DEV Community

Miklós Szeles
Miklós Szeles

Posted on • Originally published at mszeles.com on

Hashnode Weekly 002 by Miki Szeles

Image description
It is Saturday again, so it is time for Hashnode weekly. I collected again the articles which were most interesting for me.

As usual, I highlight one article which was the most insightful for me from this weeks list. This time, it is Ahmed Ramy's Mindset Books: The 5 AM Club post. I can highly relate to this topic.

A few years ago I also followed Robin Sharma's method. I was doing it for months (with a few days exception). That period was the second most productive of my life (I am currently living the most productive period 😊). Getting up at 5 am and doing the mentioned steps till 6 am gives such a huge motivation boost which is not comparable to anything. On the other hand, it was very tough to get up at 5 am, no matter whenever you went into bed. 😊 In the end I gave up after a few months. Recently I am getting up again around 5 am, but without using any alarm clock. If if it 5:20 or 4:50 it does not matter, I still receive the huge boost for the rest of the day 😊

I also documented my days with the 5 am club, on my former blog. It is in Hungarian, but you can translate it via Google Translate if you are interested.

After this introduction, it is time to start with the collection. Enjoy. 😊

Software Development

Writing, blogging, journaling

Self-improvement, psychology, productivity

Data analysis and machine learning

Cyber security

Search Engine Optimization (SEO), internet and social media

Newcomers

It was quite a dense post, thanks for reading. 😊

Share this article if you found it useful. 😊

Buy me a coffee if you like this article! 😊

Image of Timescale

🚀 pgai Vectorizer: SQLAlchemy and LiteLLM Make Vector Search Simple

We built pgai Vectorizer to simplify embedding management for AI applications—without needing a separate database or complex infrastructure. Since launch, developers have created over 3,000 vectorizers on Timescale Cloud, with many more self-hosted.

Read more →

Top comments (0)

Sentry image

See why 4M developers consider Sentry, “not bad.”

Fixing code doesn’t have to be the worst part of your day. Learn how Sentry can help.

Learn more