Seems like an attempt to re-define "the grind". According to Urban Dictionary[0], this has connoted:
staying "on the grind" means to work hard, always be hustling, or otherwise engaged in money-making or woman-procuring activities.
I'm not sure if this really ailgns with the mission statement. It's a phrase that's synonymous with "ambition", which historically had negative meanings[1][2]. Passionate artists for example usually suffer a lot, while the "ambitious" ones go too far in either trading the soul of their art for money[3] or try to restricting others from engaging with it is meaningful ways[4]. In many domains, not only art, prioritizing the grind over production creates a hostile environment where others have to lose. It's not possible to achieve without doing moral injury[5] to one's self.
What does the title mean? Being on social media is the opposite of "grinding" unless you run an direct to consumer business or an mlm. And if you run a direct to consumer business then this site is only helpful if your target audience is developers.
staying "on the grind" means to work hard, always be hustling, or otherwise engaged in money-making or woman-procuring activities.
I'm not sure if this really ailgns with the mission statement. It's a phrase that's synonymous with "ambition", which historically had negative meanings[1][2]. Passionate artists for example usually suffer a lot, while the "ambitious" ones go too far in either trading the soul of their art for money[3] or try to restricting others from engaging with it is meaningful ways[4]. In many domains, not only art, prioritizing the grind over production creates a hostile environment where others have to lose. It's not possible to achieve without doing moral injury[5] to one's self.
[0] https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=on+the+grind
[1] https://www.etymonline.com/word/ambition
[2] https://reference.jrank.org/governance/Ambition.html
[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42817713
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rights_management
[5] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/moral-injury