Anyway, I did some more performance optimizations, it should load lazily more efficiently and not be as laggy when it does.
I find it difficult to finish anything I start due to being a (self-proclaimed) perfectionist. It's nice to see someone with a similar problem going out of their comfort zone.
Kudos!
Freelance Sr. Engineer with Kubernetes/DevOps/Golang Focus
Location: Berlin, Germany
Remote: yes
Remote availability: Worldwide
Current preferences:
Kubernetes, Golang, Kubernetes Operators, Ci/CD, Containers and automating everything
Willing to travel: yes
Willing to relocate: no
Languages: German (Native), English (Fluent)
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johannes-h%C3%B6lzel
Github: https://github.com/jhoelzel
Availability starting 15.10Hi , I'm Johannes
I talk to humans and machines and specialize in golang, kubernetes as well as automating everything!
I build kubernetes clusters from srcatch on bare-metal and in the clound I provide services from DevOps to application development and have a history of completing projects on time and in budget. I currently focus on kubernetes, golang and terraform as well as everything k8s related.
You can learn more about me here:
https://www.hoelzel.it/about.html
and contact me on my linkedin:
The first few years in my career were a will-do-anything attitude. So yes, like the OP, I did a bunch of different things. A few years in, I harbored similar thoughts of feeling inadequate. A jack-of-all-trades-but-master-of-none. Especially, since I was at Google and was surrounded by the best of the best and experts/specialists in anything you could name.
My next stint was at an early stage startup (<10 employees). This is when I started to realize that this "weakness" may actually be a strength. You could point me to a wide array of things and I could run with it. I could take the principles from one stack/language/system and use them in another.
Now, as a founder, my favorite hires are generalists. Engineers who have a wide breadth of experience, a do-whatever-it-takes mindset, and ideally, a sprinkling of product/business sense. They are the first-principles thinkers. They can handle ambiguity and change without batting an eye. They will figure when/where you need a specialist.
Be proud of being a generalist.
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apmhelp.com is our core service (think bookkeeping/maintenance coordination for rental properties)
fyxed.com is a fintech product we're launching soon (think pipe but for rental properties)
Would you mind sending me an email at stefan@stefanyas.me?