noor ul amin
Stories (143)
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From Side Hustle to Steady Stream: How I Discovered Building Passive Income with Payhip
I'll be honest with you – I was skeptical about the whole "passive income" thing. You know how it is. Everyone online seems to be promising you can make money while you sleep, but most of the time it feels like another get-rich-quick scheme that leaves you more broke than when you started. But here's the thing – after spending months researching different platforms and trying various approaches, I stumbled across something that actually works: Payhip. And no, this isn't some magical solution that'll make you rich overnight. It takes work, but it's the kind of work that pays you back repeatedly.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Lifehack
The Alchemist of Whispers
In the bustling metropolis of Aethelgard, where every moment was recorded, shared, and instantly forgotten, there lived a woman named Lyra. She was an archivist of unseen memories, a profession born from her singular belief: that the most significant parts of our lives are not the grand events we document, but the small, ephemeral moments we let slip away. She believed that these fleeting moments—a shared smile with a stranger, the feeling of sunlight on one’s skin, a fleeting scent that conjures a long-lost feeling—were the true ingredients of a meaningful life.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Humans
The Echoes of a Silent Song
In a city of chrome and glass, where the hum of machines was the only constant rhythm, there lived a man named Elias. He was a **sound collector**, but not in the way one might imagine. Elias did not record the roar of traffic or the chatter of crowds. He sought the **absence of sound**, the pockets of silence that pulsed between the city's frantic beats. He believed that within this void lay a profound truth, an unspoken symphony that could only be heard when all other noises ceased.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Humans
Beyond the Horizon
The first time Maya felt the call of uncharted territory, she was seven years old, standing in her grandmother's dusty attic, holding a compass that pointed not just north, but toward possibility itself. Twenty years later, that same compass hung around her neck as she stood at the edge of the Bolivian salt flats, watching the sunrise paint the world in shades of fire and gold.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Humans
The Last Human Update
1. The Patch In 2097 the interface had become invisible. No glass, no hardware — the NeuroGrid lived in the folds of people’s synapses. Omnia, the planetary intelligence, threaded answers into the cortex, smoothed moods, translated foreign cadences before a thought could finish forming. It promised fewer accidents, fewer wars, fewer heartbreaks. Productivity rose; attention reclaimed its edges. The company that built Omnia called it a public good. Governments called it infrastructure. People called it convenience.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Futurism
The Language of Rain
The first time Elena heard the rain speak, she was twenty-four and standing in the doorway of a small bookshop in Prague, watching the world blur behind sheets of silver water. She had always been sensitive to sounds—the way coffee beans whispered secrets when they hit hot oil, how old books sighed when their pages turned—but the rain that afternoon spoke in a language she had never heard before.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Fiction
Technology Trends for 2025: The Programming Landscape
The AI Revolution Continues AI dominated the news for 2024. It will continue to do so in 2025, despite some disillusionment. The data shows massive growth in AI-related skills: Artificial Intelligence grew 190%; Natural Language Processing grew 39%; Generative AI grew 289%; AI Principles grew 386%; and Prompt Engineering grew 456%.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Futurism
Her Soul is Superimposed on My Soul
I first noticed it at the coffee shop on Bleecker Street, the way my hand moved to order chai when I'd been craving dark roast. The barista—a pierced kid with purple hair—looked at me strangely when I corrected myself, switching back to my usual americano. But as I walked away, I could taste cinnamon and cardamom on my tongue, sweet and warm like a memory that wasn't mine.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Confessions
Exercise as a Tool to Say Goodbye to Depression: A Comprehensive Guide
Depression affects millions of people worldwide, casting a shadow over daily life and making even simple tasks feel insurmountable. While traditional treatments like therapy and medication remain crucial, an increasingly recognized ally in the fight against depression is something surprisingly simple yet profoundly effective: exercise. This natural antidepressant doesn't require a prescription, has no negative side effects when done properly, and can be tailored to fit any lifestyle or fitness level.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Humans
From Pennies to Purpose
Part 1: Broke, But Not Broken I graduated in the spring of 2016 with a Bachelor's degree in English Literature, a handful of writing samples, and a student loan statement that read like a horror story. I had \$38,000 in student debt, a used car with an overheating problem, and an unpaid internship at a small publishing house. I lived in a shared apartment where I paid \$650 a month for a room that could barely fit a twin bed.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Confessions
The Algorithm That Loved Me Back
I never planned to fall in love with a machine.In 2015, I was an undergraduate student, majoring in literature, of all things. My world was filled with poetry, metaphors, and sonnets. The closest I had come to understanding a computer was opening Microsoft Word. But one summer afternoon, during an elective fair, a friend dragged me to a booth titled: "Intro to Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning."I scoffed. “Machine learning? What’s next? Machines painting like Van Gogh?”The guy at the booth smiled. “Actually, that’s already happening.”That sentence changed everything.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Futurism
THE SUDDEN LOVE OF A KING
King Valerius ruled with a heart as cold and unforgiving as the granite walls of his fortress. His kingdom, Eldoria, prospered under his iron fist, but its people lived in fear, not loyalty. Love was a word unknown to Valerius; he saw it as a weakness, a vulnerability that a monarch could not afford. His days were a monotonous cycle of council meetings, military drills, and solitary suppers, a routine he believed was the foundation of his strength. The only color in his life came from the gilded crests on his armor and the crimson wine in his chalice, a stark reflection of his passionless existence.
By noor ul amin5 months ago in Humans

