Candost's Blog

Candost's Blog

Candost

I used to think that reading would make me wise. One day, ten pages before finishing a book, I realized that I had read that same book before. At that point, my perspective on reading and, therefore, my life had changed. Now, I don’t care how many books I read; I take many notes, connect dots, and share what I’ve found on my blog and newsletter. I’m interested in many things at the same time (I’m a multipotentialite). On this blog, you’ll find me talking to about multiple aspects of life like leadership, software engineering, philosophy, psychology, software architecture & design, urban & industrial design, exercising, finance, Formula1 Racing, eating healthy, and many more. I’m a software engineering manager; that’s my current job. At home, I’m a writer and an avid reader. I rarely watch TV, movies or TV series. I don’t have any social media account (except Mastodon where I have automated posting of my new articles). Hence, I often miss the popular culture references in conversations. That’s alright. I don’t have FOMO; I embrace JOMO. I rarely read fictional books.

Latest Posts

Hi friend! I hope you and everyone you care about are well. I've spent quite some time with many e-mail tools and this month I'm trying ConvertKit. While writing and publishing on Substack were easy, I wanted to own and have more control...
10: Building Healthy On-call Culture - Serhat Can Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
When a new manager joins the team, team members often approach with suspicion. Accepting someone from outside as a new leader or supervisor is complicated. It depends on how well the previous manager was and how experienced the new...
9: Engineering Career Path - Tobias Bales Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
8: Cross-Cultural Communication in Engineering Teams with Felipe Furlan da Silva Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
Software deployment is one of the last but essential steps of the software development lifecycle. All planning, designing, coding, testing, and teamwork end up with deployment. Make it right; it's smooth and exciting. All the effort pays...
Hello friend! I hope you and everyone you care about are doing well and healthy. This first issue brings immense excitement. Putting myself in front of many people is one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. Even though I’m a bit an...
7: Mobile Apps at Scale - Fırat Karataş Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
This post is Chapter 3 of my notes from the book Building Microservices: Designing Fine-Grained Systems. Chapter 1: Microservices and Their Benefits Chapter 2: The Evolutionary Architect Chapter 3: How to Model Microservices Chapter 4,...
6: Software Development in Startups with Fatih Acet Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
This post is Chapter 2 of my notes from the book Building Microservices: Designing Fine-Grained Systems. Chapter 1: Microservices and Their Benefits Chapter 2: The Evolutionary Architect Chapter 3: How to Model Microservices Chapter 4,...
Some people think that having a less diverse team is a big problem for inequality. Often in homogeneous teams, people offend each other without realizing it. They make "innocent" jokes about nationality, ethnicity, and gender. Most of...
5: Startup Marketing with Peri Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
4: How to Be A Working Student with Oksana Shcherban Reply via email | Reply via Mastodon | Comment
This post is Chapter 1 of my notes from the book Building Microservices: Designing Fine-Grained Systems. Chapter 1: Microservices and Their Benefits Chapter 2: The Evolutionary Architect Chapter 3: How to Model Microservices Chapter 4,...
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