Thursday, November 6, 2025

Finding Ourselves in the Light -- What Zohran Mamdani’s Victory Teaches Us About Faith, Politics, and Courage


See All News by Ravish Kumar

“I will not change how I eat. I will not change the faith I am proud to belong to. But there is one thing I will change — I will no longer look for myself in the shadow. I will find myself in the light.”

With these words, Zohran Mamdani set the tone for what his historic mayoral campaign in New York represents — not just for America, but for democracies around the world where religion is weaponized to divide.

Mamdani’s campaign and triumph answered two age-old questions: Can faith be separated from politics? And more importantly, why must it be?

His win proved that while religion might never be fully absent from politics, the politics of hate in the name of religion can indeed be defeated.


A Muslim Candidate Who Refused to Be a “Muslim Candidate”

What makes Zohran Mamdani’s journey remarkable is that he never hid his Muslim identity, nor did he seek votes in its name.

His supporters urged him to stay silent when attacked for being Muslim. But he chose speech over silence. He told New Yorkers — yes, he was a Muslim, but above all, he was a citizen seeking the same dignity and equality every New Yorker deserved.

“I am a Muslim,” he said, “but I am not a Muslim candidate. I want to be a leader who fights for every New Yorker — no matter their skin color, religion, or birthplace.”

That clarity disarmed his opponents. He didn’t run from his identity; he transcended it.


The Politics of Dignity vs. The Politics of Fear

For over two decades after 9/11, American Muslims lived under suspicion. Hate was institutionalized — from the airport to the ballot box. Mamdani, a son of immigrants, walked right into that storm.

Opponents painted him as dangerous. Ads funded by billionaires showed his beard exaggerated, his image darkened. TV hosts accused him of wanting to “chair another 9/11.” Others mocked the way he ate.

It was Islamophobia with corporate funding.

Mamdani’s answer was radical — not anger, but empathy. He spoke not just for Muslims, but for all marginalized New Yorkers: the ones who couldn’t afford bus fares, housing, or healthcare.

His campaign revolved around simple, humane issues:

  • Free public transport for working-class people.

  • Affordable housing in a city where the poor are being pushed farther away.

  • Dignity for all, regardless of background.

He reframed the debate — from who belongs to who benefits.


Hate Has Billion-Dollar Sponsors

Mamdani pulled the curtain on something most politicians avoid discussing — how corporate money sustains hate.

He named companies that funded his opponent’s Islamophobic propaganda. “They don’t fear my faith,” he said, “they fear fair wages.”

If workers gain power, corporations lose profits. So they distract the public — through hate, fear, and division.

As Mamdani put it:

“The billionaire class seeks to convince those making $30 an hour that their enemies are those earning $20 an hour. They want us to fight each other, so we forget who truly controls the system.”

It’s the same playbook used across the world — including in India.


Lessons for India

India’s politics runs on similar fuel.
While millions struggle for food, jobs, and education, leaders keep the nation busy fighting imaginary enemies.
The politics of “send them to Pakistan” and “illegal infiltrators” thrives because it’s easier to inflame hatred than to fix hunger.

Even opposition leaders, fearing electoral backlash, shy away from openly supporting Muslim voices or religious minorities.
They whisper when courage demands they speak.

Mamdani did the opposite — he stood beside Imams in public, he embraced his faith openly, and yet, he never made it his electoral plank.
He showed that the antidote to fear is not silence, but visibility.

His politics wasn’t about Muslims, it was about New Yorkers — and that made all the difference.


A New Kind of Campaign: Humanity as Strategy

Mamdani’s campaign turned issues like bus fares into symbols of justice.

New York’s working class — 1.3 million people who commute by bus daily — became central to his vision.
Slow buses meant lost hours, lost wages, and lost dignity.

By fighting for faster, cheaper public transport, Mamdani wasn’t just talking policy — he was talking respect.

He made the working person’s time valuable again.

It’s a politics India’s cities could learn from — where millions commute for hours each day, losing health and hope while leaders argue about faith.


Beyond Religion, Beyond Hate

Zohran Mamdani’s victory is more than electoral. It’s moral.

It proved that people can see through billion-dollar propaganda.
That the politics of fear, no matter how powerful, cannot outlast the politics of belonging.
That you can be proud of your faith without turning it into a weapon.

In a world increasingly consumed by division, Mamdani’s campaign feels like the fresh air Ravish Kumar described — the air many nations are still waiting to breathe.


The Light We Must Step Into

Zohran Mamdani's line now reads less like a statement and more like a manifesto for our times:

“I will no longer look for myself in the shadow. I will find myself in the light.”

Mamdani found his light — not by abandoning faith or identity, but by refusing to let them be twisted into tools of fear.

The rest of us — in Delhi, in Lucknow, in New York — might ask:
Are we still living in the shadows others built for us?
Or are we ready to walk into the light ourselves?


In defeating the politics of hate, Zohran Mamdani hasn’t just changed New York — he’s offered a lesson for the world: the future belongs not to those who divide, but to those who dare to unite.

Tags: Politics,Ravish Kumar,Hindi,Video,

Model Alert... Open-Weights Coding Leader


See All Articles on AI

An open-weights model from Shanghai-based MiniMax challenges top proprietary models on key benchmarks for coding and agentic tasks.

 

What’s new: MiniMax, which provides voice-chat and image-generation services, released the weights for MiniMax-M2, a large language model that’s optimized for coding and agentic tasks.

  • Input/output: Text in (up to 204,000 tokens), text out (up to 131,000 tokens, roughly 100 tokens per second)
  • Architecture: Mixture-of-experts transformer, 230 billion parameters total, 10 billion parameters active per token
  • Performance: First among open weights models on Artificial Analysis’ Intelligence Index
  • Availability: Weights free to download from Hugging Face and ModelScope for commercial and noncommercial uses under MIT license, API $0.30/$1.20 per million input/output tokens via MiniMax
  • Undisclosed: Training data, specific training methods

How it works: MiniMax has not published a technical report on MiniMax-M2, so little public information is available about how it built the model.

  • Given a prompt, MiniMax-M2 interleaves reasoning steps (enclosed within <think>...</think> tags) within its output. This differs from models like DeepSeek-R1 that generate a block of reasoning steps prior to final output. It also differs from models like OpenAI GPT-5 and recent Anthropic Claude models that also generate reasoning steps prior to final output but hide or summarize them.
  • MiniMax advises users to retain <think>...</think> tags in their conversation histories for optimal performance across multiple turns, because removing them (say, to economize on tokens) would degrade the model’s context.

Results: MiniMax-M2 achieved 61 on independent evaluator Artificial Analysis’ Intelligence Index (a weighted average of benchmark performance in mathematics, science, reasoning, and coding), a new high for open weights models, ahead of DeepSeek-V3.2 (57 points) and Kimi K2 (50 points). It trails proprietary models GPT-5 with thinking enabled (69 points) and Claude Sonnet 4.5 (63 points). Beyond that, it excelled in coding and agentic tasks but proved notably verbose. It consumed 120 million tokens to complete Artificial Analysis evaluations, tied for highest with Grok 4.

  • On τ2-Bench, a test of agentic tool use, MiniMax-M2 (77.2 percent) ranked ahead of GLM-4.6 (75.9 percent) and Kimi K2 (70.3 percent) but behind Claude Sonnet 4.5 (84.7 percent) and GPT-5 with thinking enabled (80.1 percent).
  • On IFBench, which tests the ability to follow instructions, MiniMax-M2 (72 percent) significantly outperformed Claude Sonnet 4.5 (57 percent) but narrowly trailed GPT-5 with thinking enabled (73 percent).
  • On SWE-bench Verified, which evaluates software engineering tasks that require multi-file edits and test validation, MiniMax-M2 (69.4 percent) ranked in the middle tier ahead of Gemini 2.5 Pro (63.8 percent) and DeepSeek-V3.2 (67.8 percent) but behind Claude Sonnet 4.5 (77.2 percent) and GPT-5 with thinking enabled (74.9 percent).
  • On Terminal-Bench, which measures command-line task execution, MiniMax-M2 (46.3 percent) ranked second only to Claude Sonnet 4.5 (50 percent), significantly ahead of Kimi K2 (44.5 percent), GPT-5 with thinking enabled (43.8 percent), and DeepSeek-V3.2 (37.7 percent).

Behind the news: In June, MiniMax published weights for MiniMax-M1, a reasoning model designed to support agentic workflows over long contexts (1 million tokens). The company had been developing agents for internal use in tasks like coding, processing user feedback, and screening resumes. However, it found that leading closed-weights models were too costly and slow, while open-weights alternatives were less capable. It says it built MiniMax-M2 to fill the gap.

 

Why it matters: Developing reliable agentic applications requires experimenting with combinations and permutations of prompts, tools, and task decompositions, which generates lots of tokens. Cost-effective models that are capable of agentic tasks, like MiniMax-M2, can help more small teams innovate with agents.

 

We’re thinking: MiniMax-M2s visible reasoning traces make its decisions more auditable than models that hide or summarize their reasoning steps. As agents are applied increasingly to mission-critical applications, transparency in reasoning may matter as much as raw performance.

Tags: Technology,Artificial Intelligence,Large Language Models,

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Zohran Mamdani - The Immigrant Who Redefined New York’s Politics


See All News by Ravish Kumar
Image generated using ChatGPT for illustration purpose



New York — the city that never sleeps, where power, money, and dreams collide. Yet in this global capital of capitalism, an unlikely figure has risen to power — Zohran Mamdani, the son of filmmaker Mira Nair and historian Mahmood Mamdani. His victory as New York's mayor has stunned America and inspired millions worldwide.

Who is Zohran Mamdani, and how did he win against the might of billionaires, political lobbies, and hate campaigns?

Mamdani is a politician of conviction — a man who speaks of justice, equality, and dignity for the working class in a city that glorifies wealth. He didn't win by distributing dollars, but by talking about why people remain poor and how the system must change. His victory has been called a “turning point in American democracy,” reminiscent of Jawaharlal Nehru's “tryst with destiny” in 1947 — a moment when a society decides to shed the old and embrace the new.

A Political Awakening in the City of Immigrants

Mamdani's win is more than just a political success; it's a moral statement. In the same country where Donald Trump built his politics on fear and division — especially targeting immigrants — Mamdani, an immigrant himself, won by appealing to hope. He stood for immigrants, workers, and renters, and promised to make the city livable again for ordinary people.

New York is home to people from over 150 countries. It is also a city of contradictions — immense wealth alongside staggering poverty. Mamdani's campaign asked a simple question: why does one of the richest cities in the world have so many people struggling to afford rent, education, or healthcare? His slogans were direct:

  • “No more rent hikes.”

  • “Free public transport.”

  • “Healthcare for all.”

These weren't utopian dreams. They were demands born out of everyday pain.

Fighting Billionaire Power and Hate Politics

The billionaire class united against him. They called him a “communist,” “anti-Israel,” even “dangerous.” Elon Musk mocked him online. Donald Trump went as far as threatening to cut federal funding to New York if Mamdani won. But New Yorkers — tired of political theater — stood by him.

What set Mamdani apart was his honesty. When his opponents tried to link him to terrorism, he smiled and kept talking about bus fares and teacher shortages. When accused of being “anti-Jewish,” he replied calmly:

“New York is home to Jews, Muslims, Christians, everyone. This city belongs to all of us.”

He didn't hide his Muslim identity, nor did he use it to divide. In a world where fear dominates politics, Mamdani's courage became his greatest strength.

The Making of a Global Leader

Mamdani's story is also a story of migration, resilience, and moral inheritance. His father, Mahmood Mamdani, was exiled from Uganda during Idi Amin's rule in 1972. His mother, Mira Nair, chronicled those immigrant struggles in Mississippi Masala and The Namesake. From that family emerged a leader who turned those experiences into political energy — a leader who knows what displacement feels like and what belonging truly means.

Lessons for India and the World

Ravish Kumar, the journalist who first brought this story to the Indian audience, notes how Mamdani's victory echoes far beyond America. He writes that while India's political discourse is trapped in caste and religion, Mamdani won by uniting people around issues that matter: education, rent, transport, and dignity.

In Bihar, for instance, politicians debate handouts instead of job creation. Mamdani's campaign offers a lesson — real change comes not from fear, but from trust, empathy, and clarity of purpose.

A Hopeful Future

Zohran Mamdani's win has become a symbol — proof that progressive politics isn't dead, even in an age of polarization. He defeated Trump-backed billionaires not with anger, but with ideas. He reignited hope among young voters and brought moral clarity back to public life.

In his victory speech, Mamdani said:

“Those hands that built this city, but were told they'd never touch power — today, the future is in their hands.”

That single line captures the essence of his journey — and perhaps, the essence of democracy itself.


Zohran Mamdani didn't just win an election. He reminded the world that even in the age of billionaires, people still matter.

Tags: Politics,Ravish Kumar,Hindi,Video,

Why Bihar Needs a Ministry of Migration


See All News by Ravish Kumar

Hello, I’m Ravish Kumar.
I have an idea for Bihar’s next government — an unusual one. Instead of pretending to stop migration, why not embrace it? Why not create a Ministry of Migration?

Sounds strange, right? But think about it.
Back in 2004, India created a separate department for Indians living abroad — the Ministry of Non-Resident Indians, later renamed Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs, before being merged with the Ministry of External Affairs in 2016. If the Indian government can care for Indians abroad, then why can’t Bihar care for its own people living outside the state — its NRBs: Non-Resident Biharis?

Every Indian state has its share of Bihari workers. They build roads, run factories, clean cities, and power other states’ economies. Isn’t it time Bihar acknowledged their existence formally — with a dedicated ministry that tracks their welfare, ensures they live in humane conditions, and keeps in touch with them through offices in major cities like Delhi, Surat, or Ludhiana?

Critics will laugh. Some will say the government’s job is to stop migration, not support it.
But look at the reality — no government has ever managed to stop it. Not in 20 years. Even during Nitish Kumar’s so-called “golden years of law and order,” migration soared. Opportunities kept blooming outside Bihar, not within. People continued to leave — for survival, for dignity, for hope.

Migration, therefore, is not Bihar’s Plan B — it’s Plan A.
It’s the state’s most successful export.
And perhaps it’s time to give it the status of an industry.

Imagine this:
First-time migrants get a subsidized train ticket, a suitcase, and a bottle of water from the government.
Families returning home for Chhath or Holi get a travel subsidy — just like big industrialists get subsidies worth crores for setting up factories. If billionaires can get land at discounted prices, why can’t the poor get help to travel for work — their only “industry”?

Because let’s face it — migration is already Bihar’s largest economic activity.
During festivals, when over 1.5 crore people return home, the sheer chaos at railway stations tells the story no economic report can. If Bihar had a Migration Minister, they could plan better — create safe travel corridors, maintain worker registries, ensure safety and dignity, and monitor living conditions in host cities.

Look at how West Bengal’s Chief Minister once sent MPs to protect migrant workers in Gurugram.
If Bengal can care for its migrants, why can’t Bihar?

Bihar’s migrants live in makeshift colonies — often without clean water or toilets — across Indian cities. If the state government simply started tweeting photos of these settlements, the country would see the uncomfortable truth of how “development” really looks for those who build it.

So yes — Bihar needs a Ministry of Migration.
It needs to accept that migration isn’t a failure — it’s a symptom of a broken model.

Because after 20 years of good roads and electricity, why is there still no economic transformation?
Why is every young Bihari still dreaming of leaving home?
Why does the average Bihari student still have to move to Delhi, Kota, or Patna for education?
Why are the hospitals of Delhi and Lucknow filled with patients from Bihar?

Migration is not just about jobs. It’s about education, healthcare, hope, and dignity.

And while caste politics still dominates Bihar’s elections — keeping people divided over old loyalties — the economy remains stagnant. The poor from every caste remain poor. A few elites, contractors, and middlemen thrive, but the rest migrate.

It’s time Bihar starts talking about economic democratization — about land reform, quality education, and meaningful jobs. Because if a state can’t retain its youth, what kind of governance is that?

Until then, let’s stop the pretense.
Let’s recognize migration.
Let’s make it official.

Create a Migration ID Card, a Migration Police, and a Migration Budget.
Let’s treat the migrant not as a failure, but as Bihar’s most hardworking ambassador — a citizen who has built India city by city, brick by brick.

Migration is Bihar’s industry, enterprise, and opportunity.
It’s time the government accepts it — not as shame, but as reality.

So yes — let’s make it official.
Let’s have a Ministry of Migration.
Let’s stop migrating from the truth.

Tags: Indian Politics,Ravish Kumar,Hindi,Video,

Analysis of the HIRE Act’s Potential Impact on the Indian Economy

See All Articles on Politics/Finance/Layoffs
The Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act is primarily a U.S.-focused legislative measure; however, its wide-ranging economic implications can extend to countries with significant economic and trade ties to the United States, such as India. Analyzing the potential impact of the HIRE Act on the Indian economy involves considering several key factors: foreign direct investment (FDI), bilateral trade relations, and labor market dynamics.

1. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)

The HIRE Act, by stimulating employment and economic growth within the United States, can indirectly influence FDI flows. A robust U.S. economy may lead to increased investment from U.S. companies in foreign nations, including India. Conversely, U.S. businesses benefiting from tax incentives to hire domestically might reduce their investments abroad, potentially impacting sectors in India reliant on such investments. Understanding these dynamics is crucial, as FDI is a significant driver of economic growth and development in India, supporting infrastructure projects and the transfer of technology and expertise.

2. Bilateral Trade Relations

India-U.S. trade relations are a cornerstone of economic interaction between the two nations. The HIRE Act's focus on job creation and industrial growth can affect these relations in various ways. Increased economic activity in the U.S. might lead to higher demand for Indian exports, particularly in industries where India holds competitive advantages, such as IT services and pharmaceuticals. On the other hand, if U.S.-based companies become more self-sufficient or protectionist due to domestic economic incentives, this could pose a challenge to Indian exporters seeking to maintain or expand their market share in the U.S.

3. Labor Market Dynamics

While the HIRE Act is intended to enhance employment within the U.S., it also indirectly affects labor market conditions in countries like India. For example, by fostering greater collaboration through outsourcing and partnerships, Indian tech firms may find new opportunities to complement U.S. workforce demands. However, if domestic hiring incentives in the U.S. reduce outsourcing, there could be negative implications for Indian businesses heavily reliant on such contracts.

4. Economic Policies and Reforms

The HIRE Act's emphasis on incentivizing employment through fiscal measures could serve as a model for India as it navigates its own path toward economic recovery and growth. Policymakers in India may consider adapting similar strategies, particularly in sectors affected by rapid technological change and evolving global markets, to stimulate job creation and sustain economic momentum.

Conclusion

The HIRE Act's potential impact on the Indian economy is multifaceted, with implications spanning investment flows, trade dynamics, and employment strategies. While some effects may directly benefit the Indian economy through increased trade and FDI, others may pose challenges that require careful navigation by policymakers and business leaders. As both nations continue to engage in strategic economic dialogue, understanding these interactions will be key to sustaining mutually beneficial growth.
Tags: Politics,Finance,Layoffs,

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Books on Blogging (Nov 2025)

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1:
Psycho-Cybernetics
Maxwell Maltz
1960


2:
On Writing Well
William Zinsser
1976


3:
Writing Down the Bones
Natalie Goldberg
1986


4:
Bird by Bird
Anne Lamott
1994


5:
The Millionaire Next Door
Thomas J. Stanley
1996


6:
Getting Everything You Can Out of All You’ve Got: 21 Ways You Can Out-Think, Out-Perform, and Out-Earn the Competition
Jay Abraham
2000


7:
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Stephen King
2000


8:
Secrets Of The Millionaire Mind
T. Harv Eker
2005


9:
WordPress For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech))
Lisa Sabin-Wilson
2006


10:
Made to Stick
Chip Heath & Dan Heath
2007


11:
The 4 Hour Work Week
Tim Ferriss
2007


12:
The 4 Hour Workweek
Tim Ferris
2007


13:
ProBlogger
Darren Rowse & Chris Garrett
2008


14:
ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income
Darren Rowse
2008


15:
Secrets For Blogging Your Way To A 6-Figure Income
Darren Rowse
2008


16:
Crush It
Gary Vaynerchuk
2009


17:
Go Givers Sell More
Bob Burg
2010


18:
The Compound Effect
Darren Hardy
2010


19:
HTML and CSS
Jon Duckett
2011


20:
Launch a WordPress.com Blog In A Day For Dummies
Lisa Sabin-Wilson
2011


21:
The Digital Mom Handbook: How to Blog, Vlog, Tweet, and Facebook Your Way to a Dream Career at Home
Audrey McClelland and Colleen Padilla
2011


22:
The Lean Startup
Eric Ries
2011


23:
The Thank You Economy
Gary Vaynerchuk
2011


24:
WordPress All-in-One For Dummies
Lisa Sabin-Wilson
2011


25:
31 Days To Finding Your Blogging Mojo
Bryan Allain
2012


26:
Blog, Inc: Blogging for Passion, Profit, and to Create Community
nan
2012


27:
Blogging All-in-One For Dummies
nan
2012


28:
Blogging All-in-One For Dummies
Amy Lupold Bair
2012


29:
Blogging for Creatives
Darren Rowse & Chris Garrett
2012


30:
How To Make Money Blogging
Bob Lotich
2012


31:
Platform: Get Noticed in a Noisy World
Michael Hyatt
2012


32:
80/20 Sales and Marketing: The Definitive Guide to Working Less and Making More
Perry Marshall
2013


33:
Contagious: Why Things Catch On
Jonah Berger
2013


34:
Creative Confidence: Unleashing the Creative Potential Within Us All
Tom Kelley and David Kelley
2013


35:
How To Blog For Profit Without Selling Your Soul
Ruth Soukup
2013


36:
How To Blog For Profit: Without Selling Your Soul
nan
2013


37:
How To Blog For Profit: Without Selling Your Soul
Ruth Soukup
2013


38:
Jab Jab Jab Right Hook
Gary Vaynerchuk
2013


39:
SEO Like I’m 5
Matthew Capala
2013


40:
Tapping Into Wealth
Margaret M. Lynch
2013


41:
The One Thing
Gary Keller
2013


42:
WordPress To Go - How To Build A WordPress Website On Your Own Domain, From Scratch, Even If You Are A Complete Beginner
Sarah McHarry
2013


43:
You Are a Badass: How to Stop Doubting Your Greatness and Start Living An Awesome Life
Jen Sincero
2013


44:
Everybody Writes
Ann Handley
2014


45:
Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content
Ann Handley
2014


46:
Girlboss
Sophia Amoruso
2014


47:
Hooked
Nir Eyal
2014


48:
How To Write Great Blog Posts That Engage Readers
Steve Scott
2014


49:
Launch
Jeff Walker
2014


50:
Profit First
Mike Micbalowicz
2014


51:
Profit First: Transform Your Business from a Cash-Eating Monster to a Money-Making Machine
Mike Michalowicz
2014


52:
The Desire Map
Danielle LaPorte
2014


53:
Virtual Freedom
Chris Ducker
2014


54:
Virtual Freedom: How to Work with Virtual Staff to Buy More Time, Become More Productive, and Build Your Dream Business
Chris Drucker
2014


55:
Epic Blog: One Year Blog Editorial Planner
nan
2015


56:
The Content Code
Mark W. Schaefer
2015


57:
The Surrender Experiment: My Journey into Life’s Perfection
Michael A. Singer
2015


58:
Affiliate Marketing 101: Detailed Guide to Affiliate Marketing for Beginners & How to Build an Affiliate Marketing Website Step By Step
Marilyn Thompson
2015


59:
Blogging: Getting To $2,000 A Month In 90 Days (Blogging For Profit Book 2)
Isaac Kronenberg
2016


60:
Blogging: The Best Little Darn Guide To Starting A Profitable Blog (Blogging For Profit Book 1)
Isaac Kronenberg
2016


61:
Deep Work
Cal Newport
2016


62:
Digital Marketing Strategy
Simon Kingsnorth
2016


63:
SEO - The Sassy Way to Ranking #1 in Google - when you have NO CLUE!: A Beginner's Guide to Search Engine Optimization (Beginner Internet Marketing Series Book 4)
Gundi Gabrielle
2016


64:
The Influencer Economy: How to Launch Your Idea, Share It with the World, and Thrive in the Digital Age
Ryan Williams
2016


65:
The Sassy Way to Starting a Successful Blog when you have NO CLUE!: 7 Steps to WordPress Bliss.... (Beginner Internet Marketing Series Book 1)
Gundi Gabrielle
2016


66:
Content Marketing Made Easy: The Simple, Step-by-Step System to Attract Your Ideal Audience & Put Your Marketing on Autopilot using Blogs, Podcasts, Videos, Social Media & More!
John Nemo
2017


67:
Influencer Fast Track: From Zero to Influencer in the next 6 Months!: 10X Your Marketing & Branding for Coaches, Consultants, Professionals & Entrepreneurs
Gundi Gabrielle
2017


68:
Principles: Life and Work
Ray Dalio
2017


69:
They Ask You Answer
Marcus Sheridan
2017


70:
Lifestyle Blogging Basics
Laura Lynn
2017


71:
Atomic Habits
James Clear
2018


72:
Girl Wash Your Face
Rachel Hollis
2018


73:
Influencer: Building Your Personal Brand in the Age of Social Media
Brittany Hennessey
2018


74:
One Million Followers
Brendan Kane
2018


75:
Stretched Too Thin: How Working Moms Can Lose the Guilt, Work Smarter, and Thrive
Jessica N. Turner
2018


76:
Talk Triggers
Jay Baer and Daniel Lemin
2018


77:
Your Best Year Ever: A 5 Step Plan for Achieving Your Most Important Goals
Michael Hyatt
2018


78:
By His Grace We Blog: The Perfect Resource for the Christian Blogger
Carmen Brown
2018


79:
5,000 WRITING PROMPTS: A Master List of Plot Ideas, Creative Exercises, and More
Bryn Donovan
2019


80:
Company of One: Why Staying Small is the Next Big Thing for Business
Paul Jarvis
2019


81:
Faster, Smarter, Louder: Master Attention in a Noisy Digital Market
Aaron Agius and Gian Clancey
2019


82:
How To Start a Blog Today: The Ultimate Guide To Starting A Profitable Blog (Make Money Blogging, Blog For Profit, make money from blogging, blogging for ... (blogging for beginners Series Book 1)
Amrit Das
2019


83:
25 Ways to Work From Home: Smart Business Models to Make Money Online
Jen Ruiz
2020


84:
Blogging For Beginners: Work from Home, Travel the World, Provide for Your Family
Salvador Briggman
2020


85:
Content Writing 101: Win High Paying Online Content Writing Jobs And Build Financial Freedom With SEO Marketing
Joice Carrera
2020


86:
WordPress Explained: Your Step-by-Step Guide to WordPress (2020 Edition)
Stephen Burge
2020


87:
Mastering WordPress And Elementor : A Definitive Guide to Building Custom Websites Using WordPress and Elementor Plugin
Konrad Christopher
2020


88:
Storytelling
Daniel Anderson
2020


89:
Instagram Marketing Secrets
Harrison H. Phillips
2021


90:
The Habits of Highly Successful Bloggers
Ryan Robinson
2021


91:
Everywhere But Home: Life Overseas as Told by a Travel Blogger
Phil Rosen
2022


92:
The She Approach To Starting A Money-Making Blog (2022 Edition): Everything You Need To Know To Create A Website And Make Money Blogging
Ana Skyes
2022


93:
Practical WordPress for Beginners: A Guide on How to Create and Manage Your Website (PQ Unleashed: Practical Skills)
Selynna Payne
2022


94:
Content Marketing Strategy
Robert Rose
2023


95:
Design Your Own Website with WordPress 2023
nan
2023


96:
From Blog to Business: How to Make Money Blogging & Work From Anywhere
Jen Ruiz
2023


97:
SEO 2024
Adam Clarke
2023


98:
SEO 2026: Learn search engine optimization with smart internet marketing strategies
Adam Clarke
2023


99:
Social Media Marketing 2024
Robert Hill
2023


100:
The Art of Messaging: 7 Principles of Remarkable Messages (Or How to Stand out in a Noisy World)
Henry Adaso
2023


101:
The Profitable Content System: The Entrepreneur's Guide to Creating Wildly Profitable Content Without Burnout
Meera Kothand
2023


102:
The Ultimate ChatGPT and Dall-E Side Hustle Bible - Generate Passive Income with AI Prompts and Image Generation: Make Money, Achieve Financial Freedom ... Terms (Money Mastery in the Digital Age)
Future Front
2023


103:
Reinventing Blogging with ChatGPT : A Prompt-Driven Content Creation Guide
Laura Maya
2023


104:
WordPress for Beginners 2025
Dr. Andy Williams
2024


105:
Blogging Blueprint from Idea to Income!
Michael Wu
2024


106:
SEO 2025
Adam Clarke
2024


107:
Build a WordPress Website From Scratch 2025: Step-by-step, How to Use WordPress Appearance and Themes Hosting, WooCommerce, SEO, and more
Raphael Heide
2025


108:
How to Promote Your Blog (and Get Readers) in 2025
Ryan Robinson
2025


109:
Affiliate Marketing
Christopher Clarke and Adam Preace
2025


110:
How To Start a Blog (on the Side) in 2025
Ryan Robinson
2025


111:
Social Media Success: Monetizing Your Influence
Tyna McDuffie
2025


112:
The Real Value: Managed WordPress Hosting
Kinsta
2025


113:
Writing for Developers: Blogs that get read
Piotr Sarna
2025
Tags: List of Books,Technology,

Why AI Can't Replace Developers


See All Articles on AI

Software Developers Are Weird — And That’s Exactly Why We Need Them

Software developers are weird. I should know — I’m one of them.

And I didn’t plan to be this way. It’s not nurture, it’s nature. My father was one of Egypt’s early computer science pioneers in the 60s and 70s, back when computers filled entire rooms. He’d write assembly code, print it onto punch cards, then hop on a bus for half an hour to another university just to run them. If his code failed, he’d have to take that same 30-minute ride back, fix it, and start again.

Apparently, that experience was so fun he wanted to share it with me.

When I was eight, he sat me down to teach me how to code in BASIC. I rebelled instantly. I didn’t want to be a “computer nerd.” I wanted to be Hulk Hogan or Roald Dahl. Luckily, he supported the latter dream and filled my room with books.

I didn’t touch code again until high school — a mandatory programming class. I accidentally got one of the highest grades and panicked: Am I a nerd? I hid the result like it was an F.

Years later, in university, I told my dad I wanted to major in philosophy and writing — and become a famous DJ like Fatboy Slim. He smiled, pointed out that he was paying tuition, and said, “You can always think under a tree and write for free. But just in case, take computer science.”

So I did. Begrudgingly.

But fate — or recursion — had other plans.

One night, while tweaking a music plugin, I found a script file inside. I opened it, realized I could read the code, and before I knew it, I was rewriting the entire plugin. Ten hours later, I looked up and said the words every developer has said at least once: “Oh, damn.”

I was hooked again.

Years later, I became a senior software developer. One late night, I found a mysterious bug. I told my wife I’d be home in “15 minutes.” (Every dev’s lie.) Hours turned into days. The bug haunted my dreams. I finally found it — a race condition. When I fixed it, I screamed so loud the building’s security rushed in. That moment — pure joy, tied maybe with my first child’s birth, definitely ahead of my second’s — made me realize: I love this. I’m a developer.

And yes, we’re weird.

We find beauty in debugging chaos. We chase logic like art. We stay up for days just to make something work. For most of us, it’s not a job. It’s meaning.

But now, everything is changing. Generative AI is rewriting the rules. I see it firsthand in my role at Amazon Web Services. On one hand, innovation has never been easier. On the other, the speed of change is dizzying.

AI can now generate, explain, and debug code. It can build frontends, backends, and everything in between. So, what happens when AI can code better than humans? Should people still learn to code?

Yes. Absolutely.

Because developers aren’t just people who code. They think. They connect the dots between systems, ideas, and people. They live through complexity, ambiguity, and failure — and learn from it. That experience, that context, is something no AI can imitate.

Generative AI can write code fast. But it doesn’t understand why one solution scales and another collapses. It can generate answers, but not wisdom. And wisdom is what real developers bring to the table.

The next generation will need that wisdom more than ever.

My daughter Luli is 10. Recently, I decided it was time to teach her coding. I walked up to her room, nervous but proud — part of this grand family tradition.

“Hey, Luli,” I said. “How about I teach you how to code?”
She looked up, shrugged, and said, “I already know how.”

She showed me gamified apps on her iPad, complete with AI-generated projects and websites.

I just stood there, speechless.

“Oh, damn,” I said again.

And I realized — maybe software developers are weird. But in this new world, where AI writes code and kids outpace us, weird is exactly what keeps us human.

Because coding was never just about computers. It was always about curiosity.

Tags: Technology,Artificial Intelligence,Video,

Agentic AI Books (Nov 2025)

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1:
Advanced Introduction to Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare
Thomas H. Davenport, John Glaser, Elizabeth Gardner
Year: 2023

2:
Agentic AI Agents for Business
Year: 2023

3:
Agentic AI Architecture - Designing the Future of AI Agents
Ad Vemula
Year: 2023

4:
Agentic AI Cookbook
Robert J. K. Rowland 
Year: 2023

5:
Agentic AI Engineering: The Definitive Field Guide to Building Production-Grade Cognitive Systems (Generative AI Revolution Series)
Yi Zhou
Year: 2024

6:
Agentic AI for Retail
Year: 2023

7:
Agentic AI with MCP
Nathan Steele 
Year: 2024

8:
Agentic AI: A Guide by 27 Experts
27 Experts
Year: 2023

9:
Agentic AI: Theories and Practices
Ken Huang
Year: 2023

10:
Agentic Artificial Intelligence: Harnessing AI Agents to Reinvent Business, Work and Life
Pascal Bornet
Year: 2024

11:
AI 2025: The Definitive Guide to Artificial Intelligence, APIs, and Python Programming for the Future
Hayden Van Der Post, et al.
Year: 2020

12:
AI Agents for Business Leaders
Ajit K Jha 
Year: 2024

13:
AI Agents in Action
Micheal Lanham
Year: 2024

14:
AI Engineering: Building Applications with Foundation Models
Chip Huyen
Year: 2024

15:
AI for Robotics: Toward Embodied and General Intelligence in the Physical World
Alishba Imran
Year: 2024

16:
All Hands on Tech: The AI-Powered Citizen Revolution
Thomas H. Davenport and Ian Barkin
Year: 2023

17:
All-in On AI: How Smart Companies Win Big with Artificial Intelligence
Thomas H. Davenport and Nitin Mittal
Year: 2023

18:
Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach
Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig
Year: 1995

19:
Build a Large Language Model (From Scratch)
Sebastian Raschka
Year: 2024

20:
Building Agentic AI Systems: Create intelligent, autonomous AI agents that can reason, plan, and adapt
Anjanava Biswas
Year: 2024

21:
Building Agentic AI Workflow: A Developer's Guide to OpenAI's Agents SDK
Harvey Bower
Year: 2023

22:
Building AI Agents with LLMs, RAG, and Knowledge Graphs: A practical guide to autonomous and modern AI agents
Salvatore Raieli
Year: 2023

23:
Building AI Applications with ChatGPT APIs
Martin Yanev
Year: 2023

24:
Building Applications with AI Agents: Designing and Implementing Multiagent Systems
Michael Albada
Year: 2024

25:
Building Generative AI-Powered Apps: A Hands-on Guide for Developers
Aarushi Kansal
Year: 2024

26:
Building Intelligent Agents: A Practical Guide to AI Automation
Jason Overand
Year: 2023

27:
Designing Agentic AI Frameworks

Year: 2024

28:
Foundations of Agentic AI for Retail: Concepts, Technologies, and Architectures for Autonomous Retail Systems
Dr. Fatih Nayebi
Year: 2024

29:
Generative AI for Beginners
Caleb Morgan Whitaker
Year: 2023

30:
Generative AI on AWS: Building Context-Aware Multimodal Reasoning Applications
Chris Fregly
Year: 2024

31:
Hands-on AI Agent Development: A Practical Guide to Designing and Building High-Performance and Intelligent Agents for Real-World Applications
Corby Allen
Year: 2023

32:
Hands-On APIs for AI and Data Science: Python Development with FastAPI
Ryan Day
Year: 2024

33:
How HR Leaders Are Preparing for the AI-Enabled Workforce
Tom Davenport
Year: 2024

34:
L'IA n'est plus un outil, c'est un collègue": Moderna fusionne sa DRH et sa DSI
Julien Dupont-Calbo
Year: 2024

35:
Lethal Trifecta for AI agents
Simon Willison
Year: 2025

36:
LLM Powered Autonomous Agents
Lilian Weng
Year: 2023

37:
Mastering Agentic AI: A Practical Guide to Building Self-Directed AI Systems that Think, Learn, and Act Independently
Ted Winston
Year: 2023

38:
Mastering AI Agents: A Practical Handbook for Understanding, Building, and Leveraging LLM-Powered Autonomous Systems to Automate Tasks, Solve Complex Problems, and Lead the AI Revolution
Marcus Lighthaven
Year: 2025

39:
Multi-Agent Oriented Programming: Programming Multi-Agent Systems Using JaCaMo
Olivier Boissier, Rafael H. Bordini, Jomi Fred Hübner, et al.
Year: 2023

40:
Multi-Agent Systems with AutoGen
Victor Dibia
Year: 2023

41:
Multi-Agent Systems: An Introduction to Distributed Artificial Intelligence
Jacques Ferber
Year: 1999

42:
OpenAI API Cookbook: Build intelligent applications including chatbots, virtual assistants, and content generators
Henry Habib
Year: 2023

43:
Principles of Building AI Agents
Sam Bhagwat
Year: 2024

44:
Prompt Engineering for Generative AI
James Phoenix, Mike Taylor
Year: 2023

45:
Prompt Engineering for LLMs: The Art and Science of Building Large Language Model-Based Applications
John Berryman
Year: 2023

46:
Rewired to outcompete
Eric Lamarre, Kate Smaje, and Rodney Zemmel
Year: 2023

47:
Small Language Models are the Future of Agentic AI
Peter Belcak, Greg Heinrich, Shizhe Diao, Yonggan Fu, Xin Dong, Saurav Muralidharan, Yingyan Celine Lin, Pavlo Molchanov
Year: 2025

48:
Superagency in the workplace: Empowering people to unlock AI's full potential
Hannah Mayer, Lareina Yee, Michael Chui, and Roger Roberts
Year: 2023

49:
The Age of Agentic AI: A Practical & Exciting Exploration of AI Agents
Saman Zakpur
Year: 2025

50:
The Agentic AI Bible: The Complete and Up-to-Date Guide to Design, Build, and Scale Goal-Driven, LLM-Powered Agents that Think, Execute and Evolve
Thomas R. Caldwell
Year: 2025

51:
The AI Advantage How to Put the Artificial Intelligence Revolution to Work
Thomas H. Davenport
Year: 2023

52:
The AI Engineering Bible: The Complete and Up-to-Date Guide to Build, Develop and Scale Production Ready AI Systems
Thomas R. Caldwell
Year: 2023

53:
The economic potential of generative AI: The next productivity frontier
McKinsey
Year: 2023

54:
The LLM Engineer's Handbook
Paul Iusztin
Year: 2024

55:
The Long Fix: Solving America's Health Care Crisis with Strategies That Work for Everyone
Vivian S. Lee
Year: 2020

56:
Vibe Coding 2025
Gene Kim and Steve Yegge
Year: 2025

57:
Working with AI Real Stories of Human-Machine Collaboration
Thomas H. Davenport & Steven M. Miller
Year: 2022
Tags: List of Books,Agentic AI,Artificial Intelligence,