Not a first one to mention this but I think the market is too small for smth like this, especially when people can use many existing services [simply combining them]. I was thinking at one point that Kamal-based PaaS could be interesting - give people a lot of convenience without vendor lock-ins and so on. But right now it would be hard.
I don't have any goals per se. But I'm trying to cultivate two relevant habits:
One is to be more strategic about where I spend my time rather than working on whatever comes across my path on a given day. This involves doing occasional reviews of my products, developing a (very rough) roadmap, being aware of the things that will substantially move my projects forwards.
The other habit is to "do it now". Especially the important things. Don't overthink things, don't try to plan out everything in detail. Instead of asking "what's needed to achieve this>" I will ask myself "what requirements aren't really requirements? what steps can I eliminate? how can I do it now?"
Those two seem somewhat at odds with each other, but I think they can be a powerful combo.
Not a first one to mention this but I think the market is too small for smth like this, especially when people can use many existing services [simply combining them]. I was thinking at one point that Kamal-based PaaS could be interesting - give people a lot of convenience without vendor lock-ins and so on. But right now it would be hard.
@marc and what about your goals? :)
I don't have any goals per se. But I'm trying to cultivate two relevant habits:
One is to be more strategic about where I spend my time rather than working on whatever comes across my path on a given day. This involves doing occasional reviews of my products, developing a (very rough) roadmap, being aware of the things that will substantially move my projects forwards.
The other habit is to "do it now". Especially the important things. Don't overthink things, don't try to plan out everything in detail. Instead of asking "what's needed to achieve this>" I will ask myself "what requirements aren't really requirements? what steps can I eliminate? how can I do it now?"
Those two seem somewhat at odds with each other, but I think they can be a powerful combo.