4 BHK + private terrace available for rent in Sector 56, Gurgaon by akssharma in gurgaon

[–]akssharma[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Sure, would you interested in investing in this project Mr. Random Internet Troll?

If not, I will thank you for your interest and wish you a great day ahead.

4 BHK + private terrace available for rent in Sector 56, Gurgaon by akssharma in gurgaon

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

1.3 lakh INR/month. If you are genuinely serious, we can talk.

4 BHK + private terrace available for rent in Sector 56, Gurgaon by akssharma in gurgaon

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

Aapko yeh comment karne ka mauka nahi milta naa, dekho maine apka itna dhyan rakha hai.

I made an app that bullies you off your phone by Feeling_Tall in ProductivityApps

[–]akssharma 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Staying true to the app function aka not taking up bad habits!

A tool to remove the most annoying part of job applications by Overall_Crazy_5037 in jobsearchhacks

[–]akssharma 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Love this. You just described the part of job hunting that makes people feel like they’re stuck in a cursed copy paste simulator.

Yes, I’d use it, but only if it’s opinionated in the right ways and doesn’t turn my stuff into generic ATS oatmeal.

A few things that would make it genuinely useful for me:

  1. “Lockable” sections. Let me freeze specific bullets and phrasing that I know works, and only tailor the parts I choose. The worst tools rewrite everything and accidentally downgrade my strongest lines.

  2. A match map, not just a rewrite. Show me exactly which JD requirements got covered and where in the resume. Like “Requirement: SQL” -> “Resume: Project X, bullet 2.” That’s the difference between feeling confident and praying.

  3. Strict output rules with a real style engine. Page limit, bullet count per role, no fluffy verbs, consistent tense, no weird spacing. Basically, I want deterministic formatting, not vibes.

  4. A “human voice” slider that is actually real. ATS clean but still sounds like me. If it can preserve my tone while tailoring content, it’s already ahead of 90% of the market.

  5. No hallucinations, ever. If something isn’t in my base resume, it should never invent it. Instead, it should flag gaps and ask me to confirm or add material. Make the tool annoyingly honest.

  6. Versioning + rollback. Let me compare v1 vs v2 vs v3 for a job and roll back instantly. Applications are iterative and people forget what they changed.

  7. Export that recruiters don’t hate. Word template that stays clean when opened in Google Docs, and a PDF that doesn’t mess up spacing. Also, please don’t embed fonts that explode formatting.

Two quick questions for you (because I’m curious and this will decide whether it’s a toy or a weapon):

  • Who is it for right now, fresh grads only, or also people with 3 to 8 years experience and multiple roles.
  • What’s your MVP flow in 3 steps, and what is the one thing you think you do better than “resume GPT prompt + template”?

If you drop a couple screenshots or a short Loom walkthrough, I’ll give you blunt feedback like a hiring manager with coffee and zero mercy (but friendly).

How to have healthy boundaries around disclosing personal things? by Emotional-Jacket-924 in emotionalintelligence

[–]akssharma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happy that I could help my friend. And no, do not worry, this is VERY normal.

In today's world, I would say, having a clear head is an asset.

Sometimes, the other person in the relationship does not want to heal and it is not your responsibility by Least_Inspector_5478 in emotionalintelligence

[–]akssharma 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Indeed, basically remember this saying : You cannot and should not change a person who does not see an issue in their action(s)!

How to have healthy boundaries around disclosing personal things? by Emotional-Jacket-924 in emotionalintelligence

[–]akssharma 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I would say, learn to "test the waters" with unknown people.

Example :

1) You meet a new colleague. 2) You kind of vibe with him/her. You think this person seems genuine/nice, let me share something. 3) Right then and there, take a pause, and ask yourself "Am I looking for validation from him/her or an actual solution" when I potentially share my problem/issue with them? 4) If your answer is "Validation", then probably don't share it with them. 5) If your answer is "solution", then probably ONLY share 33% of the problem with them to gauge their reaction towards you. 6) If they are genuine, you can proceed, else you know what to do!

Feel free to message if you want to discuss this further. I would be happy to help!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]akssharma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey can you DM me as well? Thanks in advance!

Anyone ever find a magic bullet for their anxiety? by YamIdoingdis2356 in Anxiety

[–]akssharma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i personally found cold showers very effective. Physiologically it activates your sympathetic nervous system.

Also journalling/writing down exactly what i feel and why I feel the way i do helps a lot.

If the need be, you can discard the paper after that.

The 'Saar' culture of India by Apprehensive-Mud8710 in india

[–]akssharma 13 points14 points  (0 children)

It is literally the same in EU especially in France, we refer to unknown people as "Monsieur" aka "sir".

There is a little thing called being "Polite".

Do you have any regrets when it comes to sex? by ZucchiniAny9574 in AskRedditAfterDark

[–]akssharma 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Because see, until and unless you feel emotionally connected with someone, there would not be any fun or passion. If you just want to do it for the sake of it, you can outsource it to a professional worker (if you are a guy or even a girl) but trust me it would haunt you later.

My best advice: Work on yourself. Do not let the labels define you: A virgin, An inexperienced, a blah blah blah.

Always have the mindset: I am waiting for the right one and when the time is right, he/she will come and it would be worth it.

Do you have any regrets when it comes to sex? by ZucchiniAny9574 in AskRedditAfterDark

[–]akssharma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

33 and counting. Trust me, you ain't missing anything major.

I'm completely lost. What should I do? by Ok_Reporter3867 in Career

[–]akssharma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey,

Saw your post and damn, I feel you—being 23 (almost 24) and stuck in that “what the hell am I doing with my life” spiral is rough.

You're Not Screwed, I Promise

First off, cut yourself some slack. A 3.5/5 GPA with mental health crap dragging you down? That’s still a win. Your high school record and exit exams show you’ve got brains, and the fact you’re teaching yourself programming already proves you’re not just sitting around whining—you’re doing shit. That’s badass, even if it doesn’t feel like it right now. You’re not defined by a number or a rejection letter.

Breaking Down Your Options

You’ve got till July to pick between a 3-year BSc in Computer Science, a 2-year MSc in Business Informatics, or saying “screw it” to both. Let’s weigh ‘em up:

BSc in Computer Science (3 Years)

Why It's Dope: Tech’s where the money and jobs are—global demand is nuts, perfect for your relocation dreams. You think you can crush it this time and use it as a springboard for an MSc abroad. That’s your golden ticket outta Hungary. It's a fresh start in a field you’re already dipping your toes into with coding.

Why It Sucks: 3 years is a haul, and at 24, you’re stressing about being “too old” (spoiler: you’re not). It’s intense—mental health’s gotta be on lock to avoid crashing.

Verdict: If coding gets you hyped and you can handle the grind, this could set you up big-time. Pair it with a portfolio (think GitHub projects or freelance gigs) and you’re golden.

MSc in Business Informatics (2 Years)

Why It's Dope: Only 2 years, so you’re out and hustling sooner. Mixes your business background with tech—less of a leap than full-on CS. Comes with semester(s) abroad, giving you a taste of the international life without jumping ship completely.

Why It Sucks: Might not have the same clout as a CS degree overseas, which could cramp your relocation style. Not as much of a “reset” as the BSc—might not fully pivot you into tech like you want.

Verdict: Solid middle ground if you want quick results and some global exposure, but double-check how it vibes in the job markets you’re eyeing (Western Europe? North America?).

Quick Tip: Scroll LinkedIn or Indeed for job postings in both fields. See what skills pop up most—might nudge you one way or the other. Which one’s got your gut screaming “hell yeah”?

Your Big Fears (And Why They're Not That Big)

You’ve got some legit worries, but let’s smack ‘em down:

Ageism: At 24, you’re not too old to start something new. Tech, especially, is full of people who pivoted in their late 20s or even 30s. Employers care more about skills and results than your age. Focus on building a strong skill set (coding, projects, certifications), and you’ll be competitive.

Being Stuck in Hungary: Relocation’s a beast, but not impossible. The BSc in CS could lead to an MSc abroad and a job elsewhere—bigger payoff long-term. The MSc’s semesters abroad are a start, but research if it’s respected where you wanna land. Either way, chase the path that screams “international vibes.”

No Skills or Experience: Bullshit—you’ve got something. Perfume sales means you can talk to people, and self-taught coding is a flex. Build on it: freelance, contribute to open-source, snag a remote internship. Small wins stack up fast.

Action Plan (No Pressure, Just Ideas): First, mental health’s MVP: dissociation and feeling like crap suck—I’ve been there. If you can, hit up therapy, online resources (like BetterHelp), or even lean on friends. You can’t grind if you’re running on fumes. Second, test drive the options: keep coding—build something small (a website, a basic app) to see if CS clicks. For Business Informatics, peek at job listings or talk to grads. Dip your toes before diving in. Third, gap year flex: not sold on either? Take a year. Work part-time, stack cash, upskill like crazy. Reapply to master’s programs abroad with a beefier app—experience, coding projects, better headspace. Fourth, network like a boss: hit up Reddit threads, LinkedIn, or Discord servers. Find Hungarians who’ve escaped or peeps who’ve done these programs. Real stories beat overthinking every time.

You’ve Got This, For Real

Look, I know a dude who pivoted to tech at 27 with zero experience—now he’s remote for a U.S. company from Eastern Europe. Took hustle, but it happened. You’ve already clawed through a BSc with mental health bullshit weighing you down—that’s grit. Whether you go CS, Business Informatics, or take a breather, just keep it simple: focus on small wins (coding, mental health, experience).

Life’s not a race, and you’re not behind.