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a platform where people can talk to a therapist or psychiatrist or whoever they need to talk to, to express what they are going through would be really good
Читать полностью…Damnn yerasehn neger tekuret adreg man MN agebah selene
Читать полностью…amazing group btw, i was thinking of building something to help people with mental health .... i'm not sure how to approach this problem yet... but i think anonymity is a big part of it of the process
Читать полностью…Vue ecosystem now has rulekit.dev which I can't wait to try out. Seems to solve everything I'm complaining aboit
Читать полностью…lezawm eko the svelte docs have an llms.txt , the agent can go read this shi
Читать полностью…lmfao fireship judges if a model is good enough by how well they write svelte 5
Читать полностью…Is it strictly svelte lay weys overall just shits the bed occasionally
Читать полностью…they be like , i may be starting out but i still wont make a wrapper function that calls another function for no reason
Читать полностью…Yeah, people usually don't speak out openly if they aren't anonymous
Читать полностью…😂😂 we won't be talking about my group 🤣 there's all kinds of wrong with it
Читать полностью…Jack Ma – The Man Who Turned Rejection into a Global Empire
Jack Ma didn’t just build an online store.
He built one of the biggest business empires in modern history without tech skills, without money, and after hearing “NO” more times than most people can survive.
Born in 1964 in Hangzhou, China, Jack grew up poor during a time of deep change.
He was small, often bullied, and failed many school exams.
But he had one thing that couldn’t be taught:
He applied to 30 jobs.
Rejected by every one of them.
He applied to Harvard 10 times. Rejected every single time.
Even KFC rejected him — 24 people applied, 23 were accepted.
The only one who wasn’t? Jack Ma.
But instead of breaking him, these rejections built his fire.
He loved English.
He taught himself by speaking to tourists and guiding them for free.
That passion for language gave him global thinking early on and a belief that connection was the future.
In 1995, on a trip to the U.S., Jack discovered the Internet. When he searched for “China” online, he saw… nothing.
That silence became his opportunity.
He returned home, determined to bring China into the online world.
He started two companies. They failed.
Then in 1999, he gathered 17 friends in his small apartment. With pure energy and vision, he pitched a crazy idea called Alibaba an online marketplace for small businesses.
Everyone doubted him.
He didn’t care.
He believed.
He wasn’t a coder.
He wasn’t rich.
But he was consistent.
He told his team: “We’re born poor, but we must die rich — not just in money, but in experience, vision, and impact.”
Alibaba grew. Fast.
And Jack didn’t stop.
He led with passion, served with humility, and never let the noise stop his mission.
The world watched as a man who once gave free tours became one of the richest people on Earth and a legend in entrepreneurship.
What We Learn from Jack Ma:
1. Rejection is Not the End
Every “No” is a push toward the right “Yes.”
2. Skill Can Be Learned Vision Comes from Within
He couldn’t code, but he could lead. And he never stopped learning.
3. Start with Nothing But Start
His first office was his house.
His first team were friends.
4. Stay Humble, Think Global
Even as a billionaire, Jack called himself a “spiritual teacher of business.”
5. Create to Solve, Not to Impress
Alibaba wasn’t built to look good.
It was built to help millions rise.
His Legacy
Jack Ma stepped down from Alibaba to return to his roots education and youth empowerment.
He now inspires entrepreneurs, students, and creators across the world.
His story proves that being different is an advantage, not a weakness.
That greatness doesn’t require perfection — only unshakable belief and consistent effort.
Final Message
Jack Ma showed us that success doesn’t come from luck or genius it comes from not giving up when the world counts you out.
“Never give up. Today is hard, tomorrow will be worse, but the day after tomorrow will be sunshine.”
"Trust the process"
@KidusAdvisory
Follow for more powerful biographies, mind-growth, and self-leadership tools.
guys can I create a telebirr api integration without filling the business informations for testing like a sandbox?
Читать полностью…You build an API.
You test it on Postman.
Everything works flawlessly — no errors, no surprises.
But then the frontend team integrates it... and boom — nothing works.
You double-check:
— ✅ Request body? Correct
— ✅ Headers? Fine
So... what's going wrong?
Here’s the catch:
Postman bypasses browser-level CORS restrictions.
Maybe the frontend might structure the JSON slightly different
Just because it works in Postman
doesn’t mean it works in the browser.
Ever faced this before?
gemini is also garbage at it , but sometimes it gets it right
Читать полностью…so the others just make non existent method calls mnamn
Читать полностью…Is that thing worth it gn.... Malet ke certificate wchi mitekmen neger ale
Читать полностью…refactor sareg magegnew stuff will give junior devs hope
Читать полностью…