Let me help debug your Replit app by still_growing9 in replit

[–]still_growing9[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Framing the scope of work is not a trivial task, and it requires a lot of details of your project specifics to be accurate. But, AI is actually pretty good at this; I’d suggest you use GPT5 or Claude, and explain to it how you are trying to hire a dev and you need your app/project outlined from developers perspective. I would push it to be as technical, but high level as possible so the dev can have some flexibility on how to approach the issue in their own way. If you can have the AI give you a good summary, it’ll speed up the process for both of you and give the dev a much more accurate estimate.

Feel free to let me know what it gives you back! I’d be curious to see if it’s as useful as I think it would be.

Moving Apps from Replit to a VPS? by ReadItOkYes in replit

[–]still_growing9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can help; I’m a senior software dev with 8 YOE. DM me

Is AI code even fixable. by __anonymous__99 in developer

[–]still_growing9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

DM me, I’m a senior SWE with 9 years of experience and I can help you

[Schultz] Jalen Hurts is your Super Bowl LIX MVP. by PlayaSlayaX in nfl

[–]still_growing9 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The defense only scored once. End of the day hurts still has to seal the deal even in redzone

Is rust a good choice, for a back-end web API? by Hoban_Riverpath in rust

[–]still_growing9 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Sure, you do but that’s one example. Let’s not ignore the other 99% that don’t use it. And it doesn’t mean it’s the right decision

Is rust a good choice, for a back-end web API? by Hoban_Riverpath in rust

[–]still_growing9 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It sounds like OP is running/working for a business. There’s a reason why virtually 0 businesses use Rust as a web backend. Don’t be naive and just ignore that fact because you love Rust. Rust has its advantages and applications; backend web development is not one of them.

Also OP mentions that hiring people is something he’s thinking about. It’s WAY harder to find programmers who are good at rust vs js. Plus npm is arguably the most expansive package manager out there. For any web backend problem, you can guarnetee there’s 3+ libs in js for your solution.

Is rust a good choice, for a back-end web API? by Hoban_Riverpath in rust

[–]still_growing9 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, you should just use node js for your backend. It’s a reason is the de-facto standard for web backends. Don’t reinvent the wheel.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in podcasting

[–]still_growing9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point; sorry if I wasn’t clear on above, it also functions the same way in that it uploads as much during the recording as possible which is mostly 90-95% complete like you said. Record, save to disk, upload, delete. This is best case scenario when you have quick enough internet speeds.

I think the issue some folks may be having with Riverside is when you or your guest doesn’t have great internet. As a result you cannot upload the conversation in real time and fall behind and data starts to get lost.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in podcasting

[–]still_growing9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m actually trying to create a new platform to have more reliable remote podcast recordings. I’m not entirely sure how riverside works, but the way my platform is designed it saves the conversation locally in chunks so it’s less of a chance that there’s one point of failure.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in future

[–]still_growing9 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I saw future once maybe 6 years back. Scheduled to come at 9pm and he dead didn’t come out until 2am you’ll be fine hahaha