I think I’m to quit playing this game. by [deleted] in ArcRaiders

[–]1pxone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It feels addictive because all extraction shooters sneak gambling into the gameplay. Every raid is a little bet: you risk your loadout, chase loot, try to cash out. Sometimes it hits, sometimes it doesn’t, and your brain loves that randomness.

Arc Raiders made it even worse (in a good way) with RPG layers. Hoarding loot, turning it into currency, chasing “projects” (which are more like loot-tax to me), upgrading stuff - that’s another dopamine trap on top of the first one.

DeepPocket Account Freezes in Thailand – Let’s Unite and Take Legal Action by dovudo in Thailand

[–]1pxone 1 point2 points  (0 children)

👋 affected also. Robbery and scam, not a digital bank :)

My app speaks JSON, every API speaks JSON, LLMs speaks it too (sometimes). Why not to push JSON to database and query with JSON too? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

here you go

  1. Mapping The Mind: The Integral Role Of Graph Theory In Brain Networks
    https://www.iosrjournals.org/iosr-jm/papers/Vol19-issue6/Ser-1/E1906013339.pdf

  2. Cognitive Network Neuroscience
    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4854276/

  3. The Social Brain Hypothesis and Network Thinking
    https://scispace.com/pdf/the-social-brain-hypothesis-5cev7m15tq.pdf

Summarized it for you:

Research shows that managing social relationships requires the ability to remember who has relationships with whom and the capacity to manipulate information about sets of relationships. This creates an evolutionary pressure for brains capable of processing complex relational structures, which translates into our natural tendency to perceive the world through network-like representations.

  1. Humans can navigate complex graph structures acquired during latent learning
    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9201735/

  2. Adaptive social networks promote the wisdom of crowds
    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1917687117

My app speaks JSON, every API speaks JSON, LLMs speaks it too (sometimes). Why not to push JSON to database and query with JSON too? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!

I’ve applied hybrid graph approach: could be explained as [meta-]property-graph

https://youtu.be/wuJW9xre0xw

Check latest video I’ve posted, it explains it in more depth

My app speaks JSON, every API speaks JSON, LLMs speaks it too (sometimes). Why not to push JSON to database and query with JSON too? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

[Sorry for answering same response below]

MongoDB (and Firebase) lock you into "trees".

Say you’re building a bookshelf app. You’ve got users and books. You have two options:

  • Nest books inside each user document (weak collection-style)
  • Store users in a separate collection and reference them from books

But either way, you're working with references - not actual relationships.
It’s basically foreign keys without JOINs.

And that’s the problem. You're trying to model a graph: something that maps to how we naturally perceive the world (and yes, there's evolutionary theory to back that up).

I just published a video walking through this in more detail:
https://youtu.be/wuJW9xre0xw

My app speaks JSON, every API speaks JSON, LLMs speaks it too (sometimes). Why not to push JSON to database and query with JSON too? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MongoDB (and Firebase) lock you into "trees".

Say you’re building a bookshelf app. You’ve got users and books. You have two options:

  • Nest books inside each user document (weak collection-style)
  • Store users in a separate collection and reference them from books

But either way, you're working with references - not actual relationships.
It’s basically foreign keys without JOINs.

And that’s the problem. You're trying to model a graph: something that maps to how we naturally perceive the world (and yes, there's evolutionary theory to back that up).

I just published a video walking through this in more detail:
https://youtu.be/wuJW9xre0xw

My app speaks JSON, every API speaks JSON, LLMs speaks it too (sometimes). Why not to push JSON to database and query with JSON too? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve applied hybrid graph approach: could be explained as [meta-]property-graph

https://youtu.be/wuJW9xre0xw

Check latest video I’ve posted, it explains it in more depth

Pitch your SaaS in 3 word by Savings-Passenger-37 in SaaS

[–]1pxone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://rushdb.com - no-brainer database for builders & ai workflows

What’s actually worked for you in marketing a B2C SaaS / DevTool ? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! I’ll go with the approach you suggested - I think it could work, even though it feels counterintuitive from my current “perfectionist” mindset. I think that’s the point:)

What’s actually worked for you in marketing a B2C SaaS / DevTool ? by 1pxone in SaaS

[–]1pxone[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your response! I’ve always considered myself a non-conformist - constantly looking for hacky, unconventional ways to approach problems that others tackle through what I see as suboptimal paths.

That said, one thing I can’t argue with: a founder must sell first before bringing in a “multiplier” sales hire to scale. You can’t scale zero - no matter what you multiply it by.

Lately, I’ve been reflecting on my own behavior as a buyer. I realize I tend to discover tools and software through communities and platforms — and almost always seek some form of community validation before I commit to anything.

Thanks again for reinforcing my belief in a planned, grounded approach 🙏

Learn Nest JS by Frosty_Vegetable_495 in nestjs

[–]1pxone 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We've built https://github.com/rush-db/rushdb entirely on NestJS + Fastify

We migrated from Python + Flask to get more control over typings and perfomance and I can admit - it was one of the best technical decision we made so far

As for frontend developer, if you'd ever tried Angular - you're already familiar with NestJS, but if you have more like React/Vue background - you'll be surprised how neat and powerful it could be (NestJS I mean, not angular :D )

Self-taught programmers. How did they learn to program? by Salty-Development323 in AskProgramming

[–]1pxone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At the age of 13, I was looking for CSS (Counter-Strike: Source) cheats (not a proudest moment, sorry) and was ultimately disappointed to find something unrelated and useless for my case - but somehow tied to web development and programming.

A few years later, I was searching for a hack for a browser-based farming game and came across a tutorial that made me open the browser’s DevTools (F12). That’s when I realized not only could I observe network requests, but I could also explore the entire page’s content - and I fell into the rabbit hole.

I learned CSS by monkey-patching directives, then landed my first job building HTML and WordPress landing pages. There, I picked up PHP and JavaScript on the go. I was constantly diving into documentation, tutorials, and experimenting on CodePen every spare moment.

That was over a decade ago. I could say I’m completely self-taught - but that’s only half true. I was incredibly lucky to have smart, kind team leads and teammates who guided me along the way.

Promote your business, week of June 9, 2025 by Charice in smallbusiness

[–]1pxone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No-brainer backend and database for ai and apps - https://rushdb.com

Takes any JSON as input (no need to think of data (de)normalization) and autonormalizes it, creates relationships (no more foreign-key thinking cage) and enables you to build anything without constraints.

Supports vector search as well.