I am a Data Analyst with over 2 years of experience working with SQL, Python, Excel, and Power BI. I enjoy turning raw data into meaningful insights, building dashboards, analyzing trends, and helping teams make data-driven decisions.
I have experience working with large datasets, KPI reporting, business intelligence, and data visualization. I'm detail-oriented, analytical, and always eager to learn new technologies and solve real-world problems through data.
Yeah, I get what you mean.
I’ll be straight with you.
After 14 years, this didn’t happen because you “missed one thing” or because you suddenly became a bad husband. When someone slowly checks out emotionally, it’s usually something that builds over time on both sides, not one clear mistake you can point to.
You can do everything “right” on paper (work, provide, stay loyal, help with kids) and still lose emotional connection if the relationship starts feeling routine, distant, or unspoken needs aren’t being met. And sometimes the other person also changes in a way you don’t even get to see until they’ve already moved on mentally.
The hardest part is what she said: “you’re a good man, but I’m not happy.” That usually means respect is still there, but feelings changed. And attraction/emotional connection isn’t something you can force back once she’s already emotionally attached to someone else.
Right now, trying to “fix what went wrong” with her will probably just keep you stuck in pain. The only real direction is focusing on yourself, not in a fake self-improvement way, but just rebuilding your own life and headspace after something that big.
Could it ever come back? In rare cases, maybe. But only if both people independently want it again, not through convincing or fixing.
For now, what you’re dealing with is grief, not a puzzle to solve.
If you want, tell me what the last 6–12 months looked like between you two, I’ll help you break it down properly without sugarcoating it.
You should choose MLM software mainly based on whether it supports your specific compensation plan, because that’s the core of your business logic. After that, make sure it can handle growth without breaking when your network expands, and that commission calculations are fully automated and accurate. Security also matters a lot since money and user data are involved. On top of that, check if it gives you useful reporting so you can actually understand performance, and whether it connects easily with payment systems or other tools you use. Finally, see if it’s flexible enough to adjust to your exact setup instead of forcing you into a rigid structure.
Prioritize in this order:
1. Deliverability (emails actually reaching inbox)
2. List management & compliance (clean lists, anti-spam rules, segmentation)
3. Automation (drip campaigns, workflows, triggers)
4. Analytics (open/click/conversion tracking)
5. Scalability & infrastructure
6. Pricing (last, since cheap tools often hurt results)
For providers like DigitalAka™ or similar, be cautious—always verify real deliverability performance, IP reputation, and independent user reviews before committing.
Bottom line: inbox delivery + list quality matter far more than features or price.
Microservices are often a good fit for high-load gaming systems because they allow independent scaling of services like matchmaking, chat, and payments, which helps handle peak traffic. However, they are not always the “optimal” solution on their own since they add complexity (latency, monitoring, distributed failures). Most real systems use a hybrid approach, microservices for scalable components and other optimized services/caching for real-time game performance.
What you're experiencing is very common in SaaS development. The challenge is that there is always another feature, improvement, or optimization you could build. Instead of trying to make the system perfect, focus on solving the most important problems for your users and prioritize features based on the value they deliver.
Talk regularly with your realtors, identify the features they use most and the pain points they face, and prioritize improvements that directly impact their productivity or revenue. Consider maintaining a roadmap and separating "must-have" features from "nice-to-have" ideas. Sometimes shipping a good solution and gathering feedback is more valuable than continuously refining a product that users are already happy with.
Remember, successful SaaS products evolve continuously, there is rarely a point where they feel truly "finished." The goal is progress and customer value, not perfection.
Yes, there are a few AI tools that can generate PowerPoint presentations and follow your company's branding to some extent. Tools like Gamma, Beautiful.ai, Canva Magic Design, and Microsoft Copilot for PowerPoint can create presentations from a prompt or document and apply custom themes, colors, fonts, and logos.
However, completely and automatically following an existing company PowerPoint template is usually not fully available in the free versions. The closest approach is to upload or recreate your company's brand kit and then let the AI generate slides using those settings. For strict adherence to an existing corporate PPT template, Microsoft Copilot combined with your organization's PowerPoint templates tends to work best, though it generally requires a paid subscription.
If your branding requirements are simple, Gamma and Canva offer some of the best free options to get started.
It’s actually pretty simple.
To create a Shopify account, just go to Shopify’s website, click “Start free trial,” enter your email, password, and store name, then follow the setup steps. You can run it from Saudi Arabia normally; later you just connect payments and shipping methods.
To find winning products on Amazon US, search for items in a niche and focus on products with lots of reviews, strong ratings (4+), and “Best Seller” tags. Read reviews to spot what people like or complain about, that’s where product ideas come from.
To source from China, use Alibaba, AliExpress, or similar sites. Search the same product, compare prices, check supplier ratings, and contact suppliers for bulk or dropshipping options.
Simple flow: find a product on Amazon → validate demand → find supplier in China → import to Shopify → sell and test marketing.
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