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Hey,

Think about how much time disappears every day.

Ten minutes scrolling.
Twenty minutes jumping between feeds.
Hours gone — with nothing real to show for it.

Now imagine using just 15 minutes differently.

Fifteen minutes a day of focused reading something curated, thoughtful, and useful compounds faster than most people realize. One short session builds clarity. Clarity improves decisions. Better decisions change outcomes.

This habit changed my own path.

Consistent reading gave me ideas I could actually apply — in business, systems, and money. Not motivation. Leverage.

The problem today isn’t lack of information.
It’s overload.

Endless inputs create scattered thinking. You feel busy, but nothing sticks. Nothing compounds.

That’s why curation matters.

The Tech newsletter for Engineers who want to stay ahead

Tech moves fast, but you're still playing catch-up?

That's exactly why 100K+ engineers working at Google, Meta, and Apple read The Code twice a week.

Here's what you get:

  • Curated tech news that shapes your career - Filtered from thousands of sources so you know what's coming 6 months early.

  • Practical resources you can use immediately - Real tutorials and tools that solve actual engineering problems.

  • Research papers and insights decoded - We break down complex tech so you understand what matters.

All delivered twice a week in just 2 short emails.

A single high-quality source beats hours of random scrolling. Strong inputs create strong outputs. Distracting inputs create distracted results.

Here’s the simple practice:

• Pick one time you can protect
• Choose one high-quality source
• Read for 15 uninterrupted minutes
• Write down one insight
• Apply it the same day

That’s it.

Done daily, this builds a quiet advantage most people never develop.

Fifteen minutes won’t feel dramatic.
But over weeks, months, and years — it separates you from those who stay distracted.

Your mind compounds like capital.
What you feed it determines the return.

Talk soon,

Dyl - Founder of Relentlece.

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