I write code when I feel like it (mostly at 2 AM with coffee). The rest of the time? Exploring the world, hunting for good food, and conquering virtual worlds. Being lazy makes me write efficient code—why do it the hard way?
class LazyDev {
constructor() {
this.name = "MZ Lipu";
this.codingTime = "2 AM";
this.fuel = "Coffee";
this.loves = [
"Travel",
"Food",
"Gaming"
];
this.motto = "Work smart, not hard";
}
}
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Here's the thing: I'm lazy. But that's exactly what makes me a good developer.
I started with Java and Spring Boot—you know, the serious enterprise stuff. Learned all about object-oriented programming, design patterns, and how to build backends that don't crash (most of the time). It was cool, but also... a lot of work.
Then I discovered WordPress development. Building plugins, integrating Vue.js for those fancy interactive UIs, and basically finding the smartest ways to solve problems. Why? Because I'm too lazy to do things the hard way. If there's a plugin for it, great. If not, I'll build one—but it better save me time in the long run.
These days, when I'm not coding (which is most of the time, honestly), I'm traveling to random places, eating everything I can find, or destroying noobs in video games. I code on weekends or at 2 AM when inspiration strikes and the coffee's strong. Work-life balance isn't just a buzzword—it's survival.
My philosophy? The best code is the code you don't have to write. Automate everything. Find elegant solutions. And never, ever do something manually if you can script it. That's not lazy—that's efficient.
Started with Java because someone said "real programmers use Java." Built enterprise backends, learned design patterns, and wrote way too much boilerplate code. Good foundation though!
Discovered WordPress and realized I could build cool stuff without writing everything from scratch. Created tons of plugins, integrated APIs, and actually enjoyed coding again. Lazy? Maybe. Smart? Definitely.
Jumped into Vue.js to make WordPress plugins look sexy. Now I do full-stack stuff, but only when I feel like it. Usually at 2 AM. With coffee. And probably some snacks.
Enterprise application development with strong OOP principles
Building scalable RESTful APIs and microservices
Custom plugin development and theme customization
Server-side scripting and WordPress backend development
Building reactive, component-based user interfaces
Modern ES6+ features and asynchronous programming
Semantic markup and modern responsive design
MySQL, PostgreSQL, and database optimization
Let's be real—I don't code 24/7. Here's what I actually spend most of my time doing:
Exploring new countries, getting lost in random cities, and collecting passport stamps like Pokémon. Current goal: visit every continent (Antarctica, you're next!). Best part? Finding WiFi in weird places to push emergency code fixes.
Food is life. Street food? Yes. Fancy restaurants? Also yes. That weird thing the locals eat? Absolutely. I travel for food as much as for sightseeing. My debugging process often includes snack breaks. Many snack breaks.
From RPGs to FPS, I'm there. Nothing like conquering virtual worlds after solving real-world bugs. Competitive gaming taught me patience, strategy, and how to stay calm when everything's on fire—skills surprisingly useful in development.
Coffee isn't just a drink—it's the fuel that powers my 2 AM coding sessions. Tried coffee from around the world. Can debug code AND debate the perfect brew temperature. Yes, it matters.
Lazy = Efficient: If you're not automating repetitive tasks, you're doing it wrong.
Night Owl Mode: Best code happens between 10 PM and 4 AM. Don't @ me.
Balance is Key: Work hard when you work, but live harder when you don't.
Work Smart: The best solution is often the simplest one. Complexity is overrated.
Got a project? Need a WordPress wizard? Want to debate the best pizza toppings? I'm probably available—unless I'm traveling, gaming, or in a deep sleep after a 2 AM coding session. Drop me a message and I'll get back to you (eventually)!
Available for remote work