What's one self-taught skill you're proud of, and how did you go about learning it?
Udaya Sri
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Self-taught skills can be challenging but also really rewarding. They take effort, creativity, and a real curiosity to keep pushing forward. Choosing the right resources and celebrating small wins along the way makes the journey feel more special. What's that one special journey for you?
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Ben Syverson@bensyverson
Launching soon!
For some reason, I used to be so intimidated by type design. I thought there were tons of rules and guidelines you had to learn before you could really start. For example, the term "optical adjustment." How should I measure this? Where is the formula? It turns out, "optical adjustment" is industry jargon for "eyeballing it." When Glyphs 3.0 (1.0) came out, I took the plunge and started messing around. Within a few weeks, and with no expectations, I had outlined my first typeface.
It was a huge learning for me. If I had waited to learn it "the right way," I'd still be waiting.
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Chrome extension was one self-taught skill that I picked up, I was always interested in Saas products and experimenting with products I could quickly test and I would say it's been fun building extensions and exploring payment models. Luckily non developers can now use Claude to build such but I still enjoy doing it manually. How I went about learning it, was trying out a sample project and building from there. I went from being a noob to actually working on some extensions.
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/h...
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I'm pretty proud of teaching myself to code. I mean, nothing says 'fun weekend' like debugging for hours, right? But honestly, it’s satisfying to solve problems and create something from scratch. Speaking of solving problems, "Her Ideal Match" seems like it could be the perfect companion for guys struggling to crack the code of dating profiles.