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Do you have any more information about this?

The setup is

install Tailscale on your Kobo

install Koreader

Install Tailscale on the machine that host your eBook collection app of choice

Add the OPDS URL from the collection app, replacing the local machine URL with the Tailscale URL

You can now browse and download your private collection from anywhere.

I went with Kavita since I wanted my eBooks treated as equals with my manga.


This is what I'm currently doing sans tailscale. I'm running Ubooquity on a server in my homelab as my OPDS service to serve the ebooks hosted on a mounted NAS. I can download any of those books from my Kobo with a few presses on Koreader. It's pretty great. My Kobo Forma is probably one of my best and most used tech purchases. I've had it since 2019 and couldn't be happier with the device + setup. Getting it set up with tailscale so I can fetch ebooks when I'm away from home sounds like a pretty good upgrade.

Underrated

While you're not wrong, I think this undersells a little how much Mitchell has given of his time to OSS. Yes, he's fortunate that he doesn't have to worry about money, but even when he did, he still contributed openly and freely.

That's part of what drew lots of us to HashiCorp in the first place - giving back.


It's a little tongue-in-cheek, but as you can see elsewhere in this discussion thread he mentions this himself on his own X account:

"get asked the same about terminals all the time. “How will you turn this into a business? What’s the monetization strategy?” The monetization strategy is that my bank account has 3 commas mate."

https://x.com/mitchellh/status/1964785527741427940

Take a good guess where the three commas come from.


Tres Commas!

I didn't think it was possible for anyone to express this thought more obnoxiously than DHH but here we are.

The obnoxious one here is the person obsessed with monetization, not the person who throws their ignorance back in their face. Every hobby these days has to be monetized; it's fucking gross.

Eh; it's maybe dumb to suggest the only way for a project to be sustainable is to monetize it, but responding with "I'm rich, you peasant, I'm above such concerns" is infinitely worse.

Is DHH (David Heinemeier Hansson) worth 100M USD? Google results say he is worth about 50M USD... so "only" two commas.

Three comma club is for billionaires.

I think the bigger thing here is that even with three commas in his bank account he lacks the good sense to not associate with DHH.

>The monetization strategy is that my bank account has 3 commas mate."

Having money doesn't mean that you'll have the motivation to continue working on something for free forever.


Free work is the most rewarding work on every metric but monetization in my experience, and when you hit road bumps you can pay your way out of it to keep going. Sounds like the literal dream

Without turning this into a brag session, this is my experience. I don't have to worry about money anymore, so I get to work on cool projects at my own pace, do things that probably sound pointless to most, and it doesn't matter if it's successful. The important thing is that I'm interested.

I'm not as talented as Mitchell tho.


There are a ton of different projects one can devote free work to. Eventually one will get bored and want to change things up.

Money begets the freedom to work on causes. Monetization was always a core part of Hashicorp, rather than being a bolt-on after years of OSS. Which is a good thing. (I was a customer of the first commercial offering from Hashicorp, their VMWare add-on for Vagrant)

But when you already have money, you can skip the “how can I work on this and not starve to death?” part.

If he kept his comments within the Zig community and didn't go all over social media denigrating GH employees, you'd be right.

You're allowed to have negative opinions of GitHub employees on social media.

Cool.

He hid the comments he made and apologized to the Zig community for his behavior. He never apologized to the people he harmed (the 'losers' at GitHub in this context).

[flagged]


You must be fun at parties.

Harm is damage to health. He damaged their health.

Thanks


That was insulting and I am thus harmed.

Edit: I upvoted you because I love parties.


> I do feel bad for hurting your feelings but I also strongly believe that you should not be proud of working for Microsoft, and particularly on GitHub for the last 5 years. I truly am sorry but you need to be called out.

Crocodile tears.

https://hachyderm.io/@andrewrk@mastodon.social/1156234452984...


Thank you for sharing this. :(

I've found that AI is decent at this.

They should have called it Atlas :)

LOL that indeed feels more common

Every big tech company probably has a project called Atlas.


Big companies oftentimes have cultures and leadership that lead to bad code.

> If the foundation is built on sand then that needs to be fixed.

Except this is the system working as designed. Leadership 1000% wants to do things as fast and as cheap as possible.


It works as designed if your goal is to get your next promo package. It does not work as designed if the goal is to actually make the company more profitable. This constant rushing rarely ends up in things bring delivered faster or cheaper in the long term or even the medium term.

> This constant rushing rarely ends up in things bring delivered faster or cheaper in the long term or even the medium term.

Being delivered faster or cheaper isn’t the goal. The goal is to look good while doing it. Telling your bosses ‘Yes sir!’ Is apparently a lot more palatable than saying ‘No can do’.


It depends a lot on the circumstance.

Profitable over what time horizon?

Any really. Rushing the team is more about looking good so you get promoted than about profit in any form.

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