a blog about nothing

As Dusk Falls


Rating: 3/5

It’s an interactive, movie-style game, and I really enjoyed it on my first playthrough. However, the game doesn’t let you skip dialogue, and on the second playthrough it became frustrating. Having to sit through the same scenes and conversations again made it tedious and boring. I wanted to explore different paths, but the lack of dialogue skipping killed the experience.

Because of this, I’m giving it a 3/5 rating.

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Favorite Video Games


  1. Xenogears
  2. Tomb Raider series
  3. Uncharted series
  4. Last of Us series
  5. God of War (new ones)
  6. God of War Ragnarok
  7. GTA 5
  8. Syberia
  9. Life is Strange
  10. Dreams
  11. Life is Strange: Before the storm
  12. Life is Strange 2
  13. Destroit Become Human
  14. Neir: Automata
  15. Horizon Zero Dawn
  16. Until Dawn
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Starting a Portrait Photography Business


For the past few months, I’ve been trying to get my photography side hustle off the ground. My initial assumption was simple: people are always looking for photographers, so if I start with very affordable rates, clients will follow.

I did all the necessary setup and busywork early on: insurance, a new camera, PPA membership, and the other basics that make things feel official.

What I didn’t expect was how difficult it would be to land paid clients. I’ve done a few TFP shoots, which were useful for practice and portfolio building, but so far I haven’t earned a single dollar from photography.

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Photography vs Programming: a Minimalist Perspective


As I build my photography side hustle while working full-time as a software engineer, I keep returning to one idea: minimalism. Both fields pull me in different directions. Programming has taught me to strip things down to their essentials. Photography constantly tempts me with more gear, more tools, more stuff. Balancing the two has made me think deeply about what minimalism really means in creative work.

The Simplicity of Code

In programming, I live in a world of virtual tools. A laptop, an editor, a few accounts, and I can build almost anything. Over the years, these tools have faded into the background. GitHub, IDEs, frameworks, and cloud platforms all exist, but they feel weightless. They live on the screen, not in my bag.

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What Would You Do When You Retire?


We’ve all heard the classic question: “What would you do if you won a million dollars?” It’s a fun daydream, but let’s be honest, most of us know that’s a pretty unlikely scenario, so we don’t really think deeply and give very surface level answers. Instead, let’s talk about something that’s actually going to happen to most of us: retirement.

Thinking about retirement is a lot more grounded than fantasizing about sudden riches. Pretty much everyone retires at some point, and many of us are saving (or at least planning) for that phase of life. Even if it’s not something you’ve thought about in detail, it’s a realistic scenario. And the beauty of asking yourself what you’d like to do in retirement is that it can help you figure out what you truly want to do with your life right now.

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LLMs and an old dev


A lot of developers seems to be afraid of generative AI and LLMs because it may replace their jobs.

But as an older developer who sometimes have hard time keeping up with new frameworks and technologies, LLMs been life saving. Not only my productivity is high but I am able to keep up new langauges and codebases and be productive almost immmidiately. I used to think about moving to management because it seemed I could not keep up with tech but now I have new confidence that I can keep doing my hobby as a profession for another few years.

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Photography in the age of Generative AI


Generative AI has made my job as a software engineer much easier, but it’s also a bit scary. The question everyone is asking is whether AI will replace my job.

The next question is, what can I do to secure my future? What are the skills that are hard for AI?

For years, I have enjoyed photography, and I hope to turn it into a business when I retire to stay busy. It does seem that generative AI will eliminate the need for a lot of photography as well. Businesses could create ads from quick snapshots of their products, and people could generate professional photos from their family snapshots, etc.

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Former Developers and what are they doing now


Ski Mountaineering Shop

jcborro on HN is opened a ski mountaineering shop after 20 years in software development.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23952057

Realtor

Some developer pivoted to real estate.

For example, poulsbohemian on HN, switched to selling real estate after 20 years in software development.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23952181

Product Management

Product management seems an easy pivot for many software developers.

Ref: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23959642

Leadership Roles

Some developers switched to leadership roles and started to climb corporate ladder. These roles represent different challenges & skill set and opportunity to keep learning and avoid boredom.

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The things you own end up owning you


“The things you own end up owning you.” - Chuck Palahniuk.

I was minimalist. It was very easy and stress-free life. I did own many things but but only after careful planning and I was quick to sell things that didn’t meet my expectations or once I stopped using them.

I also used to live well below my means. I felt free because loss of job or any other financial crisis would not affect me much.

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Favorite Movies


  1. Oppenheimer
  2. The Matrix
  3. Vivarium
  4. The Social Network
  5. Joker
  6. Moneyball
  7. The Founder
  8. The Big Short
  9. The Wolf of Wall Street
  10. Dil Se
  11. Taare Zameen Par
  12. 3 Idiots
  13. Crash
  14. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
  15. Life Is Beautiful
  16. Pan’s Labyrinth
  17. Scarface
  18. Pulp Fiction
  19. Fight Club
  20. The Lion King
  21. Raiders of the Lost Ark
  22. Enterglatic
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