Great judging!!!!

In a total of 31 projects (which were 32 at the time of submission, one was taken down as it was spam) having more than 10 spam submissions, a project having greater code quality, a higher number of lines of code, devpost documentation of such high quality (even if the judges have only read that line by line, then only I could have finished on the podium), couldn't have finished anywhere 😂

Key takeaways:

Don't make great projects for an event, because in the end, some weird ones finish on the top. As what generally happens in this world, people who do great things and adhere to best programming practices are always neglected. (Worst decision to take part in this event. Mind doesn't come with great responsibilities, but it comes after seeing what is the actual status of others 😁). Thanks for the reality check. Learned a lot

Snippet of what was on the page:

This is the pdf, the rough sheet from the development phase, in which I wrote the daily tasks, coding approaches, and workarounds for problems that I needed to do in order to make this project live. As done with my beautiful videos and content of this project, this pdf was also neglected and I am not ashamed in saying that this pdf was alone strong enough to beat out the rest 30 projects in here. Also, I almost forgot about the commits of the GitHub file that I made. Even after providing detailed commits in the code, my project can't fetch any eyeballs. (The lines of code for commits were of utmost help and cleared everything help and could have made a non-tech person understand the project.)

Weird

I fear that if a project of such a high level of implementation, documentation, code quality, and standards can't be one of the 5 projects from the 31 spam ones, then I think there is a check to be done within the organization.

Note:

If a person would have sat down next to me during the development phase of this event, then I could have even been hired by any company's CEO, let the company be any MNC (and I am not joking).

Built With

  • great-coding-skills
  • hardwork
  • that-the-judges-can't-seee
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