
Welcome To Sudipbiswas.com
Sudip Biswas - Software Engineer of Facebook & Microsoft!
Sudip Biswas is a software engineer of Facebook & Microsoft that work for building Facebook App monetization Infrastructure and Microsoft Xbox app maintenance. it's also provide retire advice to early planning.
Hi, I’m Sudip Biswas
Thanks for stopping by my corner of the web
I work as a software engineer. My other professional interests include business strategy, investing, writing, real estates. I created this place to share some of the things I’ve done, am doing and learned.
Currently I reside in Seattle, Washington. I love the Pacific Northwest, and try my best to enjoy everything that PNW has to offer.
Say hi on email and social media!
Sudip Biswas Software Engineer Facebook Microsoft
Sudip Biswas, Manish Patil, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Shared-Constraint Range Reporting. International Conference on Database Theory 2015: 277-290
Sudip Biswas, Arnab Ganguly, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Ranked document retrieval for multiple patterns. Theor. Comput. Sci. 746: 98-111 (2018)
Sharma V. Thankachan, Manish Patil, Rahul Shah, Sudip Biswas: Probabilistic Threshold Indexing for Uncertain Strings. International Conference on Extending Database Technology 2016: 401-412
Sudip Biswas, Tsung-Han Ku, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Position-restricted substring searching over small alphabets. J. Discrete Algorithms 46-47: 36-39 (2017)
Sudip Biswas, Arnab Ganguly, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan:Space-efficient indexes for forbidden extension queries. J. Discrete Algorithms 50: 23-35 (2018)
Sudip Biswas, Arnab Ganguly, Rahul Shah: Restricted Shortest Path in Temporal Graphs. Database and Expert Systems Applications 2015: 13-27
Sudip Biswas, Arnab Ganguly, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Ranked Document Retrieval with Forbidden Pattern. Combinatorial Pattern Matching 2015: 77-88
Sudip Biswas, Manish Patil, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Succinct indexes for reporting discriminating and generic words. Theor. Comput. Sci. 593: 165-173 (2015)
Sudip Biswas, Arnab Ganguly, Rahul Shah, Sharma V. Thankachan: Forbidden Extension Queries. LIPIcs-Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics 45
Sudip Biswas, Stephane Durocher, Debajyoti Mondal, Rahnuma Islam Nishat: Hamiltonian Paths and Cycles in Planar Graphs. COCOA 2012: 83-94
Sudip Biswas, Debajyoti Mondal, Rahnuma Islam Nishat, Md. Saidur Rahman: Minimum-Segment Convex Drawings of 3-Connected Cubic Plane Graphs. COCOON 2010: 182-191
Early Planning To Retire advice
The memory of buying your first home will stay in your memory for life. For me it was even more special, since I bought my first home in the States when I was just a student.
Many of us, at the ripe age of 25 and below are still trying hard to make ends meet, while simultaneously paying back the coin we’ve sunk into our education. Not to mention, being a student is hard work. Really hard work. Deadline after deadline, exam after exam. So many places to be, and fires to put out!
How then, does one in this position find the resources to become a homeowner?
I have been there. As someone who’s navigated the standard-issue hardships of student-hood plus some more. I’m here to share my journey with you.
I am here to share how I bought my first home as a 3rd year immigrant student, and 17 more in last 3 years.
One of my life goals was actually to be financially free. A few years ago, I grew this passion for real estate investment back when I purchased my first property. From that moment onward, I realized that the quickest means of reaching this goal of financial freedom was to invest in real estate. If properly purchased, you can make a significant passive income from holding and buying real estate.
It is however, necessary to know that when you have a cash flowing rental property, it’s not always going to be dandy and fine. I think that if you are investing in a real estate property, it is essential to keep a sufficient cash reserve at hand so that you would be able to handle any tenant complaint or emergency repair.
The first ever property I acquired earned me a considerable sum in cash flow, after all loan payments, vacancies, and expenses has been accounted for.
Actually, it was a pretty nice deal, but I figured out quickly that owning three or more properties might not be enough, so i carried out a rough estimate and concluded that it would take up to 10 to 15 properties to produce what I considered as a “meaningful passive income”.
However, it took me a lot of effort and a few months to purchase a single property, so I thought to myself, how on earth was I going to purchase more than that?
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