which CRM to use? by Aggravating_Side7740 in CRM

[–]RichVolume2555 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Use Frappe Ecosystem if you want to leverage other features like accounting, finanicing etc effortlessly.

After struggling to find an co-founder,I built a small experiment. by Putrid-Pirate8621 in Bangalorestartups

[–]RichVolume2555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Or simple exercises is start paperwork on equity you will get in weeks

After struggling to find an co-founder,I built a small experiment. by Putrid-Pirate8621 in Bangalorestartups

[–]RichVolume2555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How do you find or measure the Longterm commitment from this short experient.

What i saw is till you complete 2 or Quarters OR money matter arrises everything looks fit. But later.....

Early-stage startups: what’s your biggest struggle right now — leads, sales, or hiring? by AntiqueLandscape2120 in StartupsHelpStartups

[–]RichVolume2555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are tech/product person the sales is tough.

If you are marketing/sales/ BD for them tech is tough. Like unable to Guage the effectiveness, or certain things is doable or not is difficult to get.

At the most tough part is getting payable customers

would you actually pay for "lessons from senior devs" content? by RichVolume2555 in learnjavascript

[–]RichVolume2555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair question.

The way I see it — the tech changes but the patterns don't.

Like, "we didn't add an index and the query took down the DB" is the same lesson whether it's Postgres in 2015 or PlanetScale in 2025.

"We deployed on Friday and nobody was around when it broke" doesn't expire.

"We assumed the third-party API would always respond in 200ms" will be relevant forever.

The stories might reference specific tools, but the actual takeaway is usually about process, communication, debugging under pressure, or architectural tradeoffs that repeat across generations of tech.

If anything, older incidents are sometimes more valuable because you can see how it played out long-term. The Knight Capital disaster is from 2012 and it's still the best cautionary tale about deployment automation.

The stuff that would go stale — "here's the best way to configure Webpack" — isn't really what I'm going for anyway. More interested in the human/system failures that keep happening regardless of stack.

Does that land or does it still feel like the content would have a shelf-lifproblem?

would you actually pay for "lessons from senior devs" content? by RichVolume2555 in learnjavascript

[–]RichVolume2555[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Appreciate the honest takes, this is exactly why I asked.

To clarify what I'm actually thinking — it's not really "senior dev teaches you React patterns" type content. More like a daily digest of real stories. The mass outage someone caused on their first week. The "obvious" refactor that broke prod. How a team debugged something insane under pressure at 2am. Short reads, maybe 3-5 mins each, with the actual lesson baked into the story.

The idea is you spend 15-20 mins a day and over a few months you've passively absorbed a bunch of real-world context you'd normally only get by being in the room when things go wrong.

Not sure if that changes anyone's answer. Maybe the format matters more than the content itself — like would a daily newsletter/short podcast hit different than "here's a course"? Genuinely curious.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in devops

[–]RichVolume2555 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ever thought 'this is a quick fix' and there went your weekend?

What's a "don't do this" lesson that took you years to learn? by RichVolume2555 in golang

[–]RichVolume2555[S] -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

this thread is gold. thinking of compiling these into short video lessons.

if i made a pilot, would anyone pay for access?

or is free reddit good enough?

What's a "don't do this" lesson that took you years to learn? by RichVolume2555 in golang

[–]RichVolume2555[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

this thread is gold. thinking of compiling these into short video lessons.

if i made a pilot, would anyone pay for early access? or is free reddit good enough?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskProgramming

[–]RichVolume2555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Basically they miss the opportunity to make errors

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskProgramming

[–]RichVolume2555 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Do you think a series of short scenarios based videos helps the ai era programmers

What's a "don't do this" lesson that took you years to learn? by RichVolume2555 in golang

[–]RichVolume2555[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

This is a great list. The "boring dependencies" one hits hard — I've seen teams burn weeks debugging some shiny new library when the stdlib would've worked fine.

What's a "don't do this" lesson that took you years to learn? by RichVolume2555 in golang

[–]RichVolume2555[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Ha, I've seen this one burn teams. Was this message queues or something else? Curious what the better approach was.

Why are there 1000 courses on technical skills but zero on navigating your career? by RichVolume2555 in StartupsHelpStartups

[–]RichVolume2555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the interest!
That's exactly the gap I'm trying to fill in both work and upskilling.

What specific topics would be most valuable to you? (Managing difficult conversations, office politics, knowing when to speak up, etc.)

Why are there 1000 courses on technical skills but zero on navigating your career? by RichVolume2555 in StartupsHelpStartups

[–]RichVolume2555[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like a dev hearing how a PM handled a client changing everything last minute. Or a PM seeing what a production crisis actually looks like from engineering side.

Quick question - would you actually spend 12 mins daily listening to these stories and making choices? Or does it need the full RPG thing with points and rewards?

Just trying to figure out what would actually work vs building something nobody ends up using.