Posts with replies to replies stay alive longer. Multi-layer comment threads can extend post lifespan by days compared to shallow discussions. My posting schedule has not changed. I post three times per day, every day. Morning is proof-driven or a strong point of view. Afternoon is a carousel, teardown, or case study. Evening is a lesson, system breakdown, or actionable walkthrough. Skipping even one day reduces momentum for the next 24 hours. Formats performing best right now: Carousels with a bold first slide tied to a specific outcome or pain point. Three to six concise slides with steps, visuals, or proof. A final slide with a clear next step. Short native videos under 60 seconds with subtitles. The hook must land in the first two to four seconds. Walkthrough and behind-the-scenes videos continue outperforming polished talking-head content when the information is concrete and tactical. What is underperforming: Link posts with no setup. Metrics with no narrative. Large, dense text blocks. Generic advice that applies to everyone. Posts where the author disappears after publishing and does not reply in the first hour. My engagement strategy: Comment on 20 to 30 posts per day with insight tied directly to the post. Like 50 or more posts per day. Reply to every comment on your own posts within the first hour. DM five to ten people per day with context-first value tied to something they posted. Ask follow-up questions inside comment threads to deepen discussion. Repeated engagement from the same people increases future distribution. Hooks performing best right now: “I started this account 63 weeks ago. Here is what $320,000 in LinkedIn revenue actually looks like.” “This 4-slide carousel booked 5 calls in 24 hours.” “If I had to rebuild my LinkedIn from zero today, this is the exact system I would use.” “My 3-post-per-day routine for consistent inbound.” “I made X this month from LinkedIn. Here is the breakdown.” Every hook must be backed by proof. Without proof, credibility drops fast. Here is a 30-day plan that still works: Post three times per day with at least one proof-based post. Comment on 20 to 30 posts daily with substance. Like 50 or more posts per day. Reply to every comment within the first hour. Repost one winner each week with a new angle. DM five to ten people per day with context-first value. Track impressions, comment depth, leads, and repeating commenters weekly. Test hooks, formats, and timing every week. Run this system for 30 days. Screenshot your Day 31 results. Tag me when inbound starts. If you want the full cheat sheet, follow me, repost this, and reply “LinkedIn Growth Guide.” You must do all 3 to receive the DM.
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Odera retweeted
two guys both decided to sell digital products on the same day last january both had 0 followers. both had $0. both found the idea from the same tweet. here's what happened month by month: guy A spent week one picking a niche. read 200 reddit posts about resume writing. found the same 5 complaints repeated hundreds of times. built a resume template pack that weekend. 19 pages. priced it at $37. set up gumroad in 20 minutes. started posting from a faceless X account on monday. guy B spent week one buying a $497 course on "how to build a digital product empire." highlighted notes. made a notion board. joined 3 discord servers to "network." month 1: guy A: 380 followers. $840 in sales. 19 sales total. nothing viral. just consistent posts about resume mistakes people make. guy B: 0 followers. $0 in sales. still "researching niches." joined a fifth discord. month 2: guy A: 1,100 followers. $2,200 in sales. raised price from $37 to $52 after noticing zero refund requests. launched second product. cover letter templates. same audience. $29. guy B: made a logo. bought a domain. spent $200 on a canva pro subscription. posted his first tweet. "excited to announce i'm building something special." 3 likes. all from the discord servers. month 3: guy A: 1,800 followers. $5,100 in sales across two products. found out thursdays and sundays were his best days. started scheduling posts specifically around those windows. spent maybe 45 minutes a day on content. guy B: launched his product. "the ultimate career transformation bundle." 74 pages. priced at $97. posted about it 3 times. 2 sales. both were friends. spent the rest of the month redesigning his gumroad page because he thought that was the problem. month 6: guy A: 3,200 followers. five products. $8,100/month. started a second faceless account in a different niche using the same method. total work: maybe 90 minutes per day across both accounts. guy B: rebranded twice. changed niches once. bought another course. $271 in total revenue over 6 months. posted a tweet saying "the digital product space is saturated." month 12: guy A: two accounts. seven products. $14,300/month combined. first account valued at 35x monthly revenue. got an offer to sell it for $109K. said no. guy B: deleted his gumroad. went back to job applications. tells people "i tried the online thing it doesn't work." same starting point. same day. same idea. one built ugly products fast and posted about specific problems every day. the other one built beautiful systems slowly and posted about himself. guy A treated it like a math problem. guy B treated it like an identity. the market doesn't give a shit about your brand or your logo or your notion board. it pays people who solve specific problems and show up every day. that's it. that's the whole difference.
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Odera retweeted
Bad sales sound like selling. Bad marketing looks like marketing. Bad copy reads like copy. You don’t hate marketers, salesmen, or copywriters. You just hate the bad ones. The good ones you buy from every day and don’t even think about
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Odera retweeted
Prompt engineering is dead. Anthropic recently released the real playbook for building AI agents that actually work. It’s a 30 page deep dive called The Complete Guide to Building Skills for Claude and it quietly shifts the conversation from “prompt engineering” to real execution design. Here’s the big idea: A Skill isn’t just a prompt. It’s a structured system. You package instructions inside a SKILL .md file, optionally add scripts, references, and assets, and teach Claude a repeatable workflow once instead of re-explaining it every chat. But the real unlock is something they call progressive disclosure. Instead of dumping everything into context: • A lightweight YAML frontmatter tells Claude when to use the skill • Full instructions load only when relevant • Extra files are accessed only if needed Less context bloat. More precision. They also introduce a powerful analogy: MCP gives Claude the kitchen. Skills give it the recipe. Without skills: users connect tools and don’t know what to do next. With skills: workflows trigger automatically, best practices are embedded, API calls become consistent. They outline 3 major patterns: 1) Document & asset creation 2) Workflow automation 3) MCP enhancement And they emphasize something most builders ignore: testing. Trigger accuracy. Tool call efficiency. Failure rate. Token usage. This isn’t about clever wording. It’s about designing an execution layer on top of LLMs. Skills work across Claude, Claude Code, and the API. Build once, deploy everywhere. The era of “just write a better prompt” is ending. Anthropic just handed everyone a blueprint for turning chat into infrastructure. Download the guide here: resources.anthropic.com/hubf…
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