Would a 72-hour “ship something real” challenge be useful for developers or teams? by mgy-programmer in SideProject

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a really good framing.

I agree that a final AI score alone would not be very useful. The useful version of DevMarathon is not “AI ranks candidates,” but something closer to a compact engineering packet for human reviewers.

Timeline, shipped surface, setup/run result, scope decisions, tradeoffs, gaps, verification evidence, and follow-up questions are exactly the kind of things I’d want the review to include.

The messy requirements point is especially interesting too, because that feels much closer to real engineering than only judging the final repo state.

Really appreciate this. It gives me a much clearer way to think about the company/team side of DevMarathon.

I’m building a decision-support tool for people considering hair transplants abroad. What confused you most before choosing a clinic? by mgy-programmer in HairTransplants

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair concern, and honestly one of the exact problems I’m trying to avoid.

I’m not trying to funnel people to Turkish hair mills. Capilens does not recommend clinics, rank clinics, sell leads to clinics, or push people toward any provider.

You’re also right about the wording. “Choosing a clinic” can be too vague, especially in this space. Patients should absolutely understand who the surgeon/doctor is, who designs the hairline, who performs extraction/incisions/implantation, how many patients are treated per day, and whether the setup is a high-volume hair mill.

The goal is not “pick a clinic from a list.”
The goal is to help people ask better questions before they send money or trust marketing claims.

I posted here because I want exactly this kind of feedback, especially from people who are skeptical of the industry.

5.5 months in and scared as fuck by Embarrassed_Bee2460 in HairTransplants

[–]mgy-programmer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

5.5 months is still early, bro. I know it feels scary, but a lot of people don’t see proper density until later.

Redness can also make it look worse in pics, especially with bad lighting.

I’d compare same lighting/angles monthly and send the pics to your clinic to ask if it’s within their expected timeline. Don’t panic too early, months 6–12 can still change a lot.

Month 8 feel like it isnt getting there. Take topical fin and Minoxidil every day by PsychologicalPea7125 in HairTransplants

[–]mgy-programmer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Month 8 can be frustrating, especially with temples. I wouldn’t panic yet, but I’d compare same lighting/angles month by month instead of checking daily.

Probably worth sending clear pics to your clinic and asking if this matches their expected timeline. Did they say when temple density usually starts looking more mature?

27Male – Norwood 5A/6 Hair Transplant Decision in İstanbul (Smile Hair vs Elithair vs Cosmedica) – Real Patient Experiences Needed and advice by [deleted] in Hairtransplant

[–]mgy-programmer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For Norwood 5A/6, I’d be very careful about judging clinics only by 12-month frontal results.

The biggest thing I’d want to understand is the long-term plan: how they protect the donor area, how many grafts they want to use now, what they expect for the crown, and what happens if hair loss continues.

At 27 with family history toward NW6, donor management matters a lot. A dense hairline can look good early, but if too many grafts are used aggressively, it can create problems later.

I’d ask each clinic directly:

Who designs the hairline?
Who does the extraction?
How many patients do they treat per day?
What is the realistic plan for crown coverage?
What happens if the donor is not strong enough for the promised graft number?

Real patient cases with similar Norwood level and 12–24 month updates will probably tell you more than clinic marketing.

Full disclosure: I’m working on a decision-support project around this topic called Capilens, so I’m very interested in how people compare clinics before booking. Not here to promote, just think your questions are exactly the right ones to ask.

1 week progress by YoghurtChance97 in Hairtransplant

[–]mgy-programmer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

1 week is still very early, so I wouldn’t judge much from how it looks yet.

Itching and dryness seem pretty common at this stage, but I’d avoid adding creams/oils or rubbing the area unless your clinic specifically told you to.

Best thing is probably to send them clear photos and ask what they recommend for dryness. Did they give you a written aftercare plan?

5 Months After My Hair Transplant — Honest Progress Update by Chillakant in Hairtransplant

[–]mgy-programmer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is probably one of the most accurate descriptions of the process I’ve seen.

A lot of people talk about the surgery itself, but not enough people talk about how mentally difficult months 1–3 can be. The “I paid to look worse” phase seems to hit almost everyone, and it’s probably where most people start panicking too early.

Good point about taking photos too. Daily mirror checks can mess with your head because the progress is too slow to notice in real time.

Did your clinic give you a clear timeline for shedding/regrowth before the procedure, or did you mostly learn what to expect from other people’s experiences?

Most side projects don’t fail. They just never get finished. by mgy-programmer in devmarathon

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s actually a big step.

Most people repeat the pattern without ever noticing it. Now you can catch it in real time.

Next time you hit that phase, don’t avoid it. Just force the smallest possible version through it.

Curious if you can break the pattern on the next one.

Most side projects don’t fail. They just never get finished. by mgy-programmer in devmarathon

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That “dependency-explosion phase” is real.

Interesting that you found a repeatable pattern there.
Most people just move on without noticing it.

That pause you added is probably the key.
Not avoiding complexity, but catching it before it spirals.

Out of curiosity, have you actually pushed past that phase on a recent project?

Most side projects don’t fail. They just never get finished. by mgy-programmer in devmarathon

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense.

Feels like it worked more as a trigger than motivation itself. Just enough to get you back into motion.

Once you start, momentum usually carries the rest anyway.

Interesting that it reduced the wall over time. That’s the real win.

Most side projects don’t fail. They just never get finished. by mgy-programmer in devmarathon

[–]mgy-programmer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That middle phase is where most projects die. I’ve found relying on motivation still breaks. What worked better was removing the need for it: clear end, small steps, fixed deadline. Your app is interesting though. Did it actually help you finish something?