2026-01-20 21:21:15
3 months ago I started building Animiso - a tool to help freelancers stop the "any update?" text chaos.
Today (Day 3 of launch): 0 users, $0 revenue, infinite lessons learned.
Here's what I built, how I built it, and what I'd change.
As a freelance, clients would ask "any update?" via:
I'd spend 2+ hours/week just on status updates.
Animiso: A shareable project timeline.
Simple. Boring. Solves a real problem.
Not the code. The uncertainty.
"Is this even useful?"
"Will people pay for this?"
"Am I wasting my time?"
I spent more time doubting than coding.
I wanted to add:
But I shipped without them.
Good decision. I can add features when users ask for them.
I thought: "Build it and they will come."
Reality: Building is 10%. Distribution is 90%.
I have a working product and 0 users.
The hard part isn't done. It's just starting.
I built what I thought freelancers needed.
Should have:
Live and learn.
Validate first
Talk to 50 potential users before writing code
Build an audience first
Post daily for 3 months WHILE building
Start with a waiting list
Collect emails before launch
Make a demo video
Show don't tell
Be more aggressive
10 DMs/day is nothing. Should be 100/day.
animiso.fun
Code LAUNCH50 = $1.50/month forever
I'm desperate for feedback from real developers who freelance.
Tell me what sucks. I'll fix it.
Drop your answers below. I'm reading everything.
Also: If you're a dev who's thought about building a SaaS but hasn't started - do it. You'll learn more in 3 months than 3 years of tutorials.
(Even if you end up with 0 users like me 😅)
2026-01-20 21:19:48
If you've ever written a SQL tutorial or database documentation, you know the struggle. You provide a beautiful code snippet, but for your readers to actually see it in action, they have to:
Most readers won't do it. They just keep scrolling.
Today, I'm excited to introduce SQLize Embed—a lightweight, responsive, and powerful way to embed live SQL sandboxes directly into your blog, documentation, or educational site.
SQLize Embed is a client-side library that transforms static <div> elements into fully functional SQL editors. Powered by the SQLize.online engine, it allows users to write and execute SQL against real database instances without leaving your page.
Adding a live SQL sandbox to your site is as easy as adding a YouTube video.
Add this script tag to your site's <head> or before the closing </body> tag:
<script src="https://sqlize.online/js/sqlize-embed.js"></script>
Create a div with the data-sqlize-editor attribute. Specify your preferred database version and initial code:
<div data-sqlize-editor data-sql-version="mysql80" code-rows="10">
-- Create a sample table
CREATE TABLE dev_to_fans (
id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
username VARCHAR(100)
);
-- Insert data
INSERT INTO dev_to_fans (username) VALUES ('awesome_dev'), ('sql_ninja');
-- Run it!
SELECT * FROM dev_to_fans;
</div>
You can customize the appearance and behavior of the sandbox using simple HTML attributes:
| Attribute | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
data-sql-version |
The DB engine (e.g., psql17, mssql2025, clickhouse) |
mysql80 |
code-rows |
The height of the editor in lines | 12 |
result-rows |
The height of the result area | 12 |
data-read-only |
Set to true to disable editing |
false |
DESCRIBE table themselves.Check out the live documentation and various examples here:
👉 SQLize Embed Documentation
We are constantly adding support for new database versions (we already have MS SQL Server 2025!). If you have a specific database or dataset you'd like to see, let us know in the comments!
Happy coding! 💻
2026-01-20 21:17:52
No more DynamoDB tables for Terraform locking! Terraform 1.9+ introduced S3 native state locking - a built-in mechanism that eliminates the extra AWS resource while keeping your team deployments safe. Here's everything you need to know.
Traditional S3 backend required two AWS resources:
terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "my-state-bucket"
key = "prod/terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
dynamodb_table = "terraform-locks" # Extra cost + management ❌
encrypt = true
}
}
Issues:
use_lockfile = true makes S3 handle locking natively.
terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "my-state-bucket"
key = "prod/terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
encrypt = true
use_lockfile = true # S3 does it all! ✅
}
}
How it works:
terraform.tfstate.tflock alongside your state filePutObject for *.tflock files
### Migration: 2 Minutes Flat
#### Step 1: Verify compatibility
terraform version # Must be 1.9.0+
# Remove dynamodb_table, add use_lockfile = true
terraform init -migrate-state
aws dynamodb delete-table --table-name terraform-locks
Done. Zero downtime, same locking guarantees.
Scenario: Two terminals, same state file, rapid apply commands.
Before (DynamoDB):
Terminal 1: Acquiring lock via DynamoDB...
Terminal 2: [WAIT] Lock held by Terminal 1
After (S3 Native):
Terminal 1: Acquiring S3 lock...
Terminal 2: [WAIT] Lock held by Terminal 1 (via .tflock)
Identical behavior, one less AWS bill line item.
| Item | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Terraform | 1.9.0+ |
| S3 Permissions |
PutObject on *.tflock files |
| Bucket Policy | Allow lock file creation |
| Existing State | terraform init -migrate-state |
Bucket policy update:
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": ["s3:PutObject"],
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::my-state-bucket/prod/*.tflock"
}
❌ OLD: S3 state + DynamoDB lock = 2 resources
✅ NEW: S3 state + S3 lock = 1 resource
💰 SAVINGS: ~$3/year per state file
🔧 SIMPLICITY: One less failure point
Production teams: Delete 100+ DynamoDB lock tables across your org.
Solo devs: Zero extra resources for remote state.
CI/CD: Simpler IAM roles.
# Every project now gets this backend
terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "my-org-terraform-state"
key = "env/${terraform.workspace}/terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
encrypt = true
use_lockfile = true
}
}
Daily habit:
# Verify locks work
terraform plan # Should show "Acquiring state lock..."
aws s3 mb s3://my-terraform-state-2026
.tf with above backendterraform initterraform init -migrate-state
Result: Locked, remote, DynamoDB-free Terraform in 5 minutes.
S3 native locking makes Terraform state management finally "set it and forget it." No more lock table drift, no more surprise charges, no more complexity.
Already migrated? What was your experience? Still using DynamoDB? Why? 👇
2026-01-20 21:15:03
Amazon Personalize enables businesses to deliver relevant, real-time recommendations without ML expertise. It supports diverse use cases from product suggestions to content discovery, driving revenue growth and customer satisfaction across e-commerce, media, travel, finance, education, and gaming industries.
| Recipe | Purpose |
|---|---|
| USER_PERSONALIZATION | Personalization per user. Items by purchases, views. Recommended for you. Popularity count. Most popular. |
| USER_SEGMENTATION | Item and attribute affinity. |
| PERSONALIZED_ACTIONS | Best action. |
| PERSONALIZED_RANKING | Re-rank search results for user. |
| RELATED_ITEMS | Customers who viewed x also-viewed. Frequently bought together. Similar items. |
| TRENDING_NOW | Currently trending content. |
| Industry | Events |
|---|---|
| E-commerce | view, click, add_to_cart, purchase |
| Streaming | play, pause, complete, like |
| News | read, share, bookmark |
| Travel | search, book, favorite |
This guide will walk you through building a recommendation system by AWS CDK in Python with 02 stacks:
2026-01-20 21:13:51
This is a submission for the New Year, New You Portfolio Challenge Presented by Google AI
Hi, I'm Peluola David Adeoluwa (PDA), a Frontend Architect and Web3 Creative Strategist based in West Africa, Nigeria. I'm Currently a Software Engineering student at Miva Open University. I am deeply passionate about the intersection of creative design and emerging technologies, particularly Web3 and AI.
My journey began with Python automation and evolved into crafting high-fidelity digital experiences. I don't just write code; I orchestrate visual narratives. With this portfolio, I wanted to break away from the standard "grid of thumbnails" and create something that feels like a digital scrapbook—tactile, fluid, and deeply personal. I aim to express the intersection where technical precision meets artistic soul, using motion and typography to tell a story rather than just list skills.
This portfolio was built with a "Design-First" mindset, leveraging React 19, Tailwind CSS, and Framer Motion for the heavy lifting on animations.
The "Vibe" & Micro-interactions: I'm particularly proud of the custom cursor physics and the floating "Available Now" badge that reacts to the environment. It makes the site feel alive.
The Hero Section: The parallax effect on the "P D A" background letters against the foreground profile card creates a sense of depth that draws the user in immediately.
The Vault (Archive): Instead of cluttering the main page, I built a modal overlay that acts as a "Vault" for older projects. It keeps the main experience clean while still preserving my history (like the transition from Inboxx to my newer work with BCCS Hub).
Attention to Detail: From the custom SEO meta tags to the specific positioning of the navigation buttons.
2026-01-20 21:13:45

I recently open sourced Senlo and the response honestly surprised me. Hitting more than 120 GitHub stars in such a short time was a strong signal that the problem space resonates with others. It is motivating to see developers follow the project, open issues, and share thoughtful feedback, especially at an early stage.
Right now I am actively working on the next big step which is integrating AI directly into the email editor. The goal is to make everyday work with email content faster and more intuitive while keeping full control in the hands of the user. Still early days, but the momentum so far gives me a lot of energy to keep pushing forward.
Link to try and support me with ⭐️ - https://senlo.io/