I’ve been working on a programming language for a while, and this is one of the key bits of advice I’ve had in the back of my mind during that time.
People have come along and contributed occasionally, but for the most part, I’m doing everything: writing the compiler, standard library, documentation, editor integration, blog posts, evangelism of the programming paradigm, and so on. Despite the fact that I don’t scale, I’ll happily sit down with someone who’s trying out the language, help them get up to speed, and fix all the bugs and usability issues they report. It’s that kind of connection to people that not only drives interest in the project, but drives me to stay motivated.
I can’t say I fully understand my own success…or even whether it’s success. I’m not selling anything, just making the language I want to use. Maybe a few hundred lines of code have been written in the language by someone other than me. I’ve accumulated >450 stars on GitHub for a product that doesn’t even do anything yet. It’s certainly surreal, but it’s been pleasant. :)
For our first 100 customers we basically did all the setup work for them. Basically did a screenshare, clicked for them, told them what to do. Would sometimes leave the call, and spend 1-8 hours clicking for the customer.
Learned how customers wanted the product to work, and gained initial customers. Lost money on the setup but who cares.
Now setups are a 30 minute phone call where we teach customers how to click themselves.
Spent a month in university libraries handing out candy and asking groups of students to try out our sharing platform. We then would take what we learned that day and code changes/fixes before we left or when we got home so we could go out again in the morning.
Nearly every one of your Medium posts could be interpreted as a copyright violation. Copy pasting text and calling it a "curation" doesn't give you the right to publish others' works without their permission.
The internet is choke-full of content that was "recycled" and stripped of attribution. I wouldn't call it the cancer of the web, but perhaps algae overgrowth would be a fitting metaphor.
You would need to add something original and of value to have it accepted here.
Also, your apology is very tone-deaf. I imagine it pisses people off way more than the copyright issue.
[+] [-] evincarofautumn|8 years ago|reply
People have come along and contributed occasionally, but for the most part, I’m doing everything: writing the compiler, standard library, documentation, editor integration, blog posts, evangelism of the programming paradigm, and so on. Despite the fact that I don’t scale, I’ll happily sit down with someone who’s trying out the language, help them get up to speed, and fix all the bugs and usability issues they report. It’s that kind of connection to people that not only drives interest in the project, but drives me to stay motivated.
I can’t say I fully understand my own success…or even whether it’s success. I’m not selling anything, just making the language I want to use. Maybe a few hundred lines of code have been written in the language by someone other than me. I’ve accumulated >450 stars on GitHub for a product that doesn’t even do anything yet. It’s certainly surreal, but it’s been pleasant. :)
[+] [-] markholmes|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] statictype|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] forkLding|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] brianwawok|8 years ago|reply
Learned how customers wanted the product to work, and gained initial customers. Lost money on the setup but who cares.
Now setups are a 30 minute phone call where we teach customers how to click themselves.
[+] [-] rglover|8 years ago|reply
As customers sign up we ask if they want stickers and then send out a handwritten letter alongside a set (example: https://www.instagram.com/p/BWA5q95jADc/?taken-by=cleverbeag...).
[+] [-] nextstar|8 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] Prizewinner|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] seizethecheese|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] miguelrochefort|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] js7745|8 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] sabalaba|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] 0xdeadbeefbabe|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] DenisM|8 years ago|reply
You would need to add something original and of value to have it accepted here.
Also, your apology is very tone-deaf. I imagine it pisses people off way more than the copyright issue.
[+] [-] unknown|8 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] unknown|8 years ago|reply
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