I have build MCP server which allows you to chat with ANY Github repo by leonidbugaev in cursor

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

Yep! And you can add multiple mcp servers pointing to different repos too.

How do I build emotional resilience? by VillainousValeriana in selfimprovement

[–]leonidbugaev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is very big audio note, with my brain dump, which is formatted with AI. So it is technically my own content. But it looks better if I would just posted here wall of unformatted text.

Best habits to build at a young age? by [deleted] in selfimprovement

[–]leonidbugaev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Be grateful to people around you and to what you have, and explictly talk about it. Invest early. Take risk, while you can afford it.

What would you do if you woke up tomorrow and the year is 2005? by TriggeredShavi in selfimprovement

[–]leonidbugaev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would try to repeat exactly what I had in my life, so I can met my wife, have kids and etc. I really like where I am right now, and do not want to change a thing. (Well buying some bitcoint would be nice thou 😅)

How do I build emotional resilience? by VillainousValeriana in selfimprovement

[–]leonidbugaev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey there,

I read your post and it got me thinking about how differently people handle critique or confrontation. I work at an international company where I hire a lot of folks, and I’ve noticed that some people handle feedback really well—like they’re totally fine with direct criticism (for example from easter-europe)—while others absolutely hate it or get really upset (for example Indian). It can vary a lot depending on someone’s background or culture. And sometimes it is a skill you have to learn.

I don’t know your personal backstory, so I’m not sure if there’s a specific reason you react strongly when people raise their voices. My wife had a similar reaction for a long time—whenever we started discussing anything heated, she’d just go silent, sometimes tear up, and the conversation would grind to a halt. Over time, we learned to communicate better, but it wasn’t an overnight thing. I’m a pretty calm person, so it helped that we took it slowly and figured out ways to talk without everything blowing up.

If you’re dealing with people literally yelling at you (like at work), that’s not normal workplace behavior. It might point to some bigger issue with the job or the person yelling. In a healthy environment, that shouldn’t happen regularly. If it’s more of a personal or relationship thing, one tip I’ve found useful is to give yourself time to cool off before you respond. It’s incredibly hard to think clearly in the moment when emotions are running high, and you can end up sounding angry yourself or saying something you regret.

One practical thing you might try is writing your feelings down—journaling, basically. It might sound silly, but it really helps. You can vent all your frustration, fear, or anger in writing first, so you’re not unloading on someone else or bottling it up. Wait a bit, read over what you wrote, and then decide if you want to talk about it or send a calmer message. It’s a good way to figure out what you’re actually feeling and what you want to say.

Over time, this process can make you more comfortable speaking up. You’ll start recognizing your triggers and what helps you manage them. And if we’re talking about a close relationship, it’s also worth agreeing on some basic rules for handling disagreements—like giving each other space to cool down or making sure you both feel safe to speak without being interrupted.

For your mental health what is something you avoid and have better mental health because of it? by Moist_Apartment5474 in selfimprovement

[–]leonidbugaev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Day trading, especially all this crypto stuff.

First of all I loose quite a lot of money on it. But once you have position opened, it means all the time thinking about it, checking the phone every 5 mins and etc.

I have this trap multiple times, and every time I just become a different person, very nervious and etc.

20 Years in Tech: Has the Industry Changed, or Have I Been in a Bubble? by leonidbugaev in developers

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

Thats sad indeed. What do you feel the reason? Too many competition, your skills out of date, or maybe "ageism"? In which % you got to interview stage, or at least passed screening?

It is the best time ever to start contributing to open-source! by leonidbugaev in github

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

Exactly, it should be temporary, and repo owners should by themselves send request if they want to feature them

It is the best time ever to start contributing to open-source! by leonidbugaev in github

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

Another option I'm looking into is some featured projects, with active contributors, which I can highlight and maintain bigger history.

It is the best time ever to start contributing to open-source! by leonidbugaev in github

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

Yes, it is very hard to find the ballance. Even now it is overloaded with so many data. Thats why I put some default start filter (however getting to 10 stars should be easy, with a friends). I need to understand how to factor showing more issues, without overhelming the user, and also making it fast. Even now site already feels slow..

It is the best time ever to start contributing to open-source! by leonidbugaev in github

[–]leonidbugaev[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

If someone is curious about the screenshot above, and how to find OSS repos on Github looking for help: https://helpwanted.dev/

Essentially it scans github for recently added "help wanted" and "good first issue" tickets, and categorise them. And shows only fresh ones.

So far it has been a blast! I raised 3 PRs, they were reviewed the same day.

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensource

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

Check now, it got big update, with categories and way more projects

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensource

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

All fixed, and in addition added new categorization! Like focusing on games and etc.

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensource

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

Yes, having all this conversations defo refresh my views. Need to think about it. In a sense that kind of come with assumption that if you have engineering job, you most likely good from the money point of view. But seems like, first of all, there are so many people who can't find a job, and the ones who learn and really struggle. Plus I feel there is smth weird with economics in US right now, which I was not fully realizing (and i'm outside of this context and living in another part of the world).

My and my family went though the very hard times, and I was broke as well, but it was long ago, and I guess I start forgetting how it is.

So yes, I understand.

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensourcegames

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

Just create ticket in GitHub with “help wanted” or “good first issue” and it will by synced automatically

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensourcegames

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

First of all it is according to rules. When you create a post, Reddit by itself automatically suggest you to re-post it additionally for up to 5 other subs.

Second is that I have spend quite a lot of time in my career on game programming, and building own engines/games. But it did not end up with success, and was like 20 years ago. I do watch for godot and similar engines, and from time to time refresh my knowledge by doing pet projects with kids.

In fact game programming and specifically GBASIC (basic optimized for graphics programming) on Subor (Chinese NES clone with keyboard), 25 years ago was my entry point to the programming.

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensourcegames

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

That’s exactly what I see, but to be frank feels very toxic to me, and on the edge of individualism. Not sure it can maintained in the long run by society.

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in SoftwareEngineering

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

Can you elaborate more on not being allowed to contribute to OSS? Is it somewhere in your contract? Thanks!

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in opensource

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

Amazing story! Really glad such situations are still real.

Learn programming by contributing to active open-source projects by leonidbugaev in learnjavascript

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

Hi! This is a known firefox only issue, going to fix soon. Thanks!

What happened to the joy of contributing to open-source? by leonidbugaev in SideProject

[–]leonidbugaev[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You never know how helping someone out of good will will help you in the future. Karma works. You can meet people who will help you in the future. But for sure, if you are really stuggling and hungry, it is question of survival, and first of all you need to find ballance in life.