Thousands of Responsible Cells 🔳

Joined August 2016
24 Photos and videos
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Jun 11
How memory, pointers, and data structures work under the hood. Professor Jerry Cain, Programming Paradigms, Stanford (CS107) lecture on generic stacks in C.
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TWO ENGINEERS SHOWED THE GIT TRICKS THAT MAKE PEOPLE THINK YOU'RE A WIZARD -- THE ONES 95% OF DEVELOPERS HAVE NEVER ONCE TOUCHED 42 minutes from Johan Abildskov and Jan Krag, bending git with custom configs, attributes and hooks most people don't even know exist. -> The moment it lands, git stops being four commands you repeat in fear. The same tool you've used for years turns out to have a whole layer built to bend to you. Hooks that run your checks before a bad commit ever lands. Attributes that end the "it works on my machine" merge wars. Config that makes the painful parts just stop happening. Memorizing commands was never the ceiling -> shaping git to do the work for you is. And while everyone else fights the tool by hand, the person who set it up right is shipping clean three times faster. Most people use 5% of git and call it a day. This is the other 95% nobody showed you. Bookmark it and Watch today ↓
AN MIT RESEARCHER PROVED GIT ISN'T HARD BECAUSE YOU'RE BAD AT IT -- IT'S HARD BECAUSE IT WAS DESIGNED THAT WAY 27 minutes from a PhD researcher in MIT's Software Design Group, using actual design theory to show why the tool that confuses everyone confuses everyone for a reason. -> The moment it lands, years of feeling stupid evaporate. The gap between what git's commands say and what they actually do was never in your head. It's baked into the tool. He maps the difference between what you think a command does and what git really does underneath. Once you see that gap, the confusion finally has a name and it stops being yours to carry. Struggling with git was never a skills issue -> it's a design issue, and knowing where the model lies to you is what turns panic into control. And as AI agents fire off commits and rebases you didn't write, the person who understands where git misleads is the one who untangles the mess. You were never bad at git. You were just never shown where it was built to trip you. Bookmark & Watch it today ↓
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Polished FlutterPro.Design design. Now I love it more! 😍
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Nobel Prize winner Demis Hassabis just accidentally revealed who survives the next 5 years and who doesn't. "One person who understands AI will outperform an entire startup team" Most founders heard that and thought: "Oh no, I need to learn prompt engineering" Wrong. That's not what "understands AI" means anymore. It means: building workflows. Chaining systems. Automating entire departments. Not typing better questions into ChatGPT. The split is brutal: > 90% of people = still using AI like a calculator > 10% of people = treating it like infrastructure In 5 years, the 10% will run everything with half the headcount. The 90%? Replaceable. Which group are you in? Watch the full breakdown. This is the only skill gap that actually matters right now. Bookmark this. You'll want to reference it.
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(ختم الصحابة القرآن تلاوة في أسبوع، والتحزيب المستحب ما بين أسبوع إلى شهر) "كان عثمان رضي الله عنه يفتتح #ليلة_الجمعة بالبقرة إلى المائدة (وليلة السبت) بالأنعام إلى هود. (وليلة الأحد) بيوسف إلى مريم. (وليلة الاثنين) بطه إلى طسم موسى وفرعون. (وليلة الثلاثاء) بالعنكبوت إلى ص. (وليلة الأربعاء) بتنزيل إلى الرحمن. ثم يختم (ليلة الخميس) فيفتتح ليلة #الجمعة ويختم ليلة الخميس". أخرجه الإمام أحمد في "فضائل الصحابة". -كان هدي جمهور الصحابة ختم القرآن في سبع، واختلفوا في طريقة التحزيب ومقداره، والخُلْف في هذا سهل قريب. -المقصود استحباب الختم في سبع -لمن قدر عليه-، ثم يفعل الأيسر عليه في التحزيب، وترتيب الأيام. -ومن لم يتمكن فله أن يختم إلى شهر . قال #ابن_تيمية: التحزيب المستحب ما بين أسبوع إلى شهر .. وفي حديث عبدالله بن عمرو أن النبي ﷺ انتهى به إلى سبع، كما أنه أمره ابتداء بقراءته في الشهر، فجعل الحد ما بين الشهر إلى الأسبوع.
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𝗠𝗼𝘀𝘁 𝗱𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹𝗼𝗽𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗱𝗼𝗻'𝘁 𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗱 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗶𝘀 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗯𝗮𝗯𝗹𝘆 𝗺𝘆 𝗯𝗶𝗴𝗴𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗳𝗲𝘀𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗮𝗱𝘃𝗮𝗻𝘁𝗮𝗴𝗲 So when people ask me for book recommendations, I don't give the same ones as others: Clean Code, The Pragmatic Programmer, and DDIA. Those are fine, of course, but you've heard about them many times. In the new issue of Tech World With Milan newsletter, there is the list I actually gave people in 2026. 17 books, sorted by the problem you're having. A few that earned their place: - 𝗔 𝗣𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗼𝘀𝗼𝗽𝗵𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝗦𝗼𝗳𝘁𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗗𝗲𝘀𝗶𝗴𝗻 by @JohnOusterhout. I read it late and wished I hadn't waited. Best explanation I know of why complexity is in and how to push back. - 𝗗𝗲𝘀𝗶𝗴𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗗𝗮𝘁𝗮-𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗻𝘀𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗔𝗽𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀, 2nd edition, by @martinkl and @criccomini. The rewrite adds AI data systems. Still, the book I reach for most on distributed data. - 𝗔𝗜 𝗘𝗻𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴, by @chipro. If you're putting LLMs into production, this is the one. - 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗦𝗼𝗳𝘁𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗘𝗻𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗲𝗿'𝘀 𝗚𝘂𝗶𝗱𝗲𝗯𝗼𝗼𝗸, by @GergelyOrosz. The career stuff nobody teaches you. We usually learn it by experience the hard way. - 𝗥𝗲𝗳𝗮𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴, by @martinfowler. Changing code without breaking it, which is most of the actual job. My own book is on the list too. 𝗟𝗮𝘄𝘀 𝗼𝗳 𝗦𝗼𝗳𝘁𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗘𝗻𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴: 63 laws and principles every engineer learns from experience and fails. I collected them so you don't have to. Link is in the comments.
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RT @_mar97s: - ثِق عبْد الله بما عند الله! أنت تنظر إلى عجزك وفقرك وضعف حيلتك أم تنظر إلى قدرة الله وعظمة الله وعظيم فضل الله!؟ حقيقةً م…
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Be a world-class BACKEND ENGINEER once you complete watching all these courses:
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Full Course on How To Speak Brilliantly (by Joseph Tsar)
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أخفوا الخِطبة، وأعلنوا النكاح. وأعلنوا عن قدوم طفلكم الأول بعد أن تتمّ الولادة بسلام، وتحمدوا الله على تمام النعمة. وأعلنوا عن وظائفكم بعد القبول فيها وبدء العمل. وأخفوا مشاريعكم حتى ترى النور، ثم شاركوا الناس فرحة افتتاحها. وأخفوا تفاصيل سفركم، واتركوا للذكريات أن تتحدث بعد عودتكم. وأخفوا نية شراء الأشياء الثمينة؛ كالمنازل والسيارات وغيرها، وافرحوا بها بعد أن تصبح بين أيديكم. فليس كل ما يُخطط له يُعلَن، ولا كل نعمة تُحكى قبل اكتمالها. بعض الأمور يزداد جمالها حين تُحاط بالكتمان حتى يتمّها الله على خير٠
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عالم أعصاب من ستانفورد يحذّر: الكورتيزول إذا ارتفع يخبّص الذاكرة، ويكبّر مركز الخوف عندك، ويخلي مخّك يحس كأنه متعطّل. لو أبي أصلحه بطريقة طبيعية، بسوي هالثمان أشياء كل يوم: 1) أمشي حافي على العشب 5–7 دقايق.
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Fun interactive science app ideas | Part 5 Built a periodic table app that visualizes atomic and molecular structures UI Design GPT Images 2 Code Gemini 3.1 Pro More demos ↓
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Flutter Devs, this is the smoothest button tap effect widget you'll ever have. Why smoothest? It uses spring physics and reacts soo natural to touches. Copiable code & explanation below 👇🏻
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THE CO-FOUNDER OF GITHUB GAVE A 46-MINUTE TALK ON GIT BECAUSE ENGINEERS WITH 10 YEARS IN HAVE NEVER SEEN HALF OF WHAT IT DOES This is Scott Chacon. He wrote Pro Git -- the book most devs secretly learned Git from and he co-founded GitHub. So when he says you're missing things, you're missing things. About ten minutes in it clicks: half the "git disasters" you've ever fixed by deleting the folder and re-cloning had a one-line solution sitting in the tool the whole time. Git ships new code almost every day -> roughly nine commits a day for over a decade. Most of us stopped learning it the second we memorized add, commit, push. Knowing Git isn't a senior-dev flex anymore -> it's the floor. The agent writes the code now. Your real job is reading, branching, and untangling the history it leaves behind. The day an AI agent force-pushes over your main branch, these 46 minutes are the difference between a quiet fix and a very loud apology. Save it now. You'll reach for it sooner than you'd like ↓
THE GUY WHO BUILT GIT GAVE A FULL LECTURE AT GOOGLE BECAUSE 99% OF DEVELOPERS USE IT WRONG 70 minutes of pure firepower from Linus Torvalds himself - the man who wrote both Linux and Git from scratch. -> The moment you watch it, you realize why "I'll just figure out merge conflicts on the job" is the dumbest sentence in modern software engineering. He spends the first 10 minutes calling out every other version control system in existence and he's not joking. He literally tells Google engineers using Perforce to find a new tool. Git isn't a "nice-to-have" anymore -> it's the operating system of every codebase you'll ever touch. If the man who built it had to explain it to a room full of Google engineers, you don't get a pass either. Don't forget to bookmark & watch it today.
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Most tech content is noise. But one YouTube channel is quietly archiving the deepest engineering knowledge on the internet. I’ve been watching Ryan Peterman’s (@ryanlpeterman) podcasts over the last few months, and the signal-to-noise ratio is absolutely insane. He is sitting down with: ▪️ Turing Award winners (like Leslie Lamport & Mike Stonebraker) ▪️ Bjarne Stroustrup (Creator of C ) ▪️ Elite Big Tech ICs & VPs of Engineering This isn't just about writing code. They dive deep into the reality of high-level tech careers : foundational architecture, system design from first principles, and complex trade-offs like Paxos vs. Raft. If you are serious about computer science, bookmark his channel. It's the masterclass you won't get in a classroom.
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Anthropic's head of security: "90% of our code is written by Claude. If yours is too and nobody's reviewing it, you're shipping bugs you'll never notice." In 28 minutes he shows the exact security setup Anthropic uses internally to protect their own projects. Watch the full interview, then save the config below 👇
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May 29
INSTEAD OF WATCHING A 2-HOUR MOVIE. Watch this Anthropic Claude for Finance lecture. It’s probably the best free hour in quant AI right now. Bookmark it and watch it today, no matter what.

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(جودة حياتك ترتبط بشكل مباشر بقدرتك على تحمل عدم اليقين) هناك اشخاص لا يدمرهم الفشل بقدر ما يدمرهم الغموض الذي يسبقه. الانتظار، الاحتمالات المفتوحة، العلاقات غير المحسومة، والمستقبل الذي لا يقدم ضمانات واضحة، كلها تتحول داخلهم الى استنزاف ذهني دائم. ومع الوقت يبدأ الانسان بمحاولة السيطرة القهرية على كل شيء فقط ليخفف قلقه الداخلي، فيرهق نفسه اكثر مما تحميه تلك السيطرة. ربما لهذا ترتبط جودة الحياة بقدرة الشخص على احتمال عدم اليقين دون ان يفقد توازنه النفسي كل يوم. فالنضج الحقيقي لا يعني ان العالم اصبح واضحا تماما، وانما ان الانسان اصبح قادرا على السير وسط الضباب دون حاجة مستمرة لان يرى الطريق كاملا من البداية للنهاية.
The quality of your life is in direct correlation to your tolerance for uncertainty
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Peter Thiel literally walks you step by step on how to succeed in 2026:

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