UI/UX builders networking

A social thread invited full‑stack builders to connect over frontend, backend, UI/UX and interview prep, positioning the conversation as a place to swap tips useful for project and LeetCode preparation. The post surfaced as a networking hub for engineers sharing practical frontend and backend guidance. (x.com)

A post on X turned into a networking thread for software builders trading advice on user interface, user experience, frontend, backend, and coding interview prep. (x.com) The account behind the post, MOSELEY_DEV, framed the thread as an open call for “full-stack builders” to connect and share what they were working on. The replies were aimed at people building projects and preparing for technical interviews, including practice on LeetCode. (x.com) Frontend work covers the parts of an app people see in a browser, while backend work handles servers, databases, and application logic behind the screen. Full-stack developers work across both layers, which is why a single thread can pull in user interface design, application programming interfaces, and deployment advice at the same time. (intuit.com) LeetCode is one of the best-known interview practice platforms in software hiring, and its study plans are built around coding problems used for technical screening. That makes it a common meeting point for engineers who want both project help and interview preparation in the same conversation. (leetcode.com) Threads like this have become informal job-market infrastructure for early-career engineers, especially people trying to show work in public while learning. Instead of a formal event, the post functioned like a rolling comment room where builders could introduce themselves, compare stacks, and swap practical tips. (x.com) The mix of topics also reflects how hiring has blurred once-separate lanes. Companies still distinguish frontend, backend, and design roles, but many job seekers now prepare across all three areas because portfolios, system knowledge, and coding tests often show up together in recruiting. (hackerrank.com) MOSELEY_DEV has also hosted public tech conversations on X Spaces, including sessions on design and tech careers in 2025, which gives this networking post a wider context than a single tweet. The thread fits that pattern: gather builders in one place, then let the discussion fill in the details. (twitterspacegpt.com) For people scrolling past, the post was simple: drop into one thread, say what you build, and find others working on the same frontend bugs, backend systems, design questions, and interview sets. (x.com)

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