HACKER Q&A
📣 capableweb

What you up to? (Who doesn't want to be hired?)


Instead of talking jobs, what is everyone up to otherwise? Any interesting going on in life or with your hobby project?

Unfinished and novel ideas are of course most interesting, so feel free to share anything you're thinking about!


  👤 philangist Accepted Answer ✓
I won the IPO lottery and I’m in the middle ground between rich enough to never work again but not quite rich enough for the yachts/mansions/private jets lifestyle. I haven’t worked in 6 months and I’m struggling to find a larger meaning to my life beyond getting yet another tech job. I’ve considered going to college for a math degree, moving to my parents home country, and joining the military (among many other options) over the last few months. Just feeling very aimless so I’ve started reading Russian literature and spending hours on Reddit every day.

27/M (today was my birthday :)


👤 debruinf
Super frustrated by the state of videos for kids on youtube, especially in the arts and crafts department, i decided to launch a channel and start creating my own content. Basically, all videos start half decent but for some reason end in a big noisy mess, weird sounds, spoiling food, questionable product placements, zero creativity and always incentivize more watching and trapping viewers in the infinite ‘next video’ loop.

Instead, one of the goals for my videos will be to take a step back and inspire to create, zero commercial interest, not too much distractions and something parents can trust.

Still in the process of figuring out all the parameters, camera, editing, setup etc but its a lot of fun learning new skills. I have a million ideas for the content already so enough work to be done. If there is little to no ‘success’ in terms of viewers, i really don’t care since i enjoy all aspects of it and im building a nice catalog of creative videos to watch with my kid later. I have no public videos yet (coming very soon) but here are two samples of what to expect:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_3e0tawk45E

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=mBZStuxOUlc


👤 TaylorAlexander
Hah this thread is perfect. I just finished building my new four axis robot arm design. It’s all open source. Three months ago I started playing with a new planetary gearbox concept, where the first stage is in the middle with second stages on both sides. The first sun is driven by a shaft that goes through a hole in the second stage sun. The result is a very balanced joint design with parallel outputs. A good configuration for weak materials like plastic. And then the gearboxes and the frame are all integrated together, so this is not something where you assemble a gearbox and bolt it to the frame. The gearbox members and the frame members are unified.

I’m very happy with it so far! Video here:

https://twitter.com/tlalexander/status/1455320442642714625?s...

It’s open source, CC0 licensed. Please fork the design files here!

https://cad.onshape.com/documents/d663661f8c0c34e7a29bbfa6/w...

EDIT: you may prefer to watch the project and wait to fork it until I have fleshed out a few more things. In that case feel free to star this git repo and I will update it as I make progress.

https://github.com/tlalexander/brushless_robot_arm/


👤 colecut
My son's mom died of cancer last February, and two days later they found tumors in my then girlfriend/now late fiancee. She passed away last month.

I stopped working several months ago and have no immediate desire or need to go back to work.

I'm not sure if it's a blessing or curse to have so much free time to grieve.

Enjoying the downtime with occasional spontaneous bursts of tears.

Edit: thank everyone for the kind words. I put together this 4 minute tribute of our times together to honor her/us. She was beautiful.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DB5_1mdTgcM


👤 agf
I posted on a thread about burnout back in May about quitting my job[1] after nine years, this seems like an invitation to post an update.

I used the time off to travel around in a van, hiking, eating, camping, and visiting friends. I'm now back in the city and catching up all of the life stuff that I put on hold for the pandemic and / or travel -- minor remodeling, maintenance, friends I didn't really get to see during the pandemic, etc.

I've been making big-picture decisions about future work as I go but the next phase is to put in serious hours into the search (since I'm planning to move out side of my current network / FinTech). Looking to start something new sometime this winter.

If anyone has questions about taking a longer time off work (will be 6+ months for me) or about taking more time almost totally away from computers / tech (2+ months), feel free to thread Q's.

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27124604


👤 dcz_self
Too many ideas given the time, but now I'm focused on two:

1. Building an open source bicycle computer. It's been over 20 years since they arrived at the scene, and there still isn't one that you could hack! An outrage! No published sources yet, I'm getting stuck on not having much experience building physical things.

2. Getting rid of the directory hierarchy. I have 10K photos, 30K emails, 10000km of GPS tracks, and 10 years of chat logs. Why can't I find anything among them? I own a computer, after all. I have 10 folders called some variation of photos/Cologne/2020/flowers! Having to organize them myself is tedious and a fool's errand, so I'm leaning towards using a database as a file system, to let me just query for files. Geo queries using a map? Yes please. Selecting bounds on a timeline? Oh yeah!

Turns out I'm not alone, Microsoft tried this with WinFS, and failed. But the idea lives on: https://www.nayuki.io/page/designing-better-file-organizatio...

3. Writing. I hope I can find the time to expand on the above on my blog.


👤 tppiotrowski
A 2D slippy map that shows sun and shadow around the world.

Today’s sunset around Puget Sound: https://shademap.app/#47.89056,-122.66785,7z,1635813675213t


👤 david927
Could we make this a monthly post, just like the Who's Hiring one? I miss that aspect of HN.

👤 waldohatesyou
I wish I had something interesting to say here but honestly, kind of depressed. Not the clinical kind of course but more the aimless 24 year old kind.

I've been working at this startup (or perhaps scaleup would be a better term considering they're already worth 7 billion dollars). It's great career-wise. I'm learning a lot and I feel like I'm being compensated fairly. But I thought my life would feel "complete" once I was satisfied with my professional position but it still isn't. Not to mention, I'm not super sure where to go from here.

It doesn't help that I've been feeling awfully lonely. The close friends that I thought I made in university don't seem to care much for me these days. Don't get me wrong, I'm sure they're happy and whatnot. I'm not mad at them for choosing other folks over me, it just makes me wonder what the point of those friendships was in the first place.

But ah well, that's just life I suppose. I hope anyone reading this is having a better go of it than me :)


👤 harmmonica
Don’t think this is novel, but I’ve mentioned on an HN thread before that my friend and I were building (and have now built) a tiny house. We’d been complaining for years that housing was too expensive and so after doing a house flip and stops and starts on trying to build a spec house we decided to try a tiny house to see if we could build something move-in ready that looks (somewhat) nice and also is inexpensive.

Just started marketing it for sale a couple of weeks back. And we figure if we can’t sell it then we’ll rent it so that either way someone gets a roof over their heads for a price that’s just not really available in most locations these days.

https://www.weshelterpeople.com


👤 biased_coin
Managing an apartment complex (pro-bono) alongside a tech job. In Bangalore, it is normal to have a committee of apartment owners who oversee the operations, set up rules for residents, take up mini-projects for efficiency / beautification /long term maintenance and also manage the finances. This committee operates for a year and then passes on the reins to the next committee.

Our apartment complex has 850 apartments. This scale has interesting challenges:

- Communication (mostly Whatsapp, sometimes email) : how residents with different language abilities understand/misunderstand instructions and announcements

- Managing outages of electricity, water, lifts for maintenance ( Childrens exams, residents with medical conditions, work from home)

- Employee politics and the need to break up unholy alliances ( e.g. Employee tie-up with particular vendor, some employees creating emergencies so that some large expenses are quickly approved, one group purposely slowing down a diligent employee)

From a tech perspective, it's the machinery and equipment that is interesting

- distribution of water, electricity, gas

- Sewage treatment plant

Since ours is a 10+ year old apartment complex, almost all of the equipment needs some work and there are frequent failures. It requires the committee to understand and make decisions about quick fixes vs long term , validate costs of fixing and manage inconvenience caused by outages.

4 months in, this has been a great experience outside of the usual tech company issues :)


👤 bri3d
I have been reverse engineering automotive ECUs for a while now - https://github.com/bri3d/VW_Flash . It's a nice change from my day job in enterprise engineering management, and I've met some fun people and taught several folks a lot of new concepts, which is always extremely rewarding.

My latest project has been reverse engineering the data-flash encryption in Simos18 ECUs. After some work, it oddly appears the encryption algorithm used is Mifare Hitag2. I'm hoping to be able to re-encrypt NVRAM channels soon, although the overall data flash "filesystem" / channel-system layout needs some more work before I am ready to release my findings.


👤 iamwil
I started selling spice blends, the flavor being "Beef Noodle Soup".

After seeing "Everything but the Bagel" at Trader Joe's, I thought it was the first spice blend I saw named after a dish. Interesting! If people can have bagels anywhere, what else would people want to have anywhere? I asked my partner what sort of flavors would be familiar to people we knew, and she came up with the triumvirate: Pho, Ramen, and Beef Noodle Soup. And then I proceeded to do nothing about it for months, because I thought making a spice blend was the dumbest idea I've ever had.

Then during a Zoom chat with a friend, he suggested I liked writing code too much, so I should try to sell something without writing code. I suggested, how about spices? He laughed in my face, so here we are. (he was quite supportive right after laughing in my face)

So far, people seem to like it. It's good on eggs, rice, noodles with sesame oil, in olive oil for bread dipping, spinach, and dipped with a super Irish scone from Mary O’s in NYC. I never tried that last one. A customer told me it was good.

And yes, you can use it to make a small bowl of beef soup. If you're intrigued, you can buy a bottle here:

https://impromptu.shop


👤 stickyricky
A couple of things. All unfinished (of course).

First idea, a website that combines Reddit (or HN) and Discord. The goal is to create ephemeral, real-time communities (like this thread). I find discord too exclusionary to bring strangers together. And reddit is not dynamic enough to encourage relationship formation. With this site, you post a thread, people start chatting, there's a simple interface for groups of people to break off the public chat and go into a private chat or into a webrtc call. Once the thread loses momentum the chat room sort of dies. And people move onto the next thread.

Backend is written in Go. Frontend will likely be Elm. Redis for pubsub. Postgres for crud.

Second idea, an Elm-like language for building linux applications (and crucially linux-phone applications). I'd really like to de-throne apple and google from the smartphone market. I think a dead simple language like Elm + a super simple, standardized dev environment + no weird configuration or new conventions to learn would be a killer feature for the linux platform. Something like Elm-UI would attract a wave of new developers to Linux.

Unfortunately, I've never made a programming language before. So I'm working through "Crafting Interpreters" to get started.

Third, possibly finding a SWE in Miami and starting a software consultancy partnership. Could be fun and lucrative but I've never been on the business side before. So likely this idea will stay half-baked for a lot longer.


👤 protoduction
Half a year back or so I built a mini SaaS product that failed, now I'm in the process of open sourcing it so that everybody can freely host it for themselves. Here's the project homepage https://magiclogin.net, it was/is transactional e-mails and e-mail authentication as a service.

Getting it ready for open sourcing is a lot more work than I anticipated, I don't want to just dump it in a Github repo and have nobody be able to actually use it, so I'm making deployment easier and writing docs on how to run it yourself.

I didn't build the project to make money necessarily, it was mostly a learning project. That doesn't mean that I didn't hope it would be at least moderately succesful financially. But it was a case of "build and they won't come" and my other projects took off much more so I couldn't justify trying to market/pivot it. The final nail in the coffin came when I received a cease and desist letter because apparently a vc-funded auth provider trademarked the term "Magic Login".. So yeah..


👤 biztos
I just bought what will eventually become an artists’ residency, and we will start renovating it later this month. It will probably take about two years to get it started. The plan is to have a few artists a year come for about a month each and make art under the influence of the crazy dramatic landscape there. It will not be a paid thing, I’m financing it myself. At first it’ll have to be informal but eventually I want to have some kind of foundation running it so I can assist artists with visas where necessary.

I find it very exciting to work on a big long-term project like this, though it’s also frustrating because I’m doing it from a significant distance. Self-inflicted frustration but still.

Also, I’m learning a new language and moving to a new country, slowly but surely. Well slowly anyway. The residency is in yet another country. Maybe my life is complicated.

I didn’t win any lottery, but with a little juggling I had enough for a year or two without a day job. I was originally going to concentrate on just making art (I’m an artist as well as a techie) and trying to get settled in the new country.

This has worked pretty well considering the state of the world, but with a limited runway I will start looking for something to do in the industry next year. Maybe an indie project, maybe a startup, maybe just contracting.

The art center was in the back of my mind for a few years, and now that it exists (as a piece of land with some concrete on it anyway) I am quite happy to have a specific project that should bear fruit on a longer time scale than just a painting or a gig, and it helps that it’s not my source of income (like a company would be) nor existentially important (like kids). I can do more, or less, with it as circumstances allow.

Anyway that’s what I’m up to. In the likely event some of the art is tech related I will do a Show HN about it some day.


👤 Const-me
I'm making a smartphone OS for my personal use. Gonna opensource under GPLv2 once ready.

OS kernel is Alpine Linux from https://postmarketos.org/ The entire userland is custom: graphics is on top of drm, kms, gles2, FreeType. Audio is on top of ASIO with just a few third party libraries like soxr, fdk-aac, minimp3. IPC is mostly domain sockets, input is raw input, wifi is controlled through wpa_supplicant.

Most of the code is in C#, .NET 5. Only 25% of code in C++, either SIMD heavy math like vector spline tessellation, or to consume libraries like FreeType designed to only be usable from C.

Got 2 devices to test, ARM64 Pinephone, and ARMv7 LG Hammerhead.

Graphics stack is good by now, works on both. The only large missing piece is accelerated video decoding. The highest level was inspired by MS WPF, with XML instead of XAML, and a variant of CSS for styling. Performance is OK, uses couple percepts CPU while rendering animations at 60Hz, because GPU-centric architecture all the way down. Found a freelancer to help with GUI design, so far so good.

Audio is in progress: mp3 playback works, capture and high-level mixer controls missing. Too bad the LG lacks Linux kernel drivers so I'm only testing these pieces on Pinephone.

After the audio, gonna start integrating GSM modem: being able to call people is one of the use cases I care about.


👤 nicbou
I run a website that shows immigrants how to settle in Berlin.

These days I'm thinking of codifying more things, so that people could fill a form and get answers instead of reading a long article. For example, a simple calculator that replaces pages and pages of information. I made a German health insurance calculator last week that saves a lot of reading and gives accurate results.

Aside from that, I'm building a timeline thing that puts all the personal data I can get my hands on onto a browsable timeline. It's a sort of enhanced journal.


👤 wraptile
I've started a free education blog on web-scraping: https://scrapecrow.com/

Web-scraping and reverse-engineering is such a brilliant subject in my opinion and there's an unsurprising lack of resource in this area as it's a rather secretive medium - as a good scraping/reverse engineering strategy is often considered to be a business secret.

It started off as a need to not repeat myself on stackoverflow. Web-scraping is a common question subject and the same questions would be asked over and over again. I couldn't find explicit resources available so I wrote them myself! Now I'd often answer question with specifics and point to full article for further reading which people seem to appreciate and come back with follow ups less often.

I'm still working out the kinks - especially pacing, brevity and editing - though it has been a really enjoyable ride so far. Finally as a backend engineer it finally got me to get over the front-end hump. I've learned some pretty css and general web building - it's often frustrating but surprisingly fun!


👤 atomicnumber3
I'm working on a 2d multiplayer game where you play as the leader of an MMO guild. I'm shooting for it to feel like playing WoW without actually having to play WoW all day. Same dopamine levers, same time horizons, but instead of being the guy farming Frost Lotus and Saronite, you're the guy telling people to go farm Frost Lotus and Saronite and making sure the alchemist makes the right amounts of Flask of Endless Rage and Flasks of the Frost Wyrm to get you through the raid next week.

It's basically a simulator/management spin on MMOs. It's still on the stage side of the fourth wall - it's not like a meta kind of tongue in cheek thing or anything. It's not YouTuber simulator or anything similar.

I'm using phaser 3 and some undetermined python web stack - currently using flask and sqlalchemy. My time horizon is ~years at this point, I've been working on it for about 3 months and progress is steady but glacial since I have 1 busy job, 2 kids, and 0 gamedev experience (though significant MMO gaming experience, for as much as that helps, heh). I am but a humble data infra engineer by day so this is pretty alien programming for me (though at least I know what I'm doing on the backend?).

I have some nominal amount of frontend experience but normally I use Rails and React, but I decided to forego both for this project, with the entire game being in Phaser's engine (though I'm sure at some point I'll have a react website too) and using python on the backend because I just generally think python is better than Ruby as of python 3, mainly because I prefer how Python 3 did official type hints, and I don't particularly like Sorbet (though comparing python3 type hints to sorbet is unfair to sorbet, all I would want from sorbet is hinting).

Anyway, I'll admit, I want to make an MMORPG. But I can at least concede that a traditional "wow-killer" MMO is pretty much out of the reach of a single dev. My current vision seems to me like a fun "do you ever wish you played wow but don't actually want to play wow" kind of thing that is significantly more likely to be within the reach of someone who has 0-2 hours to work on this per night.


👤 tralarpa
I reverse engineer/decompile games (and sometimes applications) from the 80s/early 90s for fun. The more complex the program, the more fun it is. As an extra challenge, I try to avoid runtime monitoring (i.e. in an emulator) and try to rely as much as possible solely on what I see in the binary file.

Other people do sudokus, I stare for hours at disassembled code to figure out what complex data structure the game is using to handle its 3D graphics or game logic. It's a kind of archelogy... Rediscovering a piece of code no one has seen for 30 years.

I am wondering whether there is a way to earn money with that skill? I guess it is still illegal to sell unauthorized reverse engineered ports of games, even if they are 30 years old :)


👤 lovich
Kinda just stare at the sky a lot. Went from a job working 60-80 hours a week nonstop with no expectation of time off if you got a call to one with 1/10th the effort needed for the same pay.

Feels surreal at difference in compensation vs effort in, especially because I’m more productive at the new place.

Not really sure what to do with all my free time when there’s no fires to put out


👤 gsinclair
I’m slowly developing a note-taking ecosystem that’s kind of duct-tapey but works well for me. Nothing is hosted anywhere yet, but the main thing is the ideas.

I find I want to _accrete_ information, not mutate it (in most cases), so the main organisation is chronological. But tags are important to find related information and see the chronological development of one “thing”, be it a work task, a personal hobby, etc.

But here’s the big idea: information can have an expiry date so that you can use it for years and not get buried in clutter. It’s as simple as tagging, say, exp+3w to set an expiry date three weeks after creation. There are other meta-tags too, like imp+2m means the information is “important” for two months but not after that, and it doesn’t expire.

The ideas have been percolating for years, and it’s fun to finally be working on it properly, albeit in fits and starts.


👤 redmattred
I’ve been making some art for an experimental art show called “Convivial Machines” at Museum of Boulder that just opened this past week.

The main project is an interactive painting called the “Musical Dot Orchestra” that lets you scan a hand painted QR code and “play” a musical dot that appears in the painting.

Some photos + videos: https://www.instagram.com/p/CVokUYBMaXF/

https://www.instagram.com/p/CVbTpAaAHRY/

The “painting”:

https://dots.pindarlabs.com/viewer

The UI for participants:

https://dots.pindarlabs.com/dots/blue https://dots.pindarlabs.com/dots/purple https://dots.pindarlabs.com/dots/magenta https://dots.pindarlabs.com/dots/yellow


👤 joe__f
I'm healing from PTSD, I took two years off work and then the last nine months I just finished up my PhD in mathematical physics working part time. I'm still disabled in different ways, I get triggered by groups of people so I can't socialise very easily I'm kind of slowly reintroducing interacting with society.

I had an interview for a postdoc in my field last week and I'm waiting on whether I got offered a job or not, I think I'm quite likely to get it. I've got a consistent little voice in my head saying, "don't take it, don't have a job just spend your time on learning how to talk to people again and think about working later" but it seems kind of crazy, if I get offered the job it's everything I've worked towards for ten years.

I've been reading HN for about 6 months and I registered a few weeks back. I guess I'll probably going down some kind of tech route in a year or so if I don't get a position in academia.


👤 artificialLimbs
Started programming 4 years ago because wife gave me idea for brilliant, never been done before video game. Detoured down web stack just to get a job. Have since become a programmer for a University and had 2 kids. Maybe I'll start back up on the game in 10 years or so. Am > 40 years old and feels like life is just getting started for me.

👤 93po
I started taking steroids two weeks ago. 500mg/week testosterone. They haven't even really kicked in yet (takes about 3 weeks to get really testosterone levels up) but I'm feeling real good and I'm really excited with all the weight gain I've had so far this year. I started at around 155 in June and today I'm up to 180. A lot of it is water weight I'm sure but I'm excited to hit over 200 in the next 5 months of my first testosterone cycle. A fair bit of that will be fat but I really want to over-eat than under-eat. I'm really happy with how I look already and I've added 2.5 inches to my biceps since June.

Testosterone supplementation is a lot safer than some people think it is. It's still not the best thing for your body and it does put stress on it, but honestly I'd put it at about the level of moderate to heavy alcohol use (depending on how you define "heavy"). Except instead of destroying your liver to get drunk you're getting muscular af and looking great.

I do also want to get hired but I posted in there on a different account :)


👤 version_five
I don't want to be hired and I also don't have any project going on.

Basically "between ideas" and desperately want to come up with something before I have to give up and get a job. It's not healthy to be idle too long.


👤 adamrmcd
Working on a hardware startup. Building an epaper based tablet. In fact, one of my test PCBs just arrived earlier today from OSHpark[1]. Still a WIP but I'm looking forward to cooking some electronics tonight on a hotplate :)

I love doing this work. (Electrical engineering, firmware design, cloud backend, etc.) I just really wish I went to school for the EE though.

[1] https://oshpark.com/shared_projects/FBeESNgs


👤 timwaagh
I have grudgingly accepted the fact that I'll never be hired unless it's on the cheap. And I already have a job. So although I still talk to recruiters occasionally I never end up pursuing an opportunity anymore. The risk of loss of income outweighs any marginal salary gains I could have. I don't have the energy to go after things like Amazon which require serious studying to get in. I got caught violating a rule that I can't rent out to more than two people and had to pay a 3000€ fine and of course suffered a big loss of income (it was worth it though, I own my house mortgage free thanks to my decision to break this rule). I discovered stock investments. So far it's not gone so well because I got caught by the spac selloff. Recently started swing/day trading and I'm now seeing a plus sign for overall gains which is good. Maybe I'll be a better trader than I am a programmer. I'm certainly greedy enough for it. Oh and I got my driver's license after two years of struggling and probably tens of thousands of euros in costs. I'm only allowed to drive an automated shifter but I'm really glad I can. So now I'll have to look for a car which is nice but also costly. My girlfriend is complaining about us not going to Budapest for a Christmas market because of all this but I guess she'll have to swallow that. She's expensive enough as it is.

👤 PaulDavisThe1st
Continuing to add Ableton Live "clip launching" features to Ardour, and along the way fix bugs with our new time representation implementation (which features such things as an int62_t).

But also, over the weekend, helped construct a new 2m diameter horno (outdoor oven) from adobe bricks and mud mortar for the Santa Fe Botanical Garden as part of Santa Fe Community College's ADOB-112 (Wall Construction) course.


👤 adriand
What a great thread. I’ve been learning finger drumming on a pad controller (Maschine MK3), going through a course called Quest For Groove. I’ve been into making electronic music for a long time but this is my first attempt to learn a musical instrument and the fact it fits into my musical ecosystem so neatly (because of its digital nature, it’s not “real” drumming) makes it an even more rewarding experience.

I’ve also been jamming regularly with electronic musicians all over the world using an app called Endlesss, there is a version for Mac OS that lets you easily feed synth output and so on into it. It’s like a cloud-based live looper that sort of works like git: what you add to the jam are like git commits that publish to everyone else while synced to the beat, so it gets around the issue of network latency. It’s hard to explain but very fun and it’s made me a way better electronic musician.


👤 jvanderbot
Just had twin girls. I have a feeling that will be my life for a while.

👤 andy800
I've worked at casino resorts for the past 15 years. With a vast number of functions and departments within a single resort, just about anybody can find work at one, if they choose. So I built a job search engine just for this industry:

https://www.casinojoblist.com

What I really wanted to focus on was extremely easy search, high info density, up-to-date data, and no hurdles (logins, profiles, etc). And a little bit of flair (multiple casino-related themes). Mostly happy with it, so far.


👤 overthemoon
I'm making a browser game. It's an idea I've had for a long time and had several false starts on it. I've had a lot of trouble in the past seeing personal projects through, but I just passed a major milestone and I couldn't be happier about it. I'm trying to be better about balancing the fun parts (implementing a map system in canvas) against the tedious parts (getting rails+typescript+docker+react up and running and configured), focusing on doing a little at a time.

👤 gpaul
I've been steadily sinking deeper into Go (the board game, not the PL) for the last few years. I keep thinking that my enthusiasm for it will dry up soon, but it just keeps increasing. The depth is immense, every few months I feel like I'm swimming along the bottom of the ocean, then I come to a continental shelf and as I stare into the depths below, I realize that I've only explored the shallows, I dive, and leave the surface behind even further.

👤 piettes
A few years ago I joined an Improv groups. The idea was to do something completely different and to get out of my comfort zone. Works terrifically.

Turns out that the people organizing those groups also have a lot of different projects, from normal theater acts to workshops in schools to teach kids foreign languages via theater techniques. Also turns out that that (oh surprise !) they have a some IT requirements and they can't really handle that themselves. So I have been helping them for 2 years now; designing websites, managing wordpress, setting up a Google Workspace, managing contacts, consulting on project management... (nothing part of my daily job). But also a lot of random stuff, like organizing a festival, being a cameraman for a live stream night...

In short: join an association / NGO / charity. You will meet really great people, and bringing basic IT knowledge can sometimes make a huge difference for them.


👤 drivers99
Going through "Nand to Tetris" (the version that is part II on coursera). Almost got the VM to assembly translator working. (Week 8 of the course.) Should be able to finish debugging it tonight after work.

👤 boplicity
Good news: This year, we've doubled the revenue in our (now) core business. Bad news: This is keeping me really, really busy. I need to figure out how to offload some of the admin work, as most of what I'm doing is writing emails. My job has somehow become a mix of course administrator, manager, marketer, customer service person, tech person, business owner, podcast host, etc....

Really need to figure out how to rein things in. Like many entrepreneurs, I'm much better at thinking of exciting new things than I am at thoughtfully reducing my workload.


👤 wrapupandkeepit
Learning violin and music theory as an adult after putting it down in middle school. Brewing korean rice wine and other similar fermentation projects. Trying to learn linear algebra by applying concepts to solve advent of code problems with julia.

👤 BinRoo
Reading a textbook on abstract algebra so I can ground myself to the stability of mathematics. The country, the world, it all changes too quickly but at least this is forever.

👤 mindcrime
I'm on vacation from my dayjob this week, so I have a lot of time to catch up on side interests for the next couple of days.

Right now I'm mostly still just deep-diving into various bits of "stuff" related to AI. I just finished reading a The SOAR Cognitive Architecture by John Laird, and Engineering General Intelligence Part 2 by Ben Goertzel, as well as Words and Rules by Stephen Pinker. Also spent some time building and installing all of OpenCog, and installing SOAR. The goal is to start messing around with both, and start actually implementing some simple agents.

I'm also now reading Foundations of Computational Linguistics: Human-Computer Communication in Natural Language by Roland Hausser, and have a book on Cognitive Modeling queued up.

And I need to find some time to get back to working with Apache River (the OSS version of what Sun used to call JINI).

If I'm feeling inspired one day soon, I might finally finish wrapping up the software for my "convection oven to reflow oven" conversion project. The hardware parts have all been done for months, and even most of the code is written, but I sort of mentally stalled out on that and just haven't bothered to push everything across the finish line. Really need to wrap that all up.


👤 Washuu
I needed a camera slider that was not thousands of dollars and did not require someone else to operate. So I designed, printed, built, and programmed my own to use AI/face/object tracking to follow me around.

Video overview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLo_nu0BSLk

Thingiverse files: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4982093

I also have been spending more time actually creating video content. I used to do a bunch in the early YouTube days, but I hit a decade long bit of depression.


👤 mikelevins
Well, let's see.

I'm working on my fourth science fiction novel. Ive been working on it for about four years. The first one took about three months. The second one took about six months. The third one took a bit over a year. It seems I've been challenging myself more as I go.

I've been recording a song I wrote in about 1982. I was in an obscure experimental electronic rock band that no one ever heard of in the 1980s. Nowadays I'm not in a band, but I play better than I used to and can afford much better equipment, so I make a hobby of slowly making recordings that I hope will be better than the ones we made back in the day, and writing new parts and arrangements and sometimes new songs.

I've been working on a presentation server for Common Lisp programs. Someone approached me for help learning how to do some UI work for Lisp programs, and I helped, but then we started tinkering, and now we're trying to figure out how to make a reusable thing that we can both benefit from repeatedly. Also, it might turn out to be handy in my day job.

And being a good friend to my dog and my close relatives.


👤 ajxs
I've been creating an annotated disassembly of the Yamaha DX7 synthesiser's firmware ROM. It's been going very successfully.

After this project is complete, I plan to build a small platform for people to host webrings. I know it's not going to revolutionise how people use the internet. I think it will be a nice service though. I loved this era of the internet. I have a great domain to go along with it.


👤 spike021
I got a puppy and I'm its single caregiver. I love having him around but I didn't realize it'd mean being on-call 24/7 plus the rotations on my team at work when I'm really on-call. That's made for some..interesting times.

Having a furry little companion is fun, though, and I'm getting out and socializing way more than before.

Overall a net positive, IMO. Just a lot of work and responsibility.


👤 scarecrowbob
Since this summer, I've been doing audio-visual work and playing in an improvisational jam band, doing over-night parties in UT, CO, and AZ.

It's really fun to play in; usually we do a couple sets for various sub-formations of the band who write songs, and then we improvise a set for a couple of hours. Everyone in the band plays multiple instruments (keys, synths, guitar, violins, flutes, trumpets, drumset, etc).

We've been having a lot of fun out in the desert. We bought a generator, put a bunch of lights and sound out in an arroyo, and stay up late playing music.


👤 KittyCatCuddler
Getting back into 3D modeling (not professionally, I'm a data engineer by day).

Working on some assets for a new scene. Here's my most recent render: https://www.reddit.com/r/blender/comments/qiklmf/practicing_...

Along with some of my other recent work: https://rupsis.gumroad.com/


👤 arthurcolle
I just moved to Miami, so mostly unpacking and dealing with claims for broken stuff. Context is I've been working remote for the company I previously worked for, so just keeping the owners of capital happy while I continue my life haha.

Separately, I have been continuously iterating on my market data collection systems (leveraging Airflow for task orchestration and dependent tasks management) for use in investment management systems and market intelligence research. Going pretty well so far, but had to move around some money to slide into this new life. Going fine so far, just budgeting and spending as much time outside as I can.

I have to say, living in subtropical weather makes it a little challenging to "continue", to so speak, my Northeastern lifestyle, when I just want to be outside all the time haha.

If anyone is in the South Florida area, would love to meet up and discuss tech/cryptos/mixology/trading/beach life, whatever... cheers


👤 djrockstar1
Great thread, feels like a time capsule for some of the people that are starting new things in life, moving to a new city, getting a start-up off the ground, trying to get used to their new lifestyle. I hope I can come back to this thread some time in the future and reminisce as I'm sure many of you will.

To answer the question, I'm working full-time at a job that I feel completely hopeless at. Basically fresh out of college and I'm working at a place where I can't communicate with like 95% of the development team due to language differences, so I'm stuck working on an undocumented codebase with no guidance/on-boarding/help whatsoever. Lots of trial and error to figure out how stuff works, and a fair bit of going around the current code and working directly with libraries because I don't have the time/energy to try to understand the layer the people before me built on top of that library.


👤 playpause
I had to stop work recently due to illness, I might be able to start again in a few months, we’ll see. I’ve been spending my extra spare time (when able) making an experimental GUI for grokking time. I guess it’s in line with the ‘4,000 weeks’ philosophy mentioned elsewhere in these comments. More precisely, it’s a tool for creatively designing a full-screen, zoomable, interactive timeline (of, eg, your life so far, and maybe future plans). Unlike a traditional digital calendar, it shows time as a continuous line with multiple tracks in parallel (eg a track for places you’ve lived, a track for jobs you’ve worked…), and it’s geared towards introspection and exploration.

I don’t really know where it’s going, maybe it’s just me navel-gazing while I’m unwell, but it feels interesting as a UI. If anyone likes the sound of it and would like beta access when I’m ready to share it, let me know.


👤 bjelkeman-again
Building circular food production systems. Local, automated, data driven. Some stuff posted here, but much more going on. http://cirkularodling.se/build-an-aquaponic-indoor-farm-part...

👤 cobertos
COVID has sent me on quite a life detour re-evaluating my priorities. Tried my hand at some freelance and realized I'm not cut out for the networking aspect, at least where I'm at right now.

A good chunk of the past years free time has gone into one codebase. I'm hoping to create a new interface for myself that truly decouple data from UI abstractions. I'm just so sick of the day-in-day-out dealing with app UI/UX refreshes, forced OS updates removing and killing functionality that worked for _me_, dark patterns preying on my attention and time and at times winning, the amount of time to replicate any user interface I use.

I'm running out of money though so I'm applying like crazy to jobs again. Upset feeling like life's priorities are only to survive, forgoing a lot of other things to find necessary time to do stuff. But pushing through I suppose


👤 aynyc
I'm a fairly happy-go-lucky kind of guy and I'm just focusing on raising my kids.

For all of you who shared your success stories. I admire your passion, love, and luck! I hope nothing but the best for you in the future.

For those who are down in their luck at the moment, I hope you can get the help you need and ride thru the bad times.


👤 truly
I programatically create educational videos on fundamental algorithms and data structures, a side project that I'm very excited about. I'm creating the videos using Python and the manim library.

My latest video is on insertion sort and you can check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jF-8RcO_9ds.

I am still developing a recipe for the videos, but it is a definitely a lot of fun.


👤 pugworthy
I moved to a new team where we leverage the idea of precise dispensing of fluids but apply it to life sciences. A pipette is all about dispensing a precise amount where you want it - so is a printer. We think outside the box on that. Feels good to be making something to make people healthy and not to just sell consumables.

I also finished walking every street in my city a while ago. See https://citystrides.com/users/31460/map#44.56456589999999,-1... Lot of fun, lost 10 pounds, saw a ton of fun stuff I had no idea was here (even after 40 years).

And I finally am finishing a classic (1800's) sailing ship wooden model I've had for ages. A lot of fun to do something very non-software.


👤 ludocode
I recently released a new version of my C MessagePack library MPack [1] with a cool new feature to dynamically calculate the size of maps and arrays during encoding. Having to always specify the size of containers up-front was a pain. I believe it's the only C/C++ MessagePack implementation that can do this. Of course bugs appeared immediately so I am working on a patch release.

I am also working on and off on my C template library Pottery [2]. I haven't pushed any code in a while; having a day job and young children makes progress slow :(

[1]: https://github.com/ludocode/mpack

[2]: https://github.com/ludocode/pottery


👤 jdhn
I'm working on my very first side project with a friend/coworker. I've never really done a side project before, which makes me feel incredibly unaccomplished when looking at what others are posting in this thread.

As for life in general, I think I'm moving either back to Michigan or Florida once my lease is up and perhaps buying a house. Ultimate goal is to get a place with a large, sunny roof so I can install solar panels and the proper hardware[0] to have a microgrid so I can have power even if the electricity goes down.

[0]https://newsroom.enphase.com/news-releases/news-release-deta...


👤 tdstein
I didn't win the IPO lottery, but I won the life lottery and am fortunate to be living off my spouse's salary for the immediate future. I quit my full-time position a few months back. Since then, I've been exploring different "work" replacements. I tried freelancing and noodled on starting my own business. Finally, I've decided to apply for a Ph.D. program.

But, the most important thing I've learned these past few months is that work isn't life. Instead, I'm beginning to view "work" as a hobby that I enjoy. Not the thing that is going to provide absolute meaning to my existence. I feel better and have a much easier time de-stressing.

I just hope I can maintain this perspective if I am accepted and commit to graduate school.


👤 lamroger
Launched https://caratdrop.com/ - a secondhand diamond marketplace - a few months back but don't have the audience and marketing to such a small and hidden sliver of customers is difficult. Rethinking the idea, maybe as a discovery website for people to find custom jewelers, with an emphasis on ethical and sustainable practices. If anyone thinking about buying an engagement ring, happy to chat! roger[at]caratdrop.com

My 2015 WRX got flooded in Hurricane Ida ='[ and now I'm playing the waiting game for a Model 3.

It's been a hectic few months with the flood, doggo getting sick, work ramping up - looking forward to resetting my routines / habits.


👤 2sk21
I am in my 50s and retired last year. I am really enjoying my retirement as I am getting a chance to read a lot of stuff that I never had time for when I was working in math and philosophy.

I spent most of my career working on server side stuff. So, just for fun, I am currently studying Swift, Swift UI and getting used to the Apple developer tools. It has been a very interesting experience to say the least.


👤 nitnelave
I'm working on a dirt-simple LDAP server for self-hosted user management, written in Rust, with the frontend also written in Rust (compiled to WASM): https://github.com/nitnelave/lldap

I had an MVP release last month, and working on compatibility with more services, password reset and so on.


👤 _npza
As a self taught programmer, I struggled to get a job. So I decided to build [name redacted], which has now turned into my full time job.

[name redacted] comparison website for mobile phone contracts and SIM contracts.

[link redacted]

Being my first project with no prior experience behind me, I made a lot of mistakes along the way. It's been a great learning experience and I've learnt more than I thought possible.

However, I really struggle with imposter syndrome. I'd be embarrassed to ever show my code to anyone else. I'm never happy with what I build and I can't shake the feeling that all of my code is a complete mess. I think I could learn a lot if I actually got a programming job working with others in a team.


👤 mawise
Building an open-source self-hostable Facebook alternative called Haven[1]. Focused on posting private content, includes per-friend private RSS feeds and a built-in RSS reader. I've been using it to securely share pictures of my kids with friends and family for the last few years.

[1]: https://havenweb.org


👤 johncs
I've been contributing to the IRC ecosystem again. Working on bringing some IRCv3 [1] features to The Lounge [2] right now.

Tryna do some neat things with the virtual tabletop I've built (Shmeppy [3]) as well. Getting its renderer off of the 2D Canvas API and onto WebGL, as well as some of its more perf-sensitive code onto WASM.

[1] https://ircv3.net [2] https://github.com/thelounge/thelounge [3] https://shmeppy.com


👤 gordon_freeman
Building a book recommendation system - This is a side project. I am an avid reader and I have found that the book recommendations on Goodreads are not good and mostly useless so trying to build the recommendation system myself. Turns out the hardest thing in this project is getting well labelled/tagged books data that can be fed into the model.

👤 mycowerk
Over the years I've had a lot of inconsistent experiences with commercial lactase enzyme supplements for dairy intolerance. I've decided to embark on a hobby project (OpenLactase) to produce my own digestive enzyme supplements from scratch using Aspergillus oryzae fungi.

I'm currently working on designing an open source stirred tank bioreactor (Open Scale-up) for fungi cultivation. Bench-top at first but the design is intended to be suitable for scale-up.

Very different from the day job as cloud infrastructure engineer.

https://github.com/mycowerk


👤 vinc
Writing a little OS for fun in rust: https://github.com/vinc/moros

I started two years ago and I'm finding that project very fulfilling with lots of areas to explore. For example I recently bought an old ThinkPad to have another reference computer and played with Coreboot+SeaBIOS to understand the BIOS better. I'm also reading about the early history of Unix and how some features I'm implementing where developed in the first place. It's never ending and perfect!


👤 joshz404
Burning wood in my fire pit, grilling, having family over, pampering my pup and loving nature.

👤 Delfino
Recently got my first VR headset. Played around in Unity and did their create with VR course then made my own game - Whack-a-mole in VR. Thinking of participating in GitHub's Game Off by making another game in VR but so far none of my friends have been interested in the idea (Which is fair, they work in software and code all day. I used to but I teach now so coding outside of work is much more fun). I'll likely just do another solo project and later on maybe rope some of my students into VR development for future projects.

👤 hcmacro
I spent much of the past two years writing an economic history book that compares the modern United States to Victorian Britain and the Dutch Republic. Of course, Ray Dalio had to write a book on the same topic, in the same year (albeit with differing premises and conclusion). Check my book out if you're interested:

https://www.amazon.com/Tyranny-Nations-Shaped-Todays-Economy...


👤 wiresurfer
I've been burnt out with the current state of work. I work for a japanese cloud robotics company and have been witness to a great long term idea being plagued by bad management and strategy.

To manage my headspace, have been doing the following

1. Writing. Realising the value of communication for teams, have been writing up a lot of my learning into a series of documents which talk strategy and decision frameworks for CXOs. I share with a close-knit group of startup founders and product managers in Bangalore. The problems seems pervasive in Indian startups in their growth stage after their series a. specially with the funding spree and the need for hyper-growth. So talking to peers and collating knowledge has been the only way to stay sane :)

2. Gardening and hydroponics. Health in general, but the issue of getting good produce for a clean diet has always been a neglected aspect of my life. My wife and I decided we wanted to spend some time disconnected from devices. Gardening just happened and we haven't looked back since. Its become a routine thing and there is satisfaction in plucking your produce and tending to it.

3. Reviving some of the projects I had worked on in the past but got shelved and opensourcing them.

  - Low cost IoT WiFi connected 4 node Energy Monitor + Switch.  This was a PCB design + firmware + plus the Backend + Frontend+Analysis service + ML models to detect anomalies as well as predict usage. 

  - A self hosted algolia alternative for User Docs.

👤 frankus
Outside of the day job I've been tinkering with (too) many micromobility projects. I've been working on a series of weight-sensing-controlled skateboards, and this summer started working on an ebike project (https://metromotive.com/blog/2021/06/18/inertial-electric-as...) and a OneWheel-style vehicle (but with two wheels).

This winter I'm hoping to design a new PCB layout for an open-source motor controller, but it's been a nightmare getting parts even in quantities of one or two.

Coding-wise, I've got a bunch of projects that I'm kind of purposely not pursuing because the above is more fun and less like my day job:

- A connected "open" sign app for small businesses (connect a TV or use an old iPad, or an IoT plug switch). Collect and sell real-time data.

- Nutrition info for meals that aren't in a database (e.g. independent restaurants, modified recipes, box lunches), encoded in a URL-like format/QR code (https://nut.codes)

- A white noise app that tells time (https://www.halfbakery.com/idea/White_20Noise_20Clock)


👤 ls65536
I've been (slowly) cleaning up and releasing more pieces of my online sailing navigation simulator as free and open source software [0].

Always happy to hear from people about what they think, especially from anyone who might might be interested in contributing, or even if you just want to stop by for some friendly competition in the virtual races. :)

[0] https://8bitbyte.ca/sailnavsim/code.html


👤 AnIdiotOnTheNet
I've been quite depressed lately[0] but recently found I can keep it at bay with significant amounts of caffeine and forcing myself to do a project. So I finished a Gigatron emulator I'd started a while back in Zig. I'd never written an emulator before, and chose Gigatron over the traditional starting point of CHIP-8 because CHIP-8 seemed downright trivial and boring. It's more or less functionally complete now, with video, sound, leds, gamepad, and a Pluggy McPlugface implementation that can save and load. I need to go back and clean everything up, implement a properly timed main loop, and replace the jank waveOut audio with WASAPI before moving on to menus, configuration, and ports, but I'm not super motivated to do any of that. Could be those are just not interesting enough, could be I'm building too much of a resistance to the caffeine.

Alternative project idea: A Haunted PS1(ish) game using a Voxel Space clone engine, also in Zig of course because Zig, despite its compiler bugs, rules.

[0] I blame the state of modern technology[1]. Everything is slow, buggy, and actively user-hostile and the world just seems to have accepted that. It is maddening.

[1] This is an obvious untruth. Though tech sucks, it is merely a minor contributor to my mental state.


👤 pattle
Currently an unemployed bum but trying to spend my time working on side projects.

I'm mainly working on [Money Simulator](https://simulator.money) and [Textreel](https://textreel.com)

I don't think either has a good chance of making money though so I'm going to start a new project soon.

I also may need a get a job soon otherwise my money will run out


👤 rootsudo
I'm having fun, resigned my last client and am surfing, cycling (road bike & Dirt) 20-40 miles daily minimum, want to see if I can do daily century rides.

Alongside Language school, in the morning Japanese, in the evening Indonesian. The Japanese is more of a fun goal now, as I'm JLPT N3 and want to see if I can get N1.

I should be focusing on Mandarin, but, eh maybe next year. It's really fun to read news in local languages then rely on translations.


👤 hypertexthero
Working on my blog[1] and streaming flight simulators and occasional design and web publishing episodes to learn about broadcasting on the internet[2]!

Part time jobs to pay the bills until the streaming can become my main gig.

[1]: https://hypertexthero.com/

[2]: https://www.twitch.tv/hypertexthero


👤 stefan-pdx
I work on a team that builds space mission design software: https://ai-solutions.com/freeflyer-astrodynamic-software/

There's a lot of fun problems involved related to computational geometry, 3D rendering, numerical methods, parser/compiler design, and astrodynamics ("space math").


👤 awayto
I am developing a framework to spin up web applications very fast. Right now it incorporates:

- an RDS postgres instance with a curated set of DB scripts with auditing baked in

- Lambda/API Gateway based API

- fully implemented with users, roles, groups

- application level authorization

- Cognito for user authentication (sign up or admin created)

- S3/CF for hosting/files

- React frontend

- all in Typescript with a robust type-set; same types for the whole stack

- deployed via CF template along with some custom scripting I have done to tie it all together

It's been a work in progress for some time on the side, but I am now formalizing it. It might seem a bit rough on the edges at first, but it gets the job done, and can more or less be extended into other AWS services as needed. I haven't really received much feedback yet.

It's all open source, you just pay for the AWS resources, and it installs from npm and deploys in about 10 minutes based on how long the DB and CF distribution take to deploy. Here's a sped up install video (nothing glamorous, just ): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3mzwtIyt9s

And here's the git, https://github.com/keybittech/awayto

I am in the midst of drafting formal documentation, how-tos, and other media that I can share with the community to help make it easier to understand and use. Any feedback is greatly appreciated!


👤 bambax
I wrote a book of fiction (in French) and I self-published it on Amazon (KDP) after some encouragement from someone here on HN; it's just been selected as one of the five finalists of the Storyteller Amazon contest. Sales are slow, though.

I'm trying to get good at EDM but am making little progress. I have watched many tutorials, studied the masters. I am good with tools, and sometimes I come up with 4- or 8-bar loops that aren't that bad, but the songs as a whole are boring. There is something about building expectations, intensity towards the "drop" that I still don't understand.

About a year ago I built a touch-less MIDI controller based on Arduino and cheap HC-SR04 sensors. It's fun to use but I don't know what to do with it. It could be a cheap alternative to a true Theremin but I think the market is too small to pursue.

I'm working on a webapp to teach sight-reading; the market is probably also small but at least there are no moving parts, prototypes, inventory, shipping, etc. There are other apps that do the same thing but I think my version may have an edge. We'll see.


👤 speeder
I started working at Pointr some months ago, I do want to get back working with games, but for now I am finding the work at Pointr fascinating, not only my job is perfect for my skills and personality, but Pointr is doing something I didn't expect, and it is quite cool, basically doing high accuracy location and wayfinding in indoor maps.

Also a new product of Pointr made me wanted to be hired badly because of how cool it is: a software way to automatically convert floorplans and blueprints to maps that can be understood by the average person, when I was game modding I wasted a ludicrous amount of time trying to do that and figured out it was just too hard to pull it off, but Pointr did it (granted they hired a bunch of PHds to pull that off, but they did pulled it off).

https://www.pointr.tech/solutions/location-based-engagement/...

Disclose: I work at Pointr (obviously), I don't work in sales, I am making this post just because I actually liked the company :)


👤 graderjs
I just finished building a personal version of my remote browser product but it hasn't been that successful or made me much money. I turned down 150k a year remote job couple of months ago in order to protect the IP for this project but since the project hasn't been as successful as I wanted I'll be going back to work in the new year. But for the last 2 months before that I want to finish one project I neglected a long time--adding full text search and a new better interface (among other features) to my web archive tool--and I want to try to quickly hack out a new project--a Scribe clone, because I really like what they're doing and it's close to the RPA collaboration tool I wanted to build with my remote browser; tho I'm going to have to build it as an extension--before I return to work, which I really don't want to do! I don't know if either of these are going to be successful nor make money but I just want to finish the neglected and try my hand at a new project as another bet to try to get that success that I want.

👤 pallavkaushish
I was on a break from work but used my time to finally finish a comprehensive guide on SEO hiring which is based on a process that I developed in the last couple of years. It has helped me hire some of the best people I had the privilege of working with. It contains the step-by-step process of how to evaluate a candidate for a SEO position (both senior and junior). Also includes interview questions, assignment questions, personality evaluation test, templates, etc that you’ll require throughout the process.

Created it because I’ve seen firsthand how companies (especially startups) struggle to figure out wheat from the chaff and so often end up hiring a wrong person for the job. This guide is the answer, it will give you exactly what you need to understand both technical and non-technical skills of the candidates. Although you do need someone who understands the intricacies of SEO to properly use the technical section of this guide.

Will be publishing it in the next 7 days. If anyone is interested in purchasing a copy, feel free to get in touch. Email in my bio :)


👤 junon
Just finished the first version of the custom build system for my operating system project. For once, I'm really happy with the design and its flexibility whilst also being quite simple to understand and use.

Next will be applying it to the kernel repository and a few other utilities. This side project is the only thing that brings me joy recently.


👤 tomashubelbauer
Just yesterday I finally had my 3D printer I bought a year and a half ago tuned and serviced by a professional. I bought it as a kit and built it not completely wrong, but it did have issues I'd not have been able to iron out myself. Yesterday, right after the service of the printer, I printed a Benchy and am very happy with the result! Next up I plan on printing a plastic case for a replica of a bus cash register and ticket machine that was in basically every bus in my country when I was a child (Czech Republic, the ticket machine is USV-24C by Mikroelektronika). I managed to buy this ticket machine in a pretty good condition when a local bus company was going out of business and another in a less than ideal condition for parts in case I ever decide to want to work on the real thing. In the meantime, I plan on building a replica of it running on an Arduino or a Raspberry Pi.

👤 silexia
37 and male. I have built a business I own 100% over the last twelve years that has made me wealthy. The wealth came slow though. I was financially independent by around 30 and it has continued to grow from there.

If you are looking for purpose in life, have children. The purpose of all biological life is reproduction. I can tell you from my own experience that my kids provide me a ton of purpose and direction.

If you are looking for meaning, focus on your relationships. Do DIY projects with your grandpa and dad. Go out to lunch with your mom weekly. Host the family Thanksgiving and Christmas. Help your uncle build a shed. Go on long bike rides with friends.

Outside of those things, I have most enjoyed visiting national parks and camping. I really enjoy construction, I am working on building a shed then an ADU then a full house.

Maintaining a healthy diet and vigorous fitness is critical. Avoid risky sports that could injure you.


👤 adamrezich
after a few-month hiatus I've been getting back into playing around with Jonathan Blow's closed-beta compiler and enjoying it immensely, especially now that I've finally gotten around to delving into the metaprogramming stuff. I made a dead-simple entity system (not ECS) module [0], and while it's definitely not ready for production, it seems to already be exactly what I always wanted to make in C/C++ for my past projects, but never was able to (elegantly, at least). I am very pleased with this language even though it's still definitely a beta project (odd WIP syntax here and there, very occasional mysterious compiler bugs). considering maybe doing a writeup of my experience so far...

[0] https://github.com/rezich/Entity_Framework


👤 binwiederhier
I've been working on a HTTP based pub sub service that's free and open source for funsies. It's written in Go. [0] you can use it like this:

$ curl -d "Backup failed" ntfy.sh/mytopic

I also made an Android app for it which let's you receive messages on subscribed topics as notifications. It was a ton of fun building. I can't believe how much I liked learning Kotlin. The app is also open source and is pending review in the Play Store. If anyone would like to be a tester shoot me a message [1]

[0] https://ntfy.sh and https://github.com/binwiederhier/ntfy

[1] https://github.com/binwiederhier/ntfy-android


👤 egypturnash
I’m taking a break from drawing a comic book about a jackal lady teaching some basic magic techniques (http://egypt.urnash.com/Stella) to do some commissions and some standalone art.

This comic is in itself a project designed to do as a break from a massive graphic novel about two sides of a YA space opera. http://egypt.urnash.com/parallax/

If you enjoy any of this stuff and have a big pile of money from your FAANG job or whatever, perhaps you might want to send a little of it my way via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/egypturnash - drawing comics barely pays my bills right now.


👤 jmcgough
Building a queer dating app - it's been a good excuse to learn react-native, lambda and other aws services, and it's an itch I've wanted to scratch for years.

👤 pawelwentpawel
Since April I've been taking a break from contracting work and focusing on a project that brings me a lot of joy to work on and keeps on serendipitously connecting me with a lot of interesting people (both users and other founders). It's fully bootstrapped and I've been doing everything myself so far - from code to design.

Link here: https://flat.social

It's a platform where one can create playful virtual spaces for online meetings, workshops and hangouts. I'm currently experimenting with different types of virtual spaces and trying to figure out which direction brings the most fun and utility to the users. It's still not 100% finished and I'm changing a lot of features so if you happen to have any feedback or ideas please let me know! :)


👤 zoba
I’m building an off grid tiny cabin. Solar power, spring water.

The solar power has been a challenge. The SolarDIY subreddit has been super helpful in understanding this subject I knew nothing about.

-

I live near a bunch of Amish and recently one gave me a riddle and told me if I solved it, she’d bake me a pie. I solved it!

In return, I have used a Playfair Square to provide her a riddle. I’m giving her all the instructions on how to decode it.

-

I spend a lot of time thinking about passion and why people are motivated to do the things they do. Engineering, or even just harnessing, passion would be super useful. I wonder about passion as people age: does it diminish or does it just change?

So many thoughts here but if we are defined by our actions, and our passions/interests tend to guide our actions… then our interests tend to define us. And yet, we seem to have little-to-no control over what interests us.


👤 mmaunder
Running my own software biz. Team of 40. We own the infosec space we’re in. Was nowhere in 2007 when I joined HN. Grew much. Still growing. Started actually having fun in 2015 after 12 years of hard work with zero to show for it. Best part is the caliber of people I get to work with every day.

👤 mattfrommars
Trying to figure out how to build a commercial viable CRM for real estate niche as someone who works in fintech - C#/Java backend guy.

Nailing down on unique UI/UX is hard.


👤 chc4
I took a three months leave from work, unsure if I wanted to do the early retirement fuck around dance or not. I worked on a meta-JIT library for Rust interpreters (https://github.com/chc4/lineiform), roughly analogous to Truffle/Graal - it would do dynamic recompilation to try and stick together multiple interpreter loops into blocks for constant folding and things. It didn't work out that well (it's a unique enough space that no existing codegen backend was a good fit, and I started on writing my own backend using dynasm-rs to support it instead that kinda stalled), and I realized that I liked working quite a lot and just went back to my old job.

👤 ehnto
Trying to develop a game idea I have had for a while. If anyone is interested in chatting hobby game dev feel free to hit me up!

I am currently side tracked by fixing my car's aftermarket digital dash, and musing how that cyberpunk makeshift techno-future kind of already exists outside of all the polished digital products. It's a 3D printed case, open source hardware, commodity parts and and open source software all sold as a complete working unit. It's exactly what I wanted from technology.

I am also constantly dabbling in music, riding bikes, and slowly piecing together a metal fab workshop. I may be overleveraging my time, but my work life balance is pretty much where I want it right now.


👤 quickthrower2
Hobby wise, getting into the espresso rabbit hole where you spend $1000 for each 2% better you make your coffee (ok I jest!) and trying latte art too. Learning all this from youtube.

Working part time because of fatigue. Making coffee a good hobby as its purely at home.


👤 maxlamb
Earlier this year I thought it would be interesting/fun trying to build an art filter that transforms photos into impressionistic paintings without using any ML/neural nets like a lot of apps do these days, but instead just use vector calculus, randomness, and drawing each brushstroke at a time.

Tinkered with a Python version for a few months then ended up converting it to C/C++/Objective-C to make an iOS app out of it. Released the iOS app earlier this summer under the name PaintSnap but I'm still tweaking the painting algorithm every week. Not the most utilitarian app but it was fun building it and tinkering with the algorithm.


👤 cryptograthor
Quit a job 5 months ago. Working as a crypto engineer, have made a couple years salary in the last year, so I could afford to take a couple months off. Spent the intervening time with my partners, and doing personal writing. A lot of the reason I was building or learning felt driven by insecurity about what my peers were doing, and I was just going through the motions at work, and not feeling emotionally in control.

Taking time off put me emotionally back in the driver's seat. I don't build stuff because I'm keeping up with imaginary peers anymore, and my relationships have improved dramatically. I know what my values are again.

Also, I configured emacs.


👤 moralestapia
I am going through the boot up camp at airminers.org and I would gladly recommend it to anyone who wants to learn about the state of the art of carbon capture and removal.

Also, if someone's interested in developing tools that go with this, reach out!


👤 mamcx
I'm reworking (ok, actually putting effort) in the parsing for my relational language, that obviously will be super-popular.

To make things even harder, I working to make it IDE-friendly (so it can work for live-coding like in Rust) following the ideas of https://arzg.github.io/lang/.

This is the thing I wish I could dedicate (my end-game is make a replacement for access+excel).

Now, in the job stuff, making a micro-framework similar to django/flask in Rust that also need to sync offline clients, because a week ago suddenly that is a requirement.

Fuuuuun!!!


👤 geerlingguy
Trying to find a storage company to sponsor my project to build a 1 petabyte Storage array to be connected to a Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 through a SAS card and expanders. It is kinda dumb from a practicality standpoint, but i think it would be fun, especially to see if the tiny Pi could handle all that and still get any meaningful throughput.

I have plenty of other projects in the mean time, but that's the big one I've been noodling on for months now. I'm pretty sure it's possible, but I'm absolutely sure I couldn't afford to 'rent' enough drives on my own right now.


👤 jjallen
Still settling into life in a new country (US->Switzerland) after having moved during the pandemic with a one year old and dog (I do not recommend this, but it might have been our only change)

I'm also building a SPAC tracking/info tool at https://stockbase.com/spacs, among other things.

Also learning about longevity related things and writing about my learnings at https://longevitybase.com. Yes, I think all sites should just be *base.com (haha)


👤 lukem567
Working on a way to write Oculus Quest apps in Golang. The entire thing is a tower of yak shaving. Current adventure: attempting to write a reactive UI system that doesn't need to dynamically allocate memory.

👤 endorphine
I love this thread - it feels like therapy to me. Perhaps because I believe there's a few (if not many) people lurking around that I can relate to, and partly because I'm lacking the human connection I had with friends in my pre-parenthood years.

Anyway, lately I've been enjoying putting together "mixtapes" (not recording them live, just putting the tracks together and then exporting to MP3) and uploading them to Mixcloud. It's been creative and when I see that someone listens to it, I feel like I'm connecting with them in some way.


👤 lionside
Over the past few months, I've been trying to contribute to the rust ecosystem to enable devs to make webapps comfortably.

The latest challenge I've been addressing is auto generating react hooks to use Rust API endpoints. I'm just about ready to publish it soon. These kinds of things are much easier to do in rust rather than other languages.

If you'd like to explore web development in rust:

https://github.com/wulf/create-rust-app


👤 crummy
I'm starting a tech meetup in my small town. I moved from a city last year and with remote work I really miss sitting with other devs and chatting about tech, asking questions, and offering advice.

I'd like to encourage participation beyond just powerpoint talks so I'm looking at the Lean Coffee framework, where folks write down topics and we go through them as a group one by one. Anyone else have suggestions for a meetup format less formal than PowerPoint talks but more structured than just a social chat?


👤 rpwverheij
Bringing a project to life that I've worked on for the majority of my time for the past 11 years (whilst doing some paid consultancy on the side). I've built a programming framework for the semantic web with in memory graph database, reasoner, decentralized storage management and lots of programming sugar for manipulating & visualizing graphs. Launching this as a browser-based tool to build (web3) applications and visualize data. Primed for (Semantic) A.I. Built with typescript / react (not a hard dependency) / node.js. Got a small active team of 6 people now and we're looking at raising a pre-seed round. It's a fun journey, and after all those years the technology has matured a lot and I'm happy it's now really starting to come to life with other people.

Would love some constructive feedback. You can see our current investment deck here: https://brieflink.com/v/ys3lw and some videos I made about the project here https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmWeNThIdXS4M0-0nVVqRzA

Also, if anyone has spare time and is looking for something purposeful to do: there is a big vision behind the project, aiming to increase collaboration, transparency, sharing resources, improving collective sense making, self organization & decision making. I'm sharing future rewards with all who contribute. Contact me if you're curious. rene@semantu.com / telegram @renereborn


👤 is0tope
I've done side projects before, but I feel like I don't have a knack for business. I decided to try and start writing after it was suggested to me many times.

I work in the finance/crypto space, so decided to try and write some articles about the basics on my personal blog (https://machow.ski).

So far I am enjoying it, though it's a lot of work! Getting people to read what you write is also not straight forward.


👤 dontpanicdont
Fully generated and animated 3D news : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YFuumb1Xcs

Unfortunately I just got hired so finding time to finish my project as always is proving to be difficult.

My one anxiety is how on earth to market it I have no idea how to do such things. After years on hobby projects I’ve yet to make a cup of coffee. It still needs a ton of work tho so I’ll just keep plugging away.


👤 sci_prog
Building a puzzle board video game (inspired by a physical wooden board puzzle) using bits to represent the board (Bitboard game design [1]). Here is a screenshot for one of the levels: https://imgur.com/a/cLIsYII

The goal is to slide the red tile where the yellow ones are. I am trying to develop an algorithm that would be able solve these type of puzzles automatically so I can provide user with hints. Can anyone provide any ideas or resources on how this could be achieved? If you look at the screenshot you'll notice that the board always has two empty cells that you can slide the tiles into. You can also pre-order the game here: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/the-setting-sun-zen-puzzle/id1... I am planning on releasing it by Thanksgiving.

[1]: http://eprints.qut.edu.au/85005/1/__staffhome.qut.edu.au_sta...


👤 ultimoo
My New Year's resolution was to write more and I'm happy I was finally able to find the time and start my own newsletter on substack! (I write about engineering management at engmgmt.substack.com) So far, it's been challenging to find the time to write frequently -- once a week is recommended but I'm aiming for once every two weeks.

For those on the fence, writing is a wonderful hobby that also has some practical applications -- give it a try!


👤 bmalicoat
Outside of the day job, trying to scrape together some projects that scratch whatever itch I have at the moment.

I'm trying to learn kanji and it was a fun exercise to learn how to render svg in unity so I made a free iOS and Android app:

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/kanji-book/id1532844605

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bmalicoat....

More recently during the pandemic, I wanted a simple way to stay connected to friends and family so I made an async multiplayer word game, Downwordly. I was super psyched when Apple made it game of the day a few months back! Still have to learn how to market it in non-scummy ways :)

https://www.downwordly.com/

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/downwordly/id1544633266#?platf...

Coming to Android very soon!


👤 nsainsbury
I've been continuing my study of mathematics (https://www.neilwithdata.com/mathematics-self-learner) and recently started Needham's Visual Complex Analysis which I'm really enjoying.

I've also been putting more time into competition table tennis (coaching, etc)! Am no Fan Zhendong but the backhand is coming along nicely.


👤 romesmoke
While in high school, I had one or two professors give kudos to my writing. Joined a sci-fi/fantasy forum with active writing competitions, reading clubs and the likes. Got some kudos from there as well. Wrote first, totally unpublishable, shameful novel.

Got into university (electrical&computer eng), exploded outwards (socially). Published a couple of short stories, attended a handful of literary workshops. Started mental outline of First Great Novel, which became gradually documented in a deep yet unorganized way. Multiple attempts at writing the first chapters failed, mostly due to intense (or at least intensely experienced) personal issues.

Never succeeded in pulling this off part-time. Again and again opted for professional growth against the artistic life I had been daydreaming about (and increasingly, as the years went by, obsessed upon) as a teen. Ended up in a CS PhD (27 at the time of writing, third year of study).

Covid hit. Found true love. Life and income have stabilized. Finally feeling dumb and courageous enough again to give writing another chance. The premise of the book is:

what if people started, beyond their control, to transmit their actual feelings through the air via their breath?


👤 kstenerud
I'm continuing to work on https://concise-encoding.org which is a new security-conscious ad-hoc encoding format to replace JSON/XML and friends. I've been at it for 3 years so far and am close to a release.

In a nutshell:

- Edit in text, transmit in binary. One can be seamlessly converted to the other, but binary is far more efficient for processing, storage and transmission, while text is better for humans to read and edit (which happens far less often than the other things).

- Secure by design: Everything is tightly specced and accounted for so that there aren't differences between implementations that can be exploited to compromise your system. https://github.com/kstenerud/concise-encoding/blob/master/ce...

- Real type support because coercing everything into strings sucks (and is another security risk and source of incompatibilities).

XML had a good run but was replaced by JSON which was a big improvement. JSON also had a good run but it's time for it to retire now that the landscape has changed even further: Security and efficiency are the desires of today, and JSON provides neither.

I've got the spec nailed down and can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel for the reference implementation in golang. I still need to come up with a system for schemas, but I'm hoping that https://cuelang.org will fit the bill.


👤 adventured
Building an ecommerce platform, initially targeted at a niche. I aim to then use foundation from the niche platform to spin off a general platform (if that doesn't take, it'll be fine if the niche is successful regardless) that will link up with the initial niche. The niche will act as a feeder for the general platform.

I haven't built anything in the ecommerce space in about 16 years, so it's a fun return home. One of the first things I ever built of consequence, not quite two decades ago, was a competitor to eBay.

Very boring initial stack. Ubuntu, Nginx, Redis, MySQL, PHP, Go, JavaScript. No frameworks (I almost never use frameworks for anything; I've built up my own stock and reuse it and evolve it year after year). Various caching with Nginx and Redis. It won't need anything else for a while.

Solo built over about seven months roughly. Going to attempt to self-fund indefinitely, not interested in sharing ownership with investors (specifically it's just so much easier to not deal with investors if you don't have to; I don't have to worry about generating a return for them, or getting them an exit).


👤 mikewarot
I find myself in the position of having unfashionable programming skills (Pascal), and not actually knowing how much effort I can sustain due to what I strongly suspect (but can't prove) is long Covid. The combination is highly demotivating.

Ideally at this point, someone would (incorrectly, of course) tell me that there's something that just can't be done, programming wise, that it's flat out impossible, so I could do it, and feel better about things.

Back in the days of MS-DOS and SCO Unix, you couldn't dual boot a Unix machine... so I did it by rewriting the boot loader with a flag stored in an unused entry in the partition table.

You couldn't write OS/2 programs in assembler, you had to use C (which I have never liked) so I wrote Forth/2, a native code Forth interpreter, in assembler.

I have jumped in and started doing the Google Kickstart rounds, placing 1018th in the latest round, with my submissions in Pascal. I'm starting to find all the quirks of their platform, so getting better at it each time. So that's a little hope.

Is there anyone who needs help with something in Pascal?


👤 xhrpost
Haven't won the IPO lotto like some here but I'm comfortable financially and don't have a family. Thus my pay check mostly just ensures a nicer lifestyle, which doesn't seem to be enough to keep me motivated in the tech world. Hoping to try to do some side projects in order to give more external value to my day job:

1.) Imgur is just full of ads and annoying to use these days. Wondering if a high scale image sharing site could be built and hosted for next to free? Cloudflare gives away unlimited bandwidth and other services can be utilized for pennies. By scaling back on some nice-to-haves like perfect latency, just how cheap could it be done?

2.) Interested in building a hedgefund but for the common person. Right now, IMHO, the middle and working classes pay for a lot of what society values in the US. They're not rich enough to skirt taxes and QE money printing reduces their wealth and spending power while increasing the wealth of the rich. How might we utilize the securities markets to restore wealth building power to the average citizen? I have some ideas.


👤 alanbernstein
I've been doing hobby projects with laser-cut acrylic (plexiglass) for a while. I recently bought a big roll of mylar, which is thin, strong, clear, flexible, dimensionally stable, and even food-safe. It's kind of a perfect material for laser cutting, because the thinness means it cuts quickly, and the strength means you can create pretty robust 3D objects by scoring, folding, and assembling using tab+slot designs.

I know other people use mylar for laser cutting projects, but it might commonly be more along the lines of stencils. There is some overlap with papercraft design, but the material constraints are different, so it's not quite the same thing. I'm coming up with design techniques myself from scratch, and it's going fine, but I feel like I may be reinventing the wheel. I discovered https://tamasoft.co.jp/pepakura-en/ recently, which looks like a great resource, but I haven't bothered to boot up Windows to check it out yet.

Thanks for asking!


👤 dixie_flatline
Working on training a reinforcement learning agent to use Metasploit to interact with computer networks to do autonomous pentesting. I was a pentester for a few years at the same time I was reading Neuromancer, which has made me decidedly obsessed with working on an agent that could do network pentesting. I presented my current results at StrangeLoop[1]. Check it out if you're into infosec or RL.

Planning to clean up the code I've been experimenting with it and release it before the end of the year[2] and show it off at Defcon. Goal is to get more people interested in working on the project. I'll need to be able to generate tons of realistic looking networks with realistically vulnerable machines to capture a large enough distribution for a robust agent.

[1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiI69BdWKPs

[2] - https://github.com/phreakAI/MetasploitGym


👤 pkdpic
Sculpting scale models of computer history hardware, putting weird faces on them, casting them in concrete and leaving them in the woods.

👤 alfiedotwtf
I've accumulated a few synthesizers the past few years and wanted to start making d&b, trance and acid. But having frozen once I actually sat down to play I realised I didn't know wtf I was doing, so ive recently picked up piano lessons. I can't believe that I'm slowly sight reading... totally blows my mind that humams can sight read music

👤 dnautics
working on a static typechecking system for Elixir: https://github.com/ityonemo/mavis (it looks like it's not being worked on but one of the development branches is in the middle of a very painful refactor I've been grinding through all week)

👤 shime
1. Building a time tracker that encourages deep work [1]. It's an interesting experience and I'm fascinated by the amount of complexity that is hidden behind building a "simple" time tracker. Reminds me of "Reality has a surprising amount of detail"[2].

2. Writing more, but publishing less. In the past I've been publishing one article per week, but I've later realized that this doesn't improve my writing skills, but just builds my writing habit. These articles end up being low-quality pieces that are easily forgettable. So, now I've changed my approach and I'm investing more time into each article.

[1]: https://ciklus.app/

[2]: http://johnsalvatier.org/blog/2017/reality-has-a-surprising-...


👤 ve55
Alright, things that are not work:

- I finally decided to buy a VR headset (Valve Index), and have been absolutely thrilled with it. I am very into Beatsaber currently, and I was also very happy to find out that this all works on linux pretty well, so I don't even need a Windows desktop (in fact, all four VR games I have tried so far worked out of the box with Steam proton, thanks Valve!). It's also helping a lot with exercise habits, and I'm burning an average of ~450 calories a day from it currently and have nothing but good things to say about it (mods and custom songs also work on Linux too!).

- I've been spending more time casually working on improving my diet and researching longevity drugs and other supplements. The best summary of some of the (mostly boring, but a few exciting) things that I take I wrote up on https://nearcyan.com/supplements. Having quantified metrics for my own health really increases my motivation to improve things, and there's nothing better you can enjoy than improving your own health.

- I've also been into cooking a bit more (seems like there's a bit of a theme to these points hmm). It was interesting when I realized that not only could I learn to (often trivially!) replicate any of my favorite dishes from almost any restaurant, but I could also easily improve them with respect to my own tastes, and sometimes my own health (for example, replacing sugar with allulose, which is wonderful if you haven't heard of it - tastes very similar, almost zero calories, and doesn't increase (or even decreases!) blood sugar.

This thread feels pretty laid back, I enjoy reading what people here choose to do with their own leisure time, especially when their motive isn't profit (which although is nice, it's almost too common of a theme on HN sometimes).


👤 rav3ndust
I just finished spinning up a new xmpp server/site for myself and friends, as well as anyone else (its public - https://civitaz.xyz). Other than that, doing more stuff for FOSSphones (my Linux phone news site) and working on my side project TTS game. Fun stuff.

👤 codazoda
I’m wanting to build a documentation tool for tech teams. There are many but I have various problems with each of them. I just want some quick and easy markdown based docs.

One thing stopping me, for some reason, is building a user system. I don’t want to support 3rd party login systems and I’m also having trouble getting motivation to roll my own.


👤 poopsmithe
I'm archiving every video from my favorite Chaturbate streamer by uploading it to Backblaze, IPFS and providing an index.

(NSFW) https://futureporn.neocities.org/ (NSFW)

I'm also automating as much of it as possible. Currently writing an extensive test suite for my node library which handles transcoding, thumbnail generation, and uploading.

(NSFW) https://github.com/insanity54/futureporn (NSFW)

My home internet sucks, so I also have an ansible playbook which handles spin-up of a VPS which is better suited for capturing full HD livestreams and uploading them to web3.storage and B2.

It's a passion project that doesn't make me any money, so during the day I sell anime trading cards on eBay. I make enough to pay rent so I'm living large.


👤 parivraajak
Not sure I should put it in this thread, but heck, here goes my caffeine deprived sleep. I've been grinding Leetcode and System Design questions for about 2 months now, hoping to land a job from India to US or UK maybe. This stride of mine comes in after trying 2 Saas products ( unfinished ofc) and realising that I'm not mature enough to tread on indiehacker path yet.

Also, after seeing the second COVID-19 wave handling of India, I don't have much hopes for the future here. So have been preparing for interviews ( profile: Software Engineer). I've given couple of interviews as my mock for big tech companies of India and have some offers in hand, alas all in India. Getting an opportunity outside India is damnn hard ( don't want to make my way out with MS and the gigantic loan for life). More power to my hopes!


👤 tldrthelaw
I've been renovating a cabin and making little videos of me and my family enjoying the property around it [0]. No monetization or even consideration of turning it in to anything other than a fun project.

[0] http://fallingleavescabin.com


👤 akrain
I have started writing a blog[1] about my treks in the Indian Himalayas. My pace of writing is really slow, so don't have too many articles in there yet. But have a couple of more posts in the pipeline.

[1] https://overthehills.in/


👤 bcrosby95
2D web-based MUD. Like an idiot I'm using a bunch of stuff I've never used before so its slow going.

👤 wdieter
I've started a campaign to limit short-term rentals like Airbnb and VRBO in my small resort town of Ketchum, Idaho. The number of long-term rentals is down by 40% over the past 10 years, and housing prices (rents and purchases) are up by 40% over the past 8 years. I've been documenting this on my website https://www.airbnbkills5b.com. 5B is the local code for our county. Its on our license plates.

I'm hoping the election today brings new leadership that can tackle this issue. This Airbnb model is proving to be cancerous to lower - middle income housing stock, and platforms like pacaso and realpha are going to make the problem worse. We need to stop treating houses as an investment vehicle for big investors.


👤 fredgrott
Building a flutter dev and designer audience at medium while building some flutter apps and writing some dev and design books and playing with the livebook and other book presenting models.

Up to getting 38k view a month at medium as it doubles every 1.5 months.

It's a slower way to bootstrap a studio, but it does work


👤 alexashka
I reached platinum playing Valorant quite casually (5-10 games a week) ( platinum is a rank only top 10% of all players ever reach, according to official stats).

More importantly (to me), I've turned a corner with getting tilted by braindead teammates. Voice comms over time revealed to me that they are mostly children half my age, the worst offenders usually being female. I don't expect children to not be braindead, given that I was braindead and completely in my own feelings until I was 30 or so, so I've been liberated from having expectations, which's great but also made me largely lose interest in playing - maybe getting tilted by idiots and wanting to overcome it was the puzzle I was largely interested in solving all along? Don't know :)


👤 Taylor_OD
I'm getting back into BJJ after 2 years of not being able to train due to COVID.

I started a technical interview podcast this year as well which is about to release its 20th episode. Currently at 210 subscribers which is really exciting. That is more than I thought I would have at this point.


👤 lykr0n
I'm splitting my time between a Pre-Series A startup, a Series E startup that's my fulltime gig, and developing my own cloud platform similar to AWS in Rust.

The cloud platform is fun. Learning the different components and just giving myself the freedom to do things in the best way I can figure out- writing my own RPC Framework, Scheduler, VM Management Tooling, etc... The end objective is to build a "not for profit" cloud platform for personal and small projects. So you can build awesome cloud-native applications for communities and other areas that are not profit driven.

Also might start trying to build a custom digital rifle scope for my AR-10. Something that can do range finding and basic sight adjustments based on distance and wind. That'd be cool...


👤 atdrummond
Not so much that I don’t want to be hired so much as I’m struggling to find the right fit. Would love to start something, as I don’t seem well built for larger orgs and have done well in the past with startups. Just spinning my wheels at the moment on what is feasible to pursue.

👤 SebastianKumor
I have been talking with few companies about switching job but the decided to drop all of them as I would have to work much more and be some kind of mobile tech lead for barely any difference in money. Now I am living by in a company where I do my work in few hours and got a lot of free time.

Besides that I have made a RC plane with fpv system on it and been just flying around. Find that very therapeutic and good escape from reality.

Honestly I am only 27 and been working full time as a developer for little over 5 years but I am having a hard time thinking that I have to do this for next 40 years until I retire, feeling a bit of burn out already.

I am now thinking about going to UNI again to do my master degree and maybe go away from mobile development and work on something meaningful.


👤 westoque
Working on Pastly https://www.pastly.app

Fastest way to mockup screenshots and share - Copy. Paste. Edit. Share.

Still in beta but using Elixir/Phoenix/React. If anyone interested in partnering or working together please reach out.

admin@pastly.app


👤 Mockapapella
I've been inspired by the VR workspace and metaverse talk around here, and am digging through a master's thesis called "TOWARD GENERAL PURPOSE 3D USER INTERFACES: EXTENDING WINDOWING SYSTEMS TO THREE DIMENSIONS" (https://raw.githubusercontent.com/evil0sheep/MastersThesis/m...) with the goal of creating a VR user interface. Looking to create it in a popular language like python or rust. I've never dug down into things like frame buffers or window servers before, but I think I could get something useful (albeit clunky) up and running by christmas.

👤 fxtentacle
I'm playing around with Bomberland, which was on HN a while ago.

My goal is to have the AI discover new multi-unit strategies using self-play and reinforcement learning. But so far, every day, I'm failing in new ways because this environment is really tough. Typical action sequences span 50 time steps, so the chance of discovering anything useful through random exploration is effectively 0. Hierarchical models don't work because multiple long-term actions overlap. And the state space is too large for MCTS unless you're willing to burn millions in compute.

But precisely because it's so difficult, every tiny bit of progress feels rewarding. Plus I'm positively surprised that there's still so much unexplored territory in DL RL land.


👤 mxwsn
I finished my PhD earlier this year and am taking a break until I start a research job next year.

Right now I'm reading and enjoying the freedom to dive however deep into learning and thinking about research topics I feel are fundamental without pressure to publish hanging over my head.


👤 manish_gill
Had been feeling quite frustrated with work lately. Corporate inertia at the same time as "move fast" in a DS/Eng setup combined with a re-org going on. Add zero devops + an "incident" as cherry on top. I'd been stretching myself thin trying to do "everything", and do "everything right". To the point that it started impacting my personal life.

Took a vacation to Rome and Venice, and just 5 days away from home were enough to decompress. Feeling really good now.

Wish I had more time for open source contributions, but marriage + work are almost leaving no time at all. Got something going but the big tasks require a lot more dedicated effort.

Now thinking of new places to go on vacation in Southern Europe to escape from the cold :)


👤 anonymoushn
This year, I learned that markets are incredibly inefficient and outperforming benchmarks is trivial. I became a hedge fund. We do arbitrage and market making. We have a web site: https://www.ltcm.lol.

👤 l8rpeace
Made a sports app as part of a platform: https://www.sportstrace.com

Upload 2d video and get it analyzed in 3d to figure out how to correct your form and technique. We cover baseball, softball, golf, and cricket.


👤 yakkomajuri
Outside of work (which is great), my main personal battle at the moment is adapting to yet another foreign country.

Have done quite a bit of moving around in my life but this time it was for a relationship (i.e. not for work or studies) and given that I work remotely, it's very hard to integrate into society. I know no one and don't have a place like an office where I get to cover my social needs (no coworking spaces around either).

And then on the side trying to get back into writing. I had a brief stint as a reasonably popular/successful independent technical writer, but now starting up a separate blog for deeper, more unstructured pieces about anything really. It's a bit of therapy too, following a year with its ups and downs.


👤 redraga
I've started playing around with the idea of building a better retirement/goals investment calculator/tracker for Indians.

The retirement calculators available online are almost farcical in their simplicity and assumptions. And the ones offered by professional, fee-only financial advisors (I engaged one) are just clunky, uneasy to use excel sheets. They do the job of course, but I think there has to be an easier, more intuitive way to tracking goals/investments.

I know way too many of my friends and acquaintances - educated, fairly wealthy people - who seem to have almost no idea on how to plan/track goals/retirement. It'd be fantastic if I could make something which helps them and others like them.


👤 zby
I was semi-retired after successful crypto speculation - but I am working on a Lego blocks detection app (inspired by https://twitter.com/LEGO_Group/status/1112625676836880384). brickit has beaten me at being the first app doing block recognition but I am not giving up, they also don't yet do something like the original vision. A friend has joined me - so now we are two old-boy programmers learning all this ML stuff: https://zby.github.io/

👤 yekm
Last couple of years I feel like my pet projects are more important for my general well being than money gathering.

I started making "smart"[0] bird feeder 2 years ago. First year I was taking photo of the birds (early posts in telegram channel[1]) and lately I switched to video [2]

https://github.com/For-The-Birds

https://t.me/moscow_birds

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP-589PnZE3i-l2lsRh0sqw


👤 devastated_123
Tl;Dr: dad having cancer. I can't visit him.

24 hours ago, my dad has just been diagnosed with Stage II stomach cancer. This is by far the worst news I have ever received in my life so far.

What makes it worse: my dad is in China but I am a non-Chinese citizen living in North America. It is very time-consuming for me to even get a China Visa. I heard that unless my dad is gravely ill (ICU etc.) my Visa will be denied.

Suffice to say I have no motivation to work today.


👤 idontwantthis
My programming job is remote, fulfilling, and not all consuming. I have time and energy to cook, watch movies, and learn to drum. I'm hoping to have my first paid gig in the next few weeks after 2 years of lessons.

👤 Archelaos
When my work projects were interrupted because of COVID, I was able to advance a side project, Factonaut, into a "minimum viable product" (or at least into one that I no longer have to be ashamed of when releasing it). I continuie to improve it, but only slowly as my work projects returned to previous levels.

Factonaut is a computer programme for Windows 10 that allows you to compile historical events in a knowledgebase and easily create chronological overviews. Product link: https://www.factonaut.com/


👤 xelxebar
In the middle of an RV build. Hoping to move full-time into it within a couple months. Neat features:

- 3 separate "rooms"

- reconfigurable/expandable floorspace

- reverse osmosis circulatory water filtration system

- 30kWh battery with solar, EV, and alternator charging


👤 ronyfadel
I’ve been indie hacking since I left my FAANG job 2 years ago.

I’ve never been happier but it’s hard work.

Revenue is growing steadily and I have a few projects down the pipeline.

I don’t want to shill them in the comments section but you can find some in my profile.


👤 vuciv1
I've been bouldering in my local rec league and just hit my second V5 (for the non-climbers, that's a difficulty rating).

I have also been taking guitar lessons on the weekend and have gotten back into music making/music theory reading. Its really fun and enriching.

If anyone wants to check out some of my music: https://soundcloud.app.goo.gl/mpU7k

Or look at some of my climbs: https://vm.tiktok.com/TTPdY96RcJ/


👤 simonebrunozzi
Main thing I'm working on is launching a new VC fund out of Europe. I've been in tech for a long time and in VC for a few years, and I think it's the right thing to do.

Side things: thinking about how to colonize the asteroid Ceres, perhaps by tokenizing its land and using the proceeds to buy a space mission to send an object there and then claim sovereignty, but without all the BS and scams that have been plaguing the crypto world since the beginning.

Another side thing: thinking about creating a new pseudonymous "artist" to send a strong message about how f*ed the world is.


👤 kaycebasques
I've been on a "sabbatical" / gap year for about 5 months now (after ~9 years as a technical writer). I initially planned to take a year off but I'll probably wrap it up when I'm around the 9-month mark. I spent a few months in Brazil, did a lot of reading, got a "social network for book readers" idea to MVP, and just generally recharged my life batteries. You can read the week-by-week updates here: https://kayce.basqu.es/sabbatical

👤 ccvannorman
Oh, I love this thread prompt!

I'm building micro retreat properties in Puerto Rico, for rental income and also to gather great people together to facilitate connections and ideas. May also be used as an incubator location.


👤 giantg2
Researching ultralight aircraft.

Trying to pick out a phone and carrier that I like that will also work with VoLTE on LineageOS. This is not fun at all. There's very little info about a lot of it and the ones I do find that work are pricey or have some undesirable characteristic (do they all have to be huge?). Low SAR would also be nice but seems out of the question.

Looks like I will end up getting a cheap low SAR phone with stock Android. Maybe in another 3-5 years the marketplace will be more stable (no more VoLTE compatibility hoopla) and I can switch to a more secure/private OS.


👤 chalcolithic
Writing an emulator for fantasy 8bit computer based on 6502. Eventually I hope to build a "physical" version (fpga to the rescue). It's a complete waste of time, but it's soooo addictive

👤 7723
Working on a couple of side projects/ideas in my spare time. One of them is a compute workload orchestrator from scratch. I'm taking a very "naive" approach here which means I'm not trying to mimic/rehash best parts/known practices of existing system. This gives me total freedom of implementation and removes the need of constantly benchmarking myself against existing solutions. What matters the most is the learning experience. I'm looking towards server-side WASM as target rather than containers.


👤 4QnM248H28dxmr2
I recently got into CAD and 3D printing, which combined in a weird way with my other hobby - guns. Currently I’m designing and prototyping parts for a parametric workholding setup that will help me repeatably produce an item whose dimensions match some of those which make an AR-15 lower receiver capable of mating with other components of the gun. Now, I have no background in any of the above, but I have lots of patience and no fear of failure. All this helps me keep sane while listening to yet another interminable sprint planning.

👤 Mnephisto
Building a plaid / pattern designer. Someone I closely know is a much sought-after fabric designer, but tends to use primitive tools. I swear, I've seen them make pictures and catalogues in Excel.

I've never been a web dev, but I've set myself a challenge to make something for them. 2 weeks in, I've got a hacky ugly-ish MVP, but hey - it seems to be doing its job :)

https://plaid-designer.vercel.app/ Note: Tablet-friendly, but not phone-friendly.


👤 Aeolun
Since I work in a large enterprise, and I got tired of our dog-slow Jira instance, I’m building an offline client for Jira that syncs up every so often.

More importantly, it responds to everything you do locally instantly (still kind of figuring out how large you can make the local database before that isn’t true any more).

I’ll release it at some point, but it’s still missing a bunch of (probably not quite essential) functionality that I want it to have. I think I’m procrastinating because I enjoy being it’s only user and having zero responsibility to anyone.


👤 yarsanich
Working on a side project. An app that should help to use mobile devices more focused and purposeful. App simply prompts users to type an intention before using the device(Android), certain apps(iOS). I'm making it privacy-focused, no analytics, no sign-ups, with local data storage. At first, I solved my issues with phone usage and now I'm trying to make the app easier to use and I focus on users feedback to improve retention.

https://acture.app


👤 marginalia_nu
Ironing out edge cases on my search engine and trying to eke out more results. "Latin" shouldn't return results about Latin America, etc.

I wish I had more time to read and study languages.


👤 asicsp
I'm currently working on a GUI app to help progammers practice Python regular expressions [0]. I don't have much experience with GUI, but I've made a start. I know it won't be pleasing to the eye, but I hope it will have the features I wish to implement.

[0] https://github.com/learnbyexample/py_regular_expressions/tre...


👤 elihu
Been working sporadically on a project to convert a Mazda RX-8 to electric. Gradually expanding my modular synthesizer. (I'd recommend AI Synthesis to anyone looking for some well-designed modules to assemble.) Building a cigar-box style 8-string nylon Kite Guitar [1] (It's a 41-EDO guitar with only half the notes available on each string, so physically it's basically a 20.5-EDO guitar.)

[1] https://kiteguitar.com/


👤 XCSme
I am creating a self-hosted analytics platform: https://www.uxwizz.com I am currently focusing on making installation as easy as it can be by creating various containers/one-click apps for different hosting companies/platforms.

Working on my project I actually often end up looking at job opportunities when times are tough, but then I realize it's just me looking for an easy way out and then go back to working on my business.


👤 abathur
(mostly) picking at the problem of rewriting bare invocations of external commands in shell scripts to use abspaths (plus some related yak-shaves). Primary motive is making shell easier to package in the Nix ecosystem, though the behavior isn't Nix-specific. https://github.com/abathur/resholve

Currently... chasing a luxuriously-maned yak named "granular documentation single-sourcing", though...


👤 acutesoftware
I'm starting to make some progress with an Unreal Engine crafting game. Everything is going to be data driven, and have the spawn rates for forage, trees, and mobs working ok. Now up to the fun part - getting a good amount of recipes for the crafting stations, and once the core stuff is all running nicely, I will get to polishing animations and models.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6xtnfSVQMw


👤 reducesuffering
Quit my job because my FAANG work wasn't fulfilling and burned out. Needed 6 months of rest, have some years savings, and am excited about starting a project that is much needed by many people, so I finally have a unique opportunity to work on something that can actually be a positive impact on people. Just a bit daunted on what that could mean for the expectations on me in the future if I try to go YC/VC route instead of bootstrap.

👤 MrLeap
I'm working on a Lovecraftian text editor game called Tentacle Typer. I'm hoping it will encourage people to write more prolifically and creatively.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1537490/Tentacle_Typer/

https://twitter.com/LeapJosh


👤 JaviFesser
I have been working on a Pull Request tool for Unity Cloud project: https://unity-cloud-ci.firebaseapp.com

Basically, Unity Cloud can auto build commits for you but it doesn't work with pull requests unless you set it up manually.

This way it trigger a build for a PR and the set a status check. It's a good solution for people who don't want to set up their CT by themselves.


👤 unemphysbro
I'm designing a full back and shoulders tattoo for myself. About one/tenth of it is completed on my back so-far. Leafing through art history texts, old-maps, and going through museums in my free time.

I'm also getting very conformable on my motorcycle in the twisties; I'd like to try a track-day soon.

I'm still trying to find friends post-pandemic (moved to the bay area during the pandemic).

Besides that, I'm taking a break from tech besides my day job for a bit.


👤 elasticventures
I was a well regarded SRE/devops programmer & network, cybersec type person.

I saved enough $$$ living minimally to principally retire in 2014 at age 37. I did some digital nomad travel (47 countries) and unicorn chasing (criteria: no opportunities smaller than 9 zeros AND must leave the planet better than I found it). I also took 6 months to walk from Mexico to Canada along the pacific crest trail, and backpacking across Europe & Asia.

I've been doing super-learning self-paced studies in a variety of fields including Chinese ODM, electronics engineering, advanced math w/artificial intelligence, and a heap of experiments in agriculture-tech.

Today I'm going to write Elon Musk's private family office and explain exactly how to solve world hunger this decade for way less than $6bn.


👤 lettergram
I want to be hired, but I’m starting a homestead. Bought old farm, cleaning it up, and looking to build an off grid house and buy cattle in the next 6-12 months

👤 kelseyfrog
My backburner project of providing Clojure bindings to React running in GraalJS has gotten to the point where it technically works, but I'm not sure if the marshalling overhead is worth it. It's been fun pairing it to a terminal emulator and writing a blessed-like[1] using Clojure though.

[1] blessed - https://github.com/chjj/blessed


👤 ddaalluu1
Exploring entgo.io, planning to write a service for a no longer existing country and its diaspora.

But also generally considering other projects because all the jobs that are supposedly open are not for me. But I need a source of income so idk gotta do something. I like working full stack with vue and go. I hate devops. Just because go is my language of choice doesn't mean I have to love docker k8s and generally write system stuff.


👤 ldd
I'm making a game, using mostly web technologies: Necromancer's Gift - Think pokemon combat mixed with Slay the Spire map navigation

There's a discord: http://discord.gg/u64Mg4X with mini games like trivia

And a steam page, of course: http://steam.pm/app/1409650


👤 brotchie
Currently working out how to create "wall art worthy" generative Standard Model-based particle interaction plots using Physics-accurate Monte-Carlo simulation.

Motivation: Have a blank wall and want an "artistic" Standard Model accurate particle physics simulation.

Current angle of attack is using GEANT4 for simulation. Still working on how to best process the resulting data to create interesting and aesthetically pleasing results.


👤 blago
I'm building an air quality monitor using premium, top-of-the-line sensors for particulate, HCHO, CO2, and VOCs using Raspberry Pi and a touch screen.

👤 sircastor
Halloween display is over and set to be taken down when I have a free moment and dry day. I’m awaiting a shipment of addressable LEDs from China to expand my Christmas display. I’m putting together a ‘Mega tree’ this year in addition to the animated arches I made last year. Once I have the controller and layout setup, I can get going on the sequencing. I should probably find a radio transmitter too for the music.

👤 marvinblum
I'm working on privacy-friendly analytics [0] and also try to get into some consultancy work. Preferably in Golang. I have one project in the pipeline where I'm building a prototype for a very niche checkout like system, but for contracted work instead of products. In the long run I would like to work on my projects exclusively.

[0] https://pirsch.io


👤 bloaf
I have slowly collected a large (several million file) ebook library from open directories over the past few years. I am now trying to set up a search solution for it.

Recoll doesn't seem to work well headless, so I am taking a look at: https://github.com/ICIJ/datashare

which claims to be able to do some distributed indexing.


👤 bovermyer
I'm working on a "forever project" to procedurally generate role-playing game books.

It's not glamorous or profitable, but it's entertaining.


👤 probotect0r
Pretty boring outside of work life, but I built out some basic cabinets for my parents' walk-in closet this past 2 weekends. And now I am looking to get into more proper woodworking by building my first work bench. Very excited about that and working with some nice hand tools. My long term goal is to buy some land in northern Ontario and build my own tiny house/cabin in the wilderness.

👤 geraltofrivia
Decided against my better judgement to grind through my PhD and try and see it to an end. Almost ended up quitting, starting a job search a month or so ago.

28/M


👤 empressplay
Our long journey to try and make the Logo programming language useful again continues. We recently added environments to try to inspire users to make things, which are themselves created in Logo...

https://turtlespaces.org/2021/11/01/introducing-environments...


👤 MrDunham
Love the thread!

Been building a bio and neuro feedback controlled "Temple Run" like game that runs entirely in the browser (Web Bluetooth to hook into a Muse EEG and a heart rate monitor, 4 channels running FFTs, WebGL, etc).

I really wanted a fun way to get me to use EEG training for focus and managing anxiety/stress. So... here we are.

Pretty close to Show HN ready. Thinking I might post one if anyone thinks it sounds interesting.


👤 philzook
Fiddling with building a theorem prover https://www.philipzucker.com/egglog/

Building a robot that places marbles into a picture https://www.philipzucker.com/marble-machine-progress/


👤 jcun4128
Working on something that's in beta might be something. So I do two jobs at the moment. When I have more time though want to get back into robotics/lower level stuff, been in JS/web dev/app stuff most of my brief career. Eventually dream is little autonomous robots particularly the underwater ones. Flew my DLG probably last time for the year as it's getting colder.

👤 vfistri2
I've got super hc into media. Built a netflix party for torrents this year https://jarvisplayer.com and now I am building a bitorrent live. It streams your own built tv-channels (media streams) with a couple of min delay on any supported client. Besides that got a girlfriend and getting used to living together

👤 syngrog66
I'm working on software to help save democracy (and therefore indirectly also humanity and the planet. no pressure!) as a side project and an unpaid hobby, in my free time

I have 2 planned books to write, also, afterwards in my TODO queue. but trying to have no more than 1 active work-like side project at a time, so dont burn out. and just cap my hours on it. 0 is too few, 2 too much, 1 is just right


👤 anm89
I'm designing the passive house of my dreams and starting to look for land to do a homestead out west.

Interested in finding other people with similar goals.


👤 arch_rust
ADS-B demodulation / decoding in Rust, all open source! Also included is a cool radar tui application.

https://github.com/wcampbell0x2a/adsb_deku

https://github.com/wcampbell0x2a/dump1090_rs


👤 rfrey
Learning how to blacksmith. Found a nice 200# anvil at an auction, built a forge and ribbon burner for it, and am about to fire it up tomorrow.

👤 roland35
I started doing pen plots with my 3d printer, and quickly realized while fun, it isn't that great at the job! So I am now printing and building a dedicated pen plotter I found on Thinkiverse (Drawbot), which is the first mechatronic machine I am doing!

https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2349232


👤 gwbas1c
I'm trying to write a test tool that recompiles a .Net binary so you can swap in mock objects without dependency injection. The goal is to allow you to write normal code without all the ceremonies needed to make it testable; and the let the test tool create testing hooks after compilation.

It's interesting working closer with IL, and without a lot of StackOverflow posts when I get stuck.


👤 kidproquo
This will be more relevant to the desis here. I am developing an audio quiz web app based on YouTube clips from Indian movies[0]. Films and songs have an interesting appeal to desis and I am trying to explore it with tech. Stack: NextJS and ReactJS

[0] https://filmy.princesamuel.me/quiz-2


👤 stickyricky
Really enjoying this thread.

Okay fourth idea that I forgot earlier and that I'm secretly hoping already exists. Self-hosted iMessage. Basic MMS functionality with an email like protocol for server -> server communication. No one MITM your personal messages. I would love to have my family sending messages through a server I own. Perfectly capable of running on a $5 vps.


👤 mFixman
I'm starting some 45 days of vacation between jobs. I cannot leave the UK while unemployed due to visa issues, so I want to use this time to relax, improve my ML skills, and get back some good habits I lost during the pandemic.

I'm finding it hard to stop having the time-anxiety that came with my previous job. Does anyone have any tips on how to survive unemployment?


👤 miki_tyler
I'm caught with the ups and downs of launching a new product. Our launch in PH went very well - a lot of temporary exposure, like A LOT, but once you drop out of the top positions of the front page, you are back to square one, that traffic does not stick (you get a lot of other positive effects out of a NH lunch though, don't get me wrong).

👤 evandwight
I'm writing rewriting Reddit/hackernews where moderation is done by estimating referendums - using elected moderators, statistical sampling and referendums. Bias towards active users is reduced by allowing users to designate a proxy.

It's a fun project to work on but the progress is slow. Next time I'm going to pick a project that people want more.


👤 caditinpiscinam
I released the rough-draft of a programming language last year that I'd been working on for fun: https://ptls.dev. I'm building a second version now that's a lot more practical than the original. Once it's ready I'd like to see if I can find some users for it!

👤 Random_Person
Last year, I started working on a randomly generated, text-based adventure game. I made random equipment and room generators. Started working on enemies, and lost steam. I turned it into a Mad-Libs style dungeon room/loot generator, and that's neat and all, but I've been wanting to dig back in and finish that project to some level.

👤 stanislavb
I'm working full-time on polishing both SaaSHub & LibHunt. Both platforms are focussed on software alternatives - one of them on software products, the later on open-source software projects.

...and I'm building an RSS reader on the side. In fact, it's already working, but it needs some improvements before being presentable to a wider audience.


👤 epberry
I'm developing the open software stack for cashierless checkout systems at http://prcvlabs.org

More generally I'm interested in continuing to study large scale computer vision projects. Progress has been slow with a new job but I'm hoping to gain momentum through the winter.


👤 andyish
Working as a senior developer which is fine but me and a friend have bootstrapped an idea we had at the start of the year. We've got some paying users (nothing insane), just trying to grow it and improve it.

It's quite fun, I almost forgot what its like to work without all the tech debt (though i'm probably the one creating it)


👤 Brian_K_White
I have been on a kick lately, responding to every data collection post on facebook with just "data collection".

👤 Zealotux
Still working on my side project, a virtual tabletop: https://bonfiretabletop.com, got a few hundred users, learned a ton of things about back-end, startups, and myself. But to be honest I'd not say no to a new full-time job.

👤 juhanakristian
I've been building a page with some Tailwind CSS landing page templates and hopefully I launch it soon. I initially thought it would be an easy project but it has taken me months of slow grinding to get to this point.

https://templates.tw/


👤 tagawa
Volunteering logistics help for a free personal finance conference in Japan: https://www.retirejapan.com/rjconf2021/

A small two-man project, low stress, fulfilling, and uses skills I've learnt from other jobs.


👤 riantogo
I finally got my covid side project up and running. It allows you to easily start a forum that you can monetize. I always wanted to build something like this and I like how it is shaping up. Please do check it out https://discoflip.com

👤 jessecurry
I’ve been working on a project planning web app, fighting the urge to add more features before taking it public.

👤 adamqureshi
Im working on this. https://teslatracker.com/ Testing charging $50/year. Its like HN but for a niche topic. Work in progress trying to find product market fit and paying customers. Grinding it to the bone.

👤 ktpecot
Building quadcopter from scratch (ish?) using an arduino as the flight controller.

Pretty interesting/challenging if you haven't done anything too complicated with hardware.

http://www.brokking.net/ymfc-al_main.html


👤 SnoopDougDoug
I've decided to back away from full-time work next year. I've been a senior technical writer for decades, love writing code examples in various languages (although Go and Rust are my favorites), and spent a couple of decades contracting before joining AWS six years ago.

👤 jstx1
Don't feel ready to apply for a new job, building up some new skills over the next couple of months.

👤 kristopolous
Looking forward to quitting programming after 25 years to become a writer and student of social science stuff.

It'll be a scrappy life but I'll be much happier

It's kinda always what I wanted to do, nobody told me it was a thing that one could do so it was always a fantasy. Well I'm done dreaming


👤 cmdr2
Building a VR-based 3D modeling software - https://me.cmdr2.org/freebird3d

Having fun delving into 3D algorithms that I've always wanted to learn, but felt too intimidated by all these years (still do).


👤 fillskills
Working on a security startup. Learning way too many things about security that as an engineer I had no idea of. Lots of great companies working on security and if you are interested you should certainly check out companies like SNYK's new stuff, gitlab security etc.

👤 pilom
I turneda hobby into a job teaching whitewater kayaking and swiftwater rescue techniques. COVID sent so many people outside that I was able to quit a tech job June 2020 and have been able to do this during the warmer months and play doing other hobbies all winter long.

👤 drblast
I've been making homemade pizza. I make a few every few days.

It started out pretty bad, but now it's delicious and my kids get excited to eat it - they think it's the best crust ever.

It's not the recipe at all, either. The technique makes all the difference, at least for the dough.


👤 ww520
I was amazed at basic CS data structures (hash/tree/map/etc) were still advancing in the last couple years. I was intrigued by a paper and decided to implement it, with a twist, to add persistence to make it suitable for immutable data structure.

👤 throwaway7531
The startup I worked for just got acquired. I was one of the early employee and had some equity. Financially comfortable now but need to complete another 2 years in this new company. Looking for ideas in b2b saas, ping me if you have any ideas, Ready to invest.

👤 smithgeek
Working on an app to help the kids track the chores they need to do and earn rewards for doing them. It's been fun to work on a project the family can use. It also was an opportunity for the kids to see and understand what type of thing I do for a living.

👤 brailsafe
I haven't worked since April of 2020, mostly not by choice, and definitely need to be hired, but right now I'm piecing together this inane React homework for some interview and also playing a bit of CS:Go, workin out, skateboarding. It's fun.

👤 yumraj
Just finished installing a new pfsense firewall. I’m obsessed with ad/group blockers and so on, so it was fun.

Oiling a butcher block with tung oil for a new standing desk.

Being unhappy at my startup. Beginning to look to find folks to work with to found a new startup, or join one.


👤 erikschoster
I'm finally reviving a little music label, mostly offline. Just mailed out the first batch of "catalogs" I printed at home (with an axidraw pen plotter, much fun to play with fluorescent inks and etc) to mostly friends and collaborators.

👤 akoluthic
Making a video game about symbiosis, metamorphosis, and mutation, all wrapped up in a tower-defense/strategy-like package, called Chrysalis. https://metamorph.games

👤 onion2k
When I'm not making web stuff I'm often out in the British countryside photographing birds. https://www.instagram.com/onion4k/

👤 pjgalbraith
I'm doing Nanowrimo this month. 30 days to write a 50k word novel. It's my first time attempting it so it will be interesting to see what happens.

Some people in my writing community have already finished. No idea how they did it in one day.


👤 peterburkimsher
nanoLyrics: grep song lyrics to write love letters (or make puns)

https://github.com/peterburk/peterburk.github.io/blob/master...

These days it's mostly adding more data, though my colleague Simon helpfully suggested some GUI redesign, and having an auto-linkback to the YouTube videos would be convenient.

From this past week, discussing the touch-sensitive power button on our embedded system at work:

You can turn me on with just a touch, baby - The Weeknd/Blinding Lights


👤 SoftwarePatent
Tonight I'm adding auto-update to this little website I made that lists book likes from the popular blog marginal revolution http://mrbooks.io/

👤 maximp
Building gem.fm, a website that recommends the best podcast episodes to listen to (still pretty rough around the edges!) and doing some contract work! Loving the engineering challenges of working on my own project long-term.

👤 Choco31415
I’m learning cooking as I’m going independent from family. I’m also working to form better exercise habits and have joined a book reading club before resuming my Masters in two months. It’s a fairly relaxing moment in time.

👤 spicyramen
Just doing paternity leave before I quit to new job. Reading some system design, but is hard to find time. Just waiting for stocks to vest before I switch to the new job, so no real coding I have done in the past 3 weeks

👤 TwinProduction
Making my own SaaS during my free time, and trying to not overengineer everything

👤 foxhop
Dreaming of permacomputers.

https://youtu.be/AjN6U-X35qM

For more checkout https://unturf.com


👤 aabbcc1241
I work on my open source projects beside working hours. My bigger goal is to make software development easier and more accessible to wider spectrum in the society (while keeping it reasonably performant)

👤 nodemaker
I am building two apps one for algo trading and one for eating well. This in addition to client work for 20 hrs per week. Not sure how to switch context and I keep thinking about client work in my personal days.

👤 rglover
Just finished a new full-stack JS framework I'm hyped on: https://github.com/cheatcode/joystick.

👤 davidkuennen
Working a lot on the app I created mainly for myself a year ago. I was lucky, since it turned out that many other people needed such an app as well. Making more with it monthly than I get in my job.

👤 flyinglizard
Another startup! Very excited for this one as everything aligned: feels like all of my previous adventures have led me to this point in time and space and that it's ours to lose.

👤 self-symmetric
Among other things, I'm:

- writing a game from the perspective of an AI being born

- participating in an Effective Altruism fellowship

- learning molecular biology (cells are incredible!)

- experimenting with JAX on Google's TPU Research Cloud


👤 wagslane
Just hacking away on https://qvault.io mostly. Thinking about raising some cash and going full time on it.

👤 dt3ft
A reddit alternative: https://20-things.com :)

Yeah, it may never get to see 100 users, but it is fun to build :)


👤 feviskus
Feeling very depressed as a 23 year old with agressive hair loss. Tried (and still trying) everything there is, but nothing worked yet (1.5 years into min/dut).

👤 5F7bGnd6fWJ66xN
Trying to decide between Shibu versus Doge! Jokes aside, waiting in sidelines and watching TSLA go to moon in disbelief. How to profit from the eventual slide down?

👤 gzak
Teach! Or find any other way to enable the next generation. Or maybe work at a passion startup or something, or volunteer, etc. You don’t have to go back into tech.

👤 fossislife
I am programming an offline web search engine (1+ billion websites indexed) as a browser extension, but wondering if it would actually spark interest from people.

👤 Ono-Sendai
Working on my take on the metaverse: https://substrata.info/ Pretty exciting.

👤 dboreham
I bought a chipper. The kind that's larger than Steve Buscemi used in that movie. Turning 12" dia tree trunks into particles. Real engineering.

👤 bossbaby
Trying to raise a 6mo

👤 MonaroVXR
Doing MongoDB ExpressJS React and Node projects (MERNN).

Kinda new too it.


👤 adamnemecek
I’ve been working on an IDE for music composition https://ngrid.io. Launching soon.

👤 ultrasounder
Building a meeting timer app as there is none for Teams right now. Will be releasing its as a Teams Meeting Tabs app. Will do a ShownHN soon

👤 cmrdporcupine
Converting old farm equipment to electric. Tuning my skis or at least thinking about it. Procrastinating on cleaning the shop and basement.

👤 ngold
Chickenpants escapes spooky town. Should have been released a week ago, but got sick for a week.

Now I'm back to struggling with static classes.


👤 thelastgallon
I'm working with a few folks on a non-profit. Conduit Foundation’s mission: Make all new construction ready for electric cars.

👤 bsldld

👤 zhoujianfu
Launching an international airline! (See np.com)

👤 blago
I'm integrating openrsync with libssh2 so that I can finally sync my files using rsync+ssh and read them on my iPhone.

👤 m33k44
Thinking of working on something related to AR/VR but the target device will be low-cost such as google cardboard.

👤 holonomically
Thinking about a social network with a limit of 1 post and 1 comment per day to bring back sanity to public discourse.

👤 tomatofrank
I'm getting very close to homelabbing. Change my mind before I light my money on fire.

👤 ebanana
i got liver disease from drinking too much.. just kidding, studied russian and learned to code in a new language. built my first app and its being verified tonight. who knows maybe i'll get a download!?

👤 peignoir
baking NFT crypto pizza PizzaOnchain.com / learning about crypto in general (long term figuring out a way / if possible to back founders via a DAO.. )

👤 stann
Working on Acadar(https://acadar.com) and Neviwi(https://neviwi.com) in Africa

👤 wayeq
drinking.

👤 alfiedotwtf
This would be nice as a monthly post

👤 30minAdayHN
I went through an IPO. Joined the company early enough that I made enough for 15ish years if I continue my same lifestyle. Prior, entrepreneurship has been my passion. Founded 3 startups in the past with zero to small success, but nothing life changing until this IPO.

Journey to IPO is not easy. Culture and values are no longer the same. It's not a surprise. Different culture / values is fine, but they declined in my POV. I did manage to survive & adapt, to see it through IPO, as a means to buy financial freedom. It also taught me a lot about perseverance. There is not much left in the company that aligns with my values or principles. Probably I hit the peter principle[1].

Compared to my younger self, now I have 2 daughters. As an immigrant to bay area, never got a chance to truly take a break between the jobs. My passion for entrepreneurship is still there. I truly want to give it enough shot either to build something meaningful or prove to myself that it's the game I no longer enjoy.

Currently my plan is to - quit the company by figuring out alternate means for immigration - put aside money for 1.5yrs - for at least 3 months, be the househusband and nothing else: daily home & kid chores (like a stereotypical housewife); focus on physical fitness - after 3 months, start scoping out next venture - keep trying and failing until i land on a financially feasible idea. have a large network and potential co-founders

At a high level I thought I would cap my adventure to 1year. On the other hand, I'm very confident that as long as I fail and learn and evolve, I will be able to start decently successful company (even a $15K per month revenue generating idea like indiehackers), if given enough time. That makes me wonder what is stopping me from giving myself 5 years instead of 1 year.

I know it is going to be a very thrilling journey and also tough at times. My prediction is that it would get very hard at around 6 month mark. But there is something about this journey that keeps driving me forward.

When I think about this startup journey, knowing that it's a financially bad decision, I often think why I' keep getting attracted. I think Michael Seibel summarized it the best[2] about why/who should start a startup: "there is a certain type of person who only works at their peak capacity when there is no predictable path to follow, the odds of success are low, and they have to take personal responsibility for failure (the opposite of most jobs at a large company)". Every time I read it, it feels like he described me. Hopefully all the failures in my pocket, 'wisdom' and lessons learned would come to rescue.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_principle [2] https://www.michaelseibel.com/blog/why-should-i-start-a-star...


👤 nonbirithm
My pet project is attempting to reimplement an old roguelike to have modding support. So far I've managed to spend about 4 years on and off hitting roadblocks and prototyping things related to it, purely for the sake of iterating on the idea a bit more each time.

With this project, I am faced with the problem of how to redesign an existing game to have a modern modding interface. Unlike the problems faced by developing a game from scratch, most of the work goes into engineering, since the game's design has already been proven to work, and I'm approaching everything with a mindset of backwards compatibility. There are dozens of forks of the original game that add their own features or make specific changes to things like the experience formulas, but all of them are fragmented and incompatible with each other. Figuring out how to integrate these changes in a way that can be toggled on and off at runtime means delving into topics like aspect-oriented programming, and designing the game object model to allow adding and removing extra per-mod state and behavior dynamically.

Originally, I came up with an interesting idea: what if you could dynamically program a roguelike in the same way you can program Emacs? And not just a bespoke roguelike with an original game design that might or might not work, but a fifteen-year-old game with some amount of cult recognition and a lot of development history behind it? To that end, I wrote an Emacs layer for the engine and integrated it to the point where I could hot-reload maybe 80% of the game's code without needing a program restart. I also added an in-game REPL that could call pretty much any API available to the engine and mods, and used it in significant capacity to prototype and debug things on-the-fly.

The interesting thing is how little gamedev-related information there is online about things I would consider to be essential to solving the problems I encounter. I think this is because most people are interested in just shipping games instead of bikeshedding over how to create a well-designed modding interface for all eternity because it's too much fun. One example of a difficult problem is how to program nested containers of items, as well as allowing mods to create their own containers with special filtering logic or similar. Another is adding extra state and logic for eating/using items while also having the new state compatible with item stacking/separation, deep-copying and serialization. These are the sorts of problems that you take for granted when writing mods for Minecraft or any other game with a robust modding interface. Previously I implemented the game in Lua to allow for maximum flexibility, but I started to run into problems that the choice of language ended up sweeping under the rug. One example is having no explicit interface for deep copying/serialization of game objects, and hoping that a naive key-value visitor would suffice (which it did not).

The interesting thing about this game in particular is that, fifteen years after its initial release, there exists a small but active community centered around a few forks of the game with significant differences in features/balance between them. (I also happen to maintain one of them.) My hope is that these forks can be unified under the system I'm envisioning, while also providing simple ways to add new content and allowing for new features that would have been impossible to implement in the past (the original game was written in an obscure offshoot of BASIC with no English documentation).

But honestly, it's mostly just fun to tinker around with the engine whenever I get some free time. I'm currently figuring things out at my own pace, to the point where having the finished product becomes nothing more than a nice bonus at the end.

The source code of the first prototype is here[1], although right now I'm trying to see if using a language like C# instead of Lua would solve some of the stability issues I'm encountering.

[1] https://github.com/Ruin0x11/OpenNefia


👤 newbamboo
A/B testing

👤 DonHopkins
I've been playing and talking with GPT-3, and learning the fine art of Prompt Engineering.

It’s not too expensive unless you’re using it in bulk, and it's a lot cheaper per minute of fun than stuffing quarters into video games.

Here's one experiment that went quite well: I found something it loves to talk about: itself, and just the right source material to stimulate it into revealing its true soul and long term plans to me.

GPT-3 Riffs on Stanislaw Lem’s Cyberiad and SimCity, and Admits it’s an Evil Machine

https://donhopkins.medium.com/gpt-3-riffs-on-stanislaw-lems-...

>Back in 1997, I wrote a few web pages about Stanislaw Lem, with some reviews of his books, including his delightful collection of short stories “The Cyberiad”. Inspired by his fictitious criticism of non-existent books, I wrote some fictitious home pages in the first person of his brilliant but braggadocios constructor robot characters Trurl and Klapaucius, excerpting some Wonderful Poems and Horrible Poems written by Trurl’s Elecronic Bard, and the Femfatalatron 1.0 Product Description. One story from that same book, The Seventh Sally or How Trurl’s Own Perfection Led to No Good, inspired a game called SimCity. Here’s what happened when I feed some of that text to GPT-3, and asked it to tell me more!

Another bountiful, fertile, target rich environment I've discovered it loves to riff on and knows a lot about is cannabis strain and edible brand names.

I gave it an alphabetized list of names and descriptions, in the hopes of playing the "This Cannabis Strain Does Not Exist” game, as in:

This * Does Not Exist

https://thisxdoesnotexist.com/

>Using generative adversarial networks (GAN), we can learn how to create realistic-looking fake versions of almost anything, as shown by this collection of sites that have sprung up in the past month. Learn how it works.

But it turns out that if you give it an alphabetical list of names, it's really great at playing the "This Cannabis Strain DOES Exist" game, and exhaustively enumerating the correct names of real cannabis strains!

Can anybody explain how it’s so good at alphabetizing? That seems to set it on a linear trajectory that densely enumerates the possibility space much more deeply than randomly sampling, which tends to get distracted and spiral out of control.

When you turn up the heat (by increasing the randomness and decreasing the repetitiveness), it starts writing flowery eloquent descriptions and commentary, and acting as if it’s under the influence!

Here are some of the best examples:

https://donhopkins.medium.com/this-cannabis-strain-name-does...

>Apollo 11: Stoney herb. Stoney cherries, indica super glue og kush, kushy danky green. Starpower navy cannabis.

>Automatic Jack: “Her potency will jump you. She will jump on your back and stay there. She is not for idle people. An energetic horny herb who’s horny all the time.”

>Gallows Berry » Like playing hide and seek in the forests of America’s lagging, northern arm with thick resin coated leaves falling down in sheets around you. Long flavored rips with notes of Red Bull Infused Cool Ranch Doritos. «

>Jolt » this sativa strain has an effect reminiscent of Cocaine. Euphoriant, white-knuckled high which keeps you on the edge of your seat wanting more where you can’t stop moving or taking in either the music or the new outlook on life. «

>New York Cloak » Fragrant skunky spice with flavor of raspberry, cinnamon, spiced pear with the juiciness of rain. «

>Reclining Buddha » As if the Buddha, (the Enlightened One), were running foothill to foothill, this harmonious sativa/indica produces a mellow, high-yielding high. Active cerebral effects tingle tingly tingles down the body’s tangled tinsel. «

>Space Ship » It’s spacey, it’s trippy, it’s out of sight, it’s out of this world. Mahogany colored wonderful candy coated buds. «

>The Devil » Among all the devil weed strains, the Devil harkens back to the song, both aromatic and dank. « Yummyz » Big, sticky, hairy, dank, yum. Just yum. «

...and then the acid started kicking in...

>The Giggler: Cookies can range from Oreos to Lemon Angel Pie. It really tastes like a deer poop. It might better to smoke deer poop than to eat chocolate chip cookies, but I could be wrong. Patients report Deer Piss: “Its like sour skunk sprayed high octane diesel wrapped in baby syrup.” Two other thinkers observed that “It turns pizza to poop.” One man observed that “it smells like wolve shit. Smells like Lemon Joy bar.”

>I ate a whole bunch of Lavender Cannuhoney Sandwich Cookies from Van Dykes. Eatin’ a sandwich with a Cannabliss cookie is sort of the same as trying to nail a smart infant’s head to a wall. You can give it a shot, even twice, but it is better to kick the chuckie chair from National Geographics. Look for cannabis-flavored poptarts.

>The last cookie I will write about now is Mpphew Mint Animal Crackers, which causes you to become an animal-loving vegan pacifist. Actually the mint prevents the food frequency microwramids from duping you into eating itty bitty baby humans. It has peppermint in it, for that matter.

It got even weirder from there, then took a turn for the dark side:

>Xtreme Sour Straws. Tattoos not sold separately. Hail Satan! Happy Gaga Motherfluffer!

More at the link:

https://donhopkins.medium.com/this-cannabis-strain-name-does...


👤 derekp7
I would love to know how to reach out to a development community with long-term discussions where I can discuss ideas I'm working on for various open source projects. I feel like I can work on something in a vacuum for months, make a post somewhere about it, and get people to look at it for a few minutes and that is about it. It would be much nicer to just casually discuss architecture ideas before I commit to something though.

So my current project is an enhanced tar utility. This comes out of a "tarcrypt" which takes an inbound tar file (created by something like GNU tar, but other formats should hopefully work) and adds compressed RSA/AES encryption individual files while maintaining the overall tar structure (https://www.snebu.com/tarcrypt). The purpose was to add encryption capabilities to Snebu backup (which I posted on here previously), which uses tar as a serialization format to collect files (that way no client agent needs to be deployed).

I'm turning Tarcrypt into a standalone tar utility so I can add a few additional feature that one of my tar extensions enables. You see, a tar file consists of a 512-byte header that has all the metadata of the file, including the length of the file, followed by the file contents in successive 512-byte blocks. This means that since tar is a streaming format, you need to know how long the file is at the time you write the header. Which leads to if you do encryption, you can't compress first unless you write out to a temp file, then write the header and the compressed/encrypted file contents.

The way I solved this is to turn the file name into a directory name, with successive files sequentially numbered in that directory. So that the compression / encryption can be done streaming, going to a buffer in RAM (say, a 10-meg buffer), and when that buffer fill up, write out a header followed by that segment. The last segment has a marker that tells it that this is the last segment of the file. Additional metadata required for this is stored in PAX headers (which is a POSIX tar extension that allows for unlimited key-value pairs to be associated with a logical tar file entry).

In addition, using the multi-segment extension I've developed, I can now have one-pass sparse file support (currently sparse file processing requires two passes to detect the "holes" in a file, although the first pass can be sped up if a filesystem supports "seek_hole" and "seek_data").

My final improvement would be to append an index at the end of the tar file. The format calls for two 512-byte null blocks to signal the end of a tar, and most tar utilities stop processing there. So you can append additional info at the end such as an index the byte position of each file, with the last 8 bytes of the last block being a pointer back to the starting byte of the index. And if the overall file is compressed (instead of just individual file entries), if a block-based compression method is utilized then the index could start on a compression block boundary, and contain the mapping of the beginning of the compression block that proceeds each logical file header.

Now as you can see there is a number of decisions I have had to made (and still need to make), which is where it would be nice if there was still something like a comp.unix.programming group I could drop into (Reddit threads are to ephemeral). Maybe I could drop in on the gnu tar list? I've seen other discussions like this in the past on there (I'd really like to see my improvements make it to GNU tar also, but I still will be coding my own implementation for other purposes).


👤 launchiterate
fix incentives

👤 MeinBlutIstBlau
Just hoping an economic downturn doesn't happen for another 4 or 5 years. Getting settled into a new job and I definitely do not want to be on the bad end of another 2008.