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Indie maker building small tools.

The note I keep sending

There is a note in my notes app called "china - for friends." It is a few years old now and I have sent it to maybe a dozen people. Every time someone tells me they are finally coming to visit, I open it, read it top to bottom, fix whatever has gone stale, and paste it into the chat. Then, a few weeks after they leave, I open it again and edit it based on what actually confused them. It might be the most useful thing I have ever written, and it is just plain text. Three lines The first versio...
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How fast is fast enough? A story about a 200-page PDF and a frozen tab

There's a specific kind of dread that shows up when you're building something that runs entirely in a browser tab: the moment you imagine someone dropping in the biggest, ugliest file they own, just to see what happens. For me that file was a 200-page scanned report someone had sent me during early testing, thick with embedded charts and full-page tables. I remember opening it locally and thinking, with real unease, this is going to lock the tab up, isn't it. That fear is worth taking seriously...
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I Have No Idea How Many People Use My Clock. I Prefer It That Way.

I run a small fullscreen clock site. No accounts, no ads, and — this is the part that still feels slightly uncomfortable to admit — no analytics. Not a stripped-down analytics setup, not a self-hosted privacy-friendly one. None at all. I genuinely do not know how many people open it in a given week, which theme they pick most, or whether anyone has ever kept it running for more than five minutes. The decision was easier to make than to live with Leaving analytics out was the easy part. The too...
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