Jahonabegim’s World
it’s that time of the year again to give you all a few updates.
over the past month, especially during ramadan, i spent most of my days in the library. wake up, go there, sit down, build with claude code and codex until iftaar, go home, sleep, and repeat. that was basically my routine for almost 30 days straight. it was intense, and honestly a little unhealthy, but also one of the most focused periods i’ve had in a while.
what stands out to me the most is how fast everything is changing right now. and i am not saying that lightly. if you remember unicraft, the startup i worked on with my close friends, a lot of what took us a huge amount of time and effort back then can now be recreated surprisingly fast with today’s tools. you can get something 95% similar to a usable first version in a single prompt shot, and in some ways even better. you could genuinely try it yourself and see. something that once demanded years of effort can now be prototyped in just a few hours. that shift still feels hard to process in real time.
even
my professor,
someone who has spent years in ai/ml research, told his phd and postdoc students to stop their research and seriously learn agentic coding first, then think about how to integrate it into their daily lifes. when people at that level are saying that, it is worth paying attention.
what is even more interesting is that i do not think the biggest advantage right now belongs only to technical people. in many ways, people from non-technical backgrounds may actually be in the best position. at a recent anthropic hackathon, the winners were not engineers, but professionals from other fields. that makes sense because they understand real problems deeply. they know the workflows, the inefficiencies, and the pain points. that matters a lot more than people think.
i am already seeing examples everywhere: lawyers building agents around local legislation, sports professionals using them to analyze players and performance, nutritionists automating parts of client planning, business owners streamlining marketing and operations. solo founders are building at a speed that would have been difficult to imagine not long ago. this is not some distant future idea. it is already happening right in front of our eyes.
i know many people will read this, think it is interesting, and move on. but i really think this is one of those moments worth paying attention to. you do not need a computer science degree to start. you do not even need to be a strong coder. you just need enough curiosity to open claude code or codex, describe what you want, and start experimenting. its fun.
and if you end up building something, share it. document it. post it on x, telegram, your blog, wherever you want. i share a lot of what i am working on on my x (
x.com/mendurmen
), and i genuinely enjoy seeing what other people are building too. the opportunities right now feel unusually wide open, and not enough people around me seem to realize how important this moment is.
i would not ignore this wave.
@akbardaily
Har yili xonamda bitta tarakan topiladi va favqulodda vaziyatga Dilshoda yetib keladi. Bu yilgisini sizlar bilan share qilmoqchiman
🤣
sometimes you grow up without having role models. you grow up having people that you don’t wanna be like and seeing situations you’d never wanna be in. and that’s more than enough.
sening bir kun gymga chiqib lekin butun dunyoga jar soladigan dugonang:
Is Rauf Faik still a thing with this generation? It’s reminds me of high peak of my teenage years. I have no idea why I suffered so much listening to them.
high time to share your strava accounts:)
shu kunlarda rosayam kóp morojnilarni try qilyapman ekan. this one worth the hipe though! sweetness level judayam me’yorida and indeed tastes like mango!