Yohannes Haile
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 I build apps for the iPhone. 4+ years of experience building and shipping consumer-facing applications for iPhone users and powerful SDKs for developers and teams, both locally and internationally. _ https://yohannescodes.com https://yohanneswrites.com
Ko'proq ko'rsatish1 136
Obunachilar
Ma'lumot yo'q24 soatlar
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Postlar arxiv
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Interesting article by Thomas Ricouard about the state of programming in the age of AI
https://dimillian.medium.com/the-state-of-agentic-ios-engineering-in-2026-c5f0cbaa7b34
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Repost from Austererieā
One of the interesting things I've noticed while learning languages is how people develop accents. I will not get into depth with it, but I will point out what I like to call the "Addis Kid English" (I'll probably change the name).
This refers to (but not limited) the people from major cities who are well versed in pop culture, western lifestyle, science and technology. They speak English nearly with a native fluency, but something sound off. You guess maybe it's the rapid transition between Amharic and English, or they're code switching, or they're over enunciating things ... you just can't put a finger on it.
If you pay attention, they(we), pronounce difficult words with ease. But then some words, simple words, just give it away.
Try saying these out loud: "said it", "Determine", "to develop", "Developer", "aluminium", "logarithmic", "Pythagorean", "conjugations", "abbreviation, "image"
Now say "Pathetic", "aesthetic", "Spiderverse", "colleague", "Megatron", "lowkey", "Pep rally"
Chances are you butchered the first set of words, and sounded a bit more native on the second set.
That is because your accent adopts words based on how it heard it first.
If you learnt words from your local teachers at school, their accent is subconsciously embedded in your head. But if you learned words for the first time from native speakers (movies and such), you'll sound like a native. That is why there's usually this rather unpleasant, borderline annoying cadence when people speak with the "Addis Kid English".
Next time you say a word, pay attention to it. Did you learn that word the way your biology teacher in the 7th grade said it, or did you learn it from a native media.
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Repost from Dagmawi Babi
Just uploaded a banger recap video of my Event. Check it out and lmk what you think š
Dagmawi Babi's Meetup Recap
⢠youtu.be/UH9V-PMrIHk?si=TcAElLAv6sZEjf7D
I loved it lots, Enjoy :)
#DagmawiBabisMeetup #MyEvents
@Dagmawi_Babi
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Vibe coding is the future
With a general skill you have around the ins and outs of programming, you can benefit greatly from any model out there
Used to say skill issues back in the day when you couldnāt accomplish a task writing code, but now it is a workflow issue if you canāt make it happen with a fair amount of token usage
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Planning to finish reading this book this month
It always bothers me that I donāt read as much as I write
Time to break free from illiteracy
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In the hopes of building a life thatās not much niched out anymore, I plan to watch a couple of movies this weekend, ship v1.0.0 of ledgerly-droid (yep, thatās a thing), and capitalize on the Apple One free trial I claimed.
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Repost from Mr. Naty
Progress beats perfection.
Make it work first.
Fake it if you must.
Perfection is a reward for consistency, not a requirement to begin.
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I know not many of us can access paid subscriptions of services we want to use. But OpenAI/ChatGPT has given free access to Codex for a month, so I think if you are interested in getting help from an agent for your projects, you should try it out.
Install Codex CLI (if youāre not on a Mac)
Install Codex app if youāre on a Mac
