sippndipp | 10 months ago
sippndipp's comments
sippndipp | 1 year ago
sippndipp | 1 year ago
sippndipp | 1 year ago
sippndipp | 3 years ago
Tightly integrates with my calendar. Easy, keyboard driven divide and conquer for my documents into tasks. Way better than all the other knowledge base apps.
sippndipp | 4 years ago
- it was four years without making any money
- with ~100k subs it's generating money
- everything grew organically
sippndipp | 5 years ago
This one here is frontpage HN :-)
Feel free to look at my post as well:
https://9elements.com/blog/developing-a-week-on-windows-with...
sippndipp | 7 years ago
sippndipp | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: What's a good algorithm to distribute data in a P2P network
sippndipp | 8 years ago
sippndipp | 8 years ago
Need #1: Since I don't know what my users will do I need to be agile and quickly adapt to business changes. Tool #1: Rails - the flexibility of RoR is still unbeatable. Especially if you're a startup this is really a timesaver. Furthermore it's no rocketscience to develop a decent frontend on top using React or Vue.
Need #2: Shitload of people will use my site. Tool #2: Elixir / Phoenix has kick ass performance and language and framework are well written and thought through.
Need #3: My whole team are frontend devs who just know JavaScript. Tool #3: Maybe Node.js is for you. In the past I've rarely seen a good Node.js backend project but if you're really disciplined (aka writing a lot of tests) it should be doable.
Need #4: My project is a FinTech and I need to talk to banks. Tool #4: Java/Scala/Clojure since you'll might talk to these services directly and all of the have JVM based SDKs.
Need #5: I'm a microsoft consultant. Tool #5: Well then go with C#/F#.
sippndipp | 8 years ago
It was roundabout 5 years just editing and making no money. Now it's making money - but just a side income.
1. Content is king! 2. Start to build a community (if you link someone in your newsletter just ping him on twitter). 3. Go to community events.
Doing ads on Facebook and Twitter actually didn't work that well.
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
sippndipp | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: How much hours of People / Meeting time does your day have?
I'd like to challenge a few things. I rarely have a moment where an LLM provides me a creative spark. It's more that I don't forget anything from the mediocre galaxy of thoughts.
See AI as a tool.
A tool that helps you to automate repetitive cognitive work.