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13 December 2025

  • 23:0823:08, 13 December 2025 8 MCP Servers That Make Your AI Actually Do the Damn Work (hist | edit) [8,030 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "You’ve Heard About MCP Servers – But Do You Actually Know What They Do? Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers are everywhere in developer conversations lately. You’ve probably seen them mentioned in Discord servers, GitHub discussions, or that one Twitter thread that made you bookmark it “for later reading.” But here’s the thing: most explanations either assume you’re already deep in the weeds or they’re so high-level they leave you wondering what you’r...")
  • 23:0623:06, 13 December 2025 Why AI Is Killing Your SaaS ARR Margins (hist | edit) [14,432 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Oracle’s stock dropped 10% amid massive AI capex surge. Your SaaS faces the same hidden problem. Learn what investors now track instead of ARR. Oracle’s latest quarterly results sent shockwaves through the tech world. The company’s stock tumbled more than 10% after revenue fell short of analysts’ expectations — missing by just $40 million despite 9% overall growth and cloud infrastructure revenue up 52%, with GPU consumption exploding 336%. The disconnect is s...")
  • 23:0223:02, 13 December 2025 The Future of FoodTech: 7 Trends Every Restaurant SaaS Should Prepare For (hist | edit) [6,044 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In 2025, the global foodservice and restaurant industry continues to rebound and expand at a robust pace. The overall market is projected to exceed $4.03 trillion this year — a sharp increase from $3.48 trillion in 2024. Forecasts suggest a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) around 7–8%, with the potential to reach $6–7 trillion by the early 2030s. This growth is driven by urbanization, rising demand for conv...")
  • 22:5522:55, 13 December 2025 Multitenant Permissions in Django: Client-Based Access Control (hist | edit) [7,800 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In multitenant SaaS applications, isolating data access per tenant (e.g. client, company, or organization) is crucial. This article explores how to implement client-based access control in Django, ensuring users can only access data belonging to their organization. We will walk through real-world modeling, query restrictions, permission enforcement, middleware, and role-based layering with practical examples to sec...")
  • 22:5322:53, 13 December 2025 Django Multi-Tenancy — Schema-based vs. Database-per-Tenant (hist | edit) [5,065 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In today’s SaaS-driven world, building apps that serve multiple tenants (clients) securely and efficiently is essential. Whether you’re building a CRM, project management tool, or investment platform, chances are you’re dealing with multi-tenancy. But how do you implement it cleanly in Django? Should you use a single database or separate ones per client? In this article, we’ll take a deep dive into mu...")
  • 22:5122:51, 13 December 2025 Getting Started with Multi-Tenant Architecture in Django: A Friendly Guide to django-tenant-schemas (hist | edit) [5,064 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When you’re building a SaaS product, one of the important decisions you’ll face is how to isolate customer data. Should every client get their own database? Or should everyone share one? Today, we’ll explore a clean, elegant approach for this using PostgreSQL schemas in Django via a library called django-tenant-schemas. If you’ve worked with Celery in Django (like we did here), you know how much easier life gets when the right tools are used. This is exactly th...")
  • 22:4822:48, 13 December 2025 The Hidden AI Side Hustle Nobody Talks About: How I Built a $3,000/Month Automation Business (hist | edit) [7,103 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Niconor Brown on Unsplash For years, I thought that earning serious side income with AI required building the next ChatGPT or launching a massive SaaS startup. What I discovered instead was much simpler and far less discussed. By combining Python, AI APIs, and smart automation strategies, I created a system that now generates $3,000 per month in predictable revenue. This is not about selling cours...")
  • 22:4622:46, 13 December 2025 Building an Autonomous Customer Success Agent with TiDB Serverless and Google Cloud (hist | edit) [7,905 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Customer churn is a billion $ problem. Every SaaS company loses customers, and traditional customer success teams can’t scale to prevent it. What if we could build an AI agent that thinks, learns, and acts like the best customer success managers — but operates 24/7 at infinite scale? That’s exactly what we built for the TiDB AgentX Hackathon 2025, and the results amazed us. 650px The Vision: True Autonomy Most “...")
  • 22:4222:42, 13 December 2025 50 Complex Business Scenario-Based SQL Interview Questions (With Real-World Code & Detailed Answers) (hist | edit) [20,036 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Master the art of solving real business problems with SQL — from SaaS churn to retail inventory, fintech fraud, and logistics optimization. All answers include working queries, explanations, and production-grade thinking. 🔍 Why This Article Matters SQL isn’t just about SELECT * FROM users. In top tech companies — Stripe, Netflix, Airbnb, Shopify, Uber — SQL interviews are the gatekeeper. 
You won’t be asked to normalize a table. You’ll be asked: “How...")
  • 22:3322:33, 13 December 2025 Multi-Tenancy in FastAPI: A Complete Guide (hist | edit) [5,878 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Building modern SaaS applications often requires serving multiple customers (tenants) from the same application while keeping their data securely isolated. This concept is called multi-tenancy. In this article, we will dive deep into multi-tenancy in FastAPI, explore different approaches, and implement a practical example to understand it better. What is Multi-Tenancy? Multi-tenancy is an architectural pattern where a single application serves multiple customers (te...")
  • 22:3122:31, 13 December 2025 Advanced Dashboard Interactivity with Streamlit + APIs (hist | edit) [7,476 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Learn how to build advanced interactive dashboards using Streamlit + APIs. From live data to user actions, make dashboards feel like SaaS apps. Hook: The Problem with “Static Dashboards” Dashboards are everywhere.
From startup founders showing KPIs to ML engineers monitoring models, everyone loves a clean Streamlit dashboard. But let’s be real: most dashboards are static. You pull data, render a chart, and...")
  • 22:2922:29, 13 December 2025 The Hidden AI Hustle No One Talks About: How to Turn Data Into $5,000 a Month (hist | edit) [6,324 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Every time a new AI breakthrough hits the market, most people jump straight into building chatbots, AI image generators, or endless SaaS clones. But here’s the thing: the real money doesn’t come from chasing hype. It comes from the quiet trenches of data monetization a model that big firms are cashing in on but individuals rarely talk about. 500px Photo by Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash I stumbled onto this path while testi...")
  • 22:2622:26, 13 December 2025 FastAPI vs Flask in 2025 (hist | edit) [10,553 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px FastAPI vs Flask in 2025: a practical, async-first guide with code, trade-offs, pitfalls, and a 10-minute blueprint to ship your indie SaaS backend. You have a weekend, a coffee, and a SaaS idea. The question isn’t “what stack?” — it’s “what ships fastest without painting me into a corner?” Let’s be real: in 2025, that often means choosing between FastAPI and Flask. Why this comparison still matters Fl...")
  • 22:2022:20, 13 December 2025 Python and Typescript in a monorepo (hist | edit) [36,986 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Many companies already run their SaaS with one or a few microservices — often a backend and some background workers — and some use a monorepo to support this. That’s the setup we have at Taskworld. With AI now everywhere and most of the tooling already in Python, rewriting everything in TypeScript is hard, costly, or simply unrealistic. You can either create a second monorepo for Python or adopt tools like Bazel. This post shares our experience navigating those cho...")
  • 22:1422:14, 13 December 2025 Building Passive Income with Python in 2025 (hist | edit) [5,530 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "How I Turned My Coding Skills into Automated Money-Making Systems 500px When I started coding in Python years ago, I never thought I’d be using it to generate actual income streams. But here’s the truth: 2025 is the best time to turn Python knowledge into money. Python’s ecosystem has matured so much that you can automate businesses, trade crypto, scrape data for insights, or even create SaaS products — a...")
  • 16:3716:37, 13 December 2025 Vertical SaaS: The Next Revolution in Generative AI (hist | edit) [7,023 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2023/07/24/the-difference-between-generative-ai-and-traditional-ai-an-easy-explanation-for-anyone/ How Specialized Software Solutions Are Transforming Industries with Advanced AI AI Vertical Agents: The Future of Silicon Valley Startups It’s happening. While I was casually watching YouTube, I stumbled upon a video that completely blew my mind. It was from none other than Y...")
  • 16:3616:36, 13 December 2025 How AI Agents Will Transform the SaaS Tech Business: A Different View on Agentic AI (hist | edit) [6,600 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Bernd 📷 Dittrich on Unsplash The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) agents into the Software as a Service (SaaS) industry represents a seismic shift in how businesses operate and deliver value. AI agents are automated systems capable of making decisions, processing large datasets, and learning from interactions without explicit programming for every scenario. In the SaaS domain, they promise...")
  • 16:3216:32, 13 December 2025 Golden Opportunity: 8 Django-Based SaaS Business Ideas for Emerging Markets (hist | edit) [5,369 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Python as a programming language that is easy to learn and has a large ecosystem with many ready-to-use libraries will help you create a reliable SaaS business at an affordable price for the lower middle class. 650px Developing countries hold a huge market potential for Software as a Service (SaaS) businesses. With the rapid growth of internet penetration and technology adoption, the demand for efficient and afforda...")
  • 16:2916:29, 13 December 2025 10 Profitable SaaS Ideas You Can Build Today with Django (Python) & PostgreSQL (hist | edit) [15,077 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Team Nocoloco on Unsplash Years ago, I stumbled upon Django and PostgreSQL while I was tinkering in my small apartment’s makeshift office. The synergy felt electric. Something about combining Python’s elegance with Django’s robust structure — and then powering it all with PostgreSQL’s reliability — captivated me. I was hooked. Since then, I’ve experimented with dozens of SaaS ideas....")
  • 16:2516:25, 13 December 2025 Real-World Use Case: Multi-Tenant SaaS API with Custom Authentication and Content Negotiation (hist | edit) [9,103 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Imagine you’re developing a multi-tenant SaaS application that provides analytics services to multiple businesses. Each business (tenant) has its own users and API keys, and they interact with your platform using RESTful APIs. Challenges to Solve: * Tenants need secure authentication via API keys. * Users send JSON or XML payloads, requiring flexible request parsing. * Certain requests should be limited to authenticated users only, while some public endp...")
  • 16:2216:22, 13 December 2025 IaaS vs PaaS vs SaaS: What’s the Difference? (hist | edit) [5,363 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When people talk about “the cloud,” they’re not all talking about the same thing. Some are referring to full-on platforms like Heroku. Others mean spinning up a virtual machine with AWS EC2. And some just mean using Google Docs instead of Microsoft Word. That’s where IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS come in. These are the three main types of cloud services — and knowing the difference helps you understand how apps are built, hosted, and scaled. In this article, we...")
  • 16:1916:19, 13 December 2025 Go vs. Python: Understanding the Rivalry for Cloud-Native Dominance (hist | edit) [7,367 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A Simple & Detailed Explanation of these Rivalries — Also For Non-Programmers 650px You’re using an app that works fast, updates quickly with your actions, and never seems to crash. Maybe it’s a streaming app, a ride-booking app, or even your online shopping platform. But have you ever wondered how these powerful apps run so smoothly in the background? This is a new way of building software called Cloud-Native development. This is the...")
  • 16:1716:17, 13 December 2025 From Java Lanes to Python Trails: Why I’m Diving into AI (and Blogging About It!) (hist | edit) [6,183 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px For years, my world has been one of robust enterprise systems, scalable SaaS platforms, and the comforting embrace of Java’s statically-typed structure. I’ve navigated the complexities of software architecture, designed solutions for intricate business problems, and found a certain rhythm in the predictable logic of well-crafted code. But the tech landscape is, as always, shifting beneath our feet, and a new front...")
  • 16:1516:15, 13 December 2025 6 packages for Django to build better SaaS apps (hist | edit) [2,285 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "If you are coding a new SaaS application, you are likely to have very limited resources. As a developer, you ought to maximize your efficiency; otherwise, you won’t get very far. Things like payments, sign-ups, mailing, issue tracking, and task scheduling are integral parts of almost all SaaS applications. Instead of reinventing the wheel and coding them from scratch, I recommend using the following 6 packages to have a strong base for your product and invest time into...")
  • 16:1416:14, 13 December 2025 5 common SaaS tasks and How to solve them with Django (hist | edit) [2,255 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "As an indie hacker, you should maximize your efficiency; otherwise, you won’t get very far. Things like payments, sign-ups, mailing, and task scheduling are integral parts of almost all SaaS applications. Instead of reinventing the wheel and coding them from scratch, you can use a reliable solution proven over time. 1. Collecting money The easiest way to collect money in your SaaS application is through Stripe integration. Stripe API is great and easy to use by itself...")
  • 16:1316:13, 13 December 2025 This Tiny Python Script Turned My AI Idea into a Working SaaS (hist | edit) [3,486 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px TL;DR: A 100-line Python script, some FastAPI magic, and OpenAI’s API were all I needed to launch my AI-powered micro-SaaS in a weekend. Like many devs, I’ve had countless AI app ideas. Most never left the notes app. But this one did — and the secret? I didn’t overbuild. I wrote a simple Python script that turned into a functioning SaaS app with real users and revenue. Here’s exactly how I did it — n...")
  • 16:1116:11, 13 December 2025 How to Build a Multi-Tenant SaaS App with Django (2025 Complete Guide) (hist | edit) [6,157 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Are you building a SaaS application using Django and wondering how to support multiple clients or companies each with their own data, users, and dashboards? 500px Welcome to the wonderful world of multi-tenancy in Django. In this comprehensive, step-by-step guide, you’ll learn: * What multi-tenancy is and why it matters in SaaS * How to implement multi-tenancy using django-tenants * How to isolate tenant data usin...")
  • 16:0616:06, 13 December 2025 ChromaDB vs. FastEmbed for SaaS RAG (hist | edit) [3,149 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When building a SaaS RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) platform, priorities shift from just “getting embeddings” to: * 🚀 Low latency (fast responses) * 🔐 Multi-tenancy (firm-level data isolation) * 💰 Cost efficiency (handling lots of PDFs without breaking the bank) Two popular tools come up a lot in this space: ChromaDB and FastEmbed. Let’s see where each fits in your SaaS architecture. Using ChromaDB in SaaS RAG Pros: * Open-source,...")
  • 16:0416:04, 13 December 2025 From Jupyter Notebook to SaaS Dashboard: My Workflow (hist | edit) [4,521 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Learn how to transform Jupyter notebooks into a real SaaS dashboard using Python, FastAPI, and modern frontend tools. A practical developer workflow explained. Why This Workflow Matters We’ve all been there: * Start with a Jupyter notebook. * Load some data. * Build a chart. * Someone says: “Can you put this into a dashboard so the team can use it?” Suddenly, your quick notebook ne...")
  • 16:0216:02, 13 December 2025 7 Python + AI Side Hustles That Print Cash in 2025 (Even If You’re Not a Pro Coder) (hist | edit) [6,694 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Fotis Fotopoulos on Unsplash The 2025 Gold Rush: Why Python + AI Side Hustles Are Exploding If 2023 was the year of AI hype, then 2025 is the year of AI money. Every corner of the internet is buzzing with tools, bots, and startups built on AI. What most people don’t realize? You don’t need to invent ChatGPT 2.0 to make life-changing money. All you need is Python, a few AI APIs, and the mindset to build so...")
  • 15:5915:59, 13 December 2025 6 Python Tools That Let Me Replace Paid SaaS Services (hist | edit) [5,422 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px You ever look at your monthly credit card bill and wonder, “Why am I paying $79/month for something I could probably code in a weekend?” Same. Over the last year, I’ve slowly been replacing paid SaaS tools with Python scripts. No monthly bills. No feature bloat. Just clean, powerful tools that do exactly what I want — nothing more, nothing less. Here are 6 that saved me hundreds of dollars and gave me the s...")
  • 15:5615:56, 13 December 2025 The Python Script I Built That Started Paying My Rent (And the Libraries That Did the Heavy Lifting) (hist | edit) [10,171 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "How I went from tinkering to shipping real Python products — scraping leads, automating workflows, building SaaS endpoints, and packaging AI features — using a handful of battle-tested libraries. 650px 1. Why I focused on libraries (not frameworks) to make money fast When I started trying to monetize Python, the biggest mistake I made was overengineering: building monoliths before validating a single paying customer. Libraries...")
  • 15:5215:52, 13 December 2025 5 Python Tools I Trust More Than Paid SaaS (hist | edit) [4,778 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I’ve spent enough money on SaaS tools to realize something harsh: most of them are just fancy wrappers around stuff you can already do with Python. The only difference? They slap a subscription price tag on it and call it “automation.” Today, I’ll show you 5 Python tools I actually trust more than their expensive SaaS alternatives. They’re free, open-source, and powerful enough that once you learn the...")
  • 15:5015:50, 13 December 2025 How I Built a Money-Making Machine with Python: Automating AI, Trading, and Side Hustles in 2025 (hist | edit) [5,040 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Kevin Dunlap on Unsplash Why Python Still Rules the Tech World In 2025, Python continues to dominate not just because it is beginner-friendly, but because it has quietly become the backbone of money-making technologies. From AI automation to algorithmic trading, Python powers tools that generate real income streams. I started experimenting with Python projects two years ago, not knowing it would...")
  • 15:4715:47, 13 December 2025 Why PHP Laravel is a Game-Changer in SaaS Product Development (hist | edit) [4,530 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When you hear SaaS product development, the first stack that comes to mind is usually Node.js, Python, or even Ruby on Rails. But here’s the thing: PHP Laravel is quietly powering thousands of successful SaaS products — from simple subscription-based tools to enterprise-grade platforms. If you’re a developer, product manager, or entrepreneur exploring how to build a SaaS product efficiently, Laravel is worth serious attention. In this post, I’ll break down why...")
  • 15:4515:45, 13 December 2025 I Tested 32 Open Source AI Content Detectors — These 10 Are SaaS-Ready (hist | edit) [5,492 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px I was chasing a unicorn.
One that could reliably detect AI-written content without breaking in production. After weeks of frustration, I realized I had only one option: test them all myself. So I did. I ran 32 open source AI content detectors through real-world use cases. The results? Brutal. But 10 of them actually held up — and yes, they’re SaaS-ready. Here’s everything I wish someone told me before I...")
  • 15:4215:42, 13 December 2025 How I Use Python and SQLite to Replace Complex Tools (hist | edit) [5,386 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Porter LaForce on Unsplash The Trap of Over-Engineering As developers, we love shiny tools. We get pulled into the latest “must-have” productivity apps, enterprise-grade databases, or complicated workflow managers. But here’s the problem: Most of these tools are overkill for small to medium projects. They add layers of friction instead of solving problems. I learned this the hard way after trying to manage...")
  • 15:4015:40, 13 December 2025 GIS in the Cloud: Analyzing SaaS-Based Mapping Tools (hist | edit) [7,767 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Yucel Moran on Unsplash In recent years, the shift to cloud-based technologies has revolutionized how Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are deployed, accessed, and maintained. Software as a Service (SaaS) mapping tools have become a key player in this transformation, offering a range of benefits for organizations and developers. In this article, we’ll explore how SaaS-based GIS tools are changing t...")
  • 15:3715:37, 13 December 2025 Building a $2500+/Month AI + Python Automation System (hist | edit) [6,584 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Learn a practical, step-by-step Python and AI workflow combining trading bots, automation, freelance services, and micro SaaS to generate real income. 650px Photo by Pierre Borthiry - Peiobty on Unsplash When I first started combining AI and Python, I had a single goal: build real, scalable workflows that generate income without constant manual effort. Over the years, I’ve refined a system that merges trading bots, content aut...")
  • 15:3415:34, 13 December 2025 How I Built Multiple Income Streams with Python in 2025 (hist | edit) [6,285 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Leveraging automation, data, and APIs to turn Python into a money-making machine For the past four years, I’ve been obsessed with not just writing Python code — but using it to create value. In 2025, Python isn’t just a language for data scientists or backend developers. It’s a tool to automate, monetize, and scale almost anything. From freelancing to SaaS products to automated trading, I’ve seen Python unlock income streams that feel unfair compared to traditi...")
  • 15:3115:31, 13 December 2025 How I Turned Python Scripts into Multiple Income Streams (hist | edit) [3,846 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "From $50 Freelance Scripts to SaaS with Recurring Revenue 1) The $50 Starter Script — File Organizer I started simple: a script that auto-sorted messy files into folders (images, docs, videos).
Clients (freelancers, small offices) happily paid $50 because it saved them hours. <pre> import os, shutil def organize(path): for file in os.listdir(path): ext = file.split(".")[-1] folder = os.path.join(path, ext.upper()) os.makedirs(folder, e...")
  • 15:2915:29, 13 December 2025 How I Built Streams of Income in 2025 With Python (hist | edit) [6,623 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Practical ways I’ve turned Python into a money-making machine 650px For years, I thought of Python as just my go-to tool for automating boring tasks and doing data analysis. But in 2025, Python isn’t just a programming language — it’s a legitimate way to generate income. From freelance gigs to SaaS products and AI automations, Python has helped me unlock multiple revenue streams. In this article, I’ll break down the...")
  • 15:2615:26, 13 December 2025 Building a Python-Powered Income Stream in 2025 (hist | edit) [6,175 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "How I turned simple scripts into scalable money-making tools 600px When I first started coding with Python, I didn’t realize just how much financial potential this language had. Fast forward to 2025, and I can confidently say that Python is not just a programming language — it’s a tool for building income streams. From automating mundane tasks to developing web applications, Python can be directly tied to making money...")
  • 15:2215:22, 13 December 2025 How I Make $2000–$3000/Month Using AI and Python (Realistic Workflow) (hist | edit) [6,532 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Learn practical ways to generate $2000–$3000/month with Python, AI trading bots, automation, and micro SaaS tools. 500px Photo by Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash When I first dove into AI and Python, I wasn’t chasing hype. I wanted something concrete: projects that could generate real income while also improving my coding and automation skills. Over the past few years, I’ve experimented with AI-powered tools, automated tra...")
  • 15:2015:20, 13 December 2025 Automating Income with Python (hist | edit) [5,882 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Making money with Python in 2025 isn’t just about freelancing or landing a full-time developer role. Over the years, I’ve discovered that Python is like a Swiss army knife for creating real revenue streams. From automating boring tasks to building scalable digital products, I’ve used Python to generate income that feels almost unfair compared to the hours I put in. In this article, I’ll break down exactly how you...")
  • 15:1715:17, 13 December 2025 8 Python Libraries That Work Better Than Entire SaaS Products (hist | edit) [4,774 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Let’s be real: SaaS fatigue is a thing. Every other week there’s a shiny new tool asking you to cough up $19/month for a feature you could honestly script in Python over a weekend. I’m not saying ditch all your SaaS subscriptions, but there are some Python libraries that pack the punch of full-blown SaaS products — minus the invoices. Here are 8 libraries that make you wonder: why am I still paying for t...")
  • 15:1415:14, 13 December 2025 Yes, Python is Slow, but it doesn’t matter for AI SaaS (hist | edit) [15,638 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Python gets criticized for being slow. Benchmarks show Rust and C++ running circles around it. Go handles thousands more requests per second. The critics aren’t wrong about raw performance numbers (ignoring the fact that languages can’t actually be slow or fast). But for most applications, especially AI SaaS, there’s a lot of context being left out. The other day a CEO that I know was telling me that he wanted to go...")
  • 15:0815:08, 13 December 2025 7 Python Side Projects That Quietly Pay My Bills (hist | edit) [3,466 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I used to think you needed to build the next billion-dollar app to make money with code. Turns out, you just need to build useful micro-tools. Python became my cashflow engine, not because of big projects, but because of dozens of tiny ones that solved real problems. Here are 7 that turned into passive income streams: 1. Flask + OpenAI: Daily Blog Writer for Niche Sites I built a micro-app that generates short blo...")
  • 15:0615:06, 13 December 2025 Python Metaprogramming Hacks That Print Money While You Sleep (hist | edit) [3,923 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px 1. The Discovery That Changed My Workflow At first, I coded every bot and automation by hand. It was slow, repetitive, and burned time I could’ve spent scaling. Once I learned that Python can write its own code — functions, classes, and even entire APIs — everything changed. Suddenly, I could spin up projects in hours instead of weeks. That difference translated directly into revenue. 2. Spinning Up Trading Strat...")
  • 11:2111:21, 13 December 2025 How I Used Python + AI to Dominate Freelancing Platforms (hist | edit) [5,808 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Steve Johnson on Unsplash Turning My Coding Skills Into a High-Income Freelance Career 1. My First Step Into Freelancing When I first stepped into the freelancing world, I had no idea how competitive it was. Platforms like Upwork, Fiverr, and Freelancer were filled with talented developers from all over the world. I tried applying for simple jobs at first bug fixing, website testing, data entry automation....")
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