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Showing posts from December, 2025

New Year Resolution

       New Year resolution: not having any resolution. I honestly don’t know where to start when it comes to New Year resolutions, mainly because I never had one before. I’m not here to share life lessons, motivate anyone, or guide people on how to plan their year. My blogs are all about fun thoughts, and this one is no different. So instead of telling you what your resolution should be, I thought I’d write about why I don’t have one at all. Usually, when a new year starts, most people decide to join the gym. They pay for the first month, go for a couple of days, feel extremely productive, and then slowly disappear. The gym card stays in the wallet, untouched. Protein powder is bought with full motivation, placed carefully in the cupboard, and forgotten until it quietly expires one day. Eating healthy also starts strong — salads, fruits, and lots of water for a few days — and then somehow ends with eating double the amount of junk food later, as if to balance all th...

Search Evolution

Before Search Engines vs After | A Simple Observation Searching and learning techniques have changed a lot from then to now, and this is just one of my observations. It’s not something I see discussed often, and it’s not something I’ve really read anywhere — so I thought, why not write about it. This is not to teach anything or share knowledge, just a fun reflection on how searching itself has evolved over time. Before search engines existed, people searched for information very differently. If you wanted to know something, you either asked scholars, elders, or experienced people, or you went looking for answers in books. Libraries were the search engines of that time. People also shared their knowledge in the form of stories, experiences, and examples, which made it easier to remember things. Learning felt slower, but it was deeper, and information came with personal context. In those days, searching required effort. You had to look through multiple books, connect different pieces of ...

Trial Mode: Jobs

            A Funny Midnight Thought:                    What If Jobs Had a Free Trial Like Apps? This is not a serious idea, not a business plan, and definitely not a suggestion to change how hiring works. This is just one of those random late-night thoughts that come when you are tired, slightly frustrated, and overthinking everything. It was around 1 or 2 AM, and I was applying for jobs, scrolling through job descriptions and slowly questioning how one person is expected to know so many things at once. Every job description felt overwhelming. They wanted experience in multiple tools, expertise in skills that were introduced only recently, the ability to learn everything quickly, and the expectation to multitask like three people at the same time. It honestly made me wonder how a single human being is supposed to fit into all of that. Companies seem to want ready-made people who already know everything, w...