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The document contains credentials for accessing various systems used by MoreYeahs, including: - UAT credentials with login details for several roles - DEV credentials with login details for admin, HR, PM, IT, and developer roles - A farewell message from an employee leaving MoreYeahs after 2.5 years, thanking various teams and individuals for their support and lessons learned.

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Tyler Kenn
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views2 pages

New Text Document

The document contains credentials for accessing various systems used by MoreYeahs, including: - UAT credentials with login details for several roles - DEV credentials with login details for admin, HR, PM, IT, and developer roles - A farewell message from an employee leaving MoreYeahs after 2.5 years, thanking various teams and individuals for their support and lessons learned.

Uploaded by

Tyler Kenn
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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[8/6 12:28 PM] Shounak Rampal

UAT Credentials - https://hr.moreyeahs.in/


PM - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
Admin 2 - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
HR Head - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
PM - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
IT - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
Developer - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
Quality Analyst - [email protected]
MoreYeahs@123
MoreYeahs Portal
[email protected]

[8/6 12:41 PM] Shounak Rampal


DEV Credentials - http://192.168.1.50:8090/#/authentication/login

 Admin : [email protected],
 PASSWORD - Yashobhit@123

HR - [email protected],
 PASSWORD : Geetika@123
 
PM - [email protected],
PASSWORD : Utkarsh@123

IT - [email protected]
Password : Ravi@123

Developer - [email protected]
Password : Pradnya@123

Adaptability
Accountability
Clear communication
Quick thinking
Problem-solving
Initiative
Resource management
Project Management
Technology or special skill
Working collaboratively
Goal setting
Leadership
Managing conflicts

https://www.altexsoft.com/blog/soap-vs-rest-vs-graphql-vs-rpc/

Hello All,

I would like to take this opportunity to inform you that today is my last day at
MoreYeahs and I am thankful to whole MoreYeahs family for providing me such a great
experience in last 2.5 years🔥.
Right from starting I got to work closely with Akhilesh Gandhi and I can say that
this Project Management role was an Integrated MBA+ Entrepreneurship course for
me🌝.
Later Yashobhit Singh sir , Govind Choukse sir and Ashwin Singone carved my career.

All these experiences will help me to win in the path which I have chosen now.✨
If there is anyone who have joined recently trust me this is the best place to
learn , execute and make friends.

Thanks to HR team, IT team , Accounts team , Operations and Logistic team Including
Lakshman bhaiya for providing all backend support.

Big thanks to all the team (Team Dialer , Begig , Onlive , Popins , Exevoo and
SharePoint)
tech lead's ,Developer's and testers who have worked with me in all the project's
and trusted the process

I will be always available for MoreYeahs whenever needed , looking forward for best
wishes for my future.

Thanks

Because 99% of the time when someone identifies as a front-end developer they are
saying that they have not been a developer for very long.

Think of it this way. On the web, Ajax was “invented” in 2004 (actually Outlook was
doing it in 1999 but shh…we can’t give Microsoft any credit). It did not become a
central part of most web developers’ lives till 2008/2009 or so. Even then,
Javascript was avoided by many until frameworks started coming out in the early
2010s.

So what were people who were already established developers pre-2010 doing? Working
largely on the back-end. So now that they do a lot of front-end work too, they face
the choice, do they brand themselves as a “front-end” or a “full-stack” developer?
I certainly choose the latter.

Which leaves most people who embrace the “front-end” moniker as people who have
been coding professionally for less than six years. So yeah…they’re less sure of
themselves.

For the record, I use the “front-end” and “back-end” terms above in the manner I
see them used more often, with “back-end” meaning server-based languages,
databases, etc; and “front-end” meaning HTML, CSS, and Javascript. Personally I
dislike those definitions and prefer “back-end developer” to indicate how good
someone is at understanding architecture, performance, databases, and security; and
“front-end developer” to indicate to what degree someone thinks about human-
computer interaction, responsiveness, UI optimization and reusability, browsers,
responsiveness, and accessibility. When you formulate definitions this way you
start seeing these as two largely orthogonal dimensions of a square, rather than
anything mutually exclusive.

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