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The large outlets seem to be making subscriptions work, though it does seem to be challenging for them. Ironically, the NYT is constantly running ads in The Daily podcast to subscribe to the NYT to support their journalism. It seems the smaller publishers really struggle to make subscriptions work.


AI companies are causing a content drought that will eventually starve them.


AI is an entropy machine. It sucks out all momentum and stagnates/ossifies everything it touches.


Who cares about them, it will starve society


tl;dr Some people travel only to say they did. Those people suck.


Great idea, I love it!


Keep an eye on https://level.app/ if you're interested in self-hosted chat and/or are tired of the interruptive nature of Slack.


Thanks, I'll definitely be sharing results. Probably put out another blog post and/or discuss it here: http://discuss.bootstrapped.fm/t/i-ll-give-you-a-job-and-hel...


Trying a new hiring strategy here. I'm trying to appeal to talented developers who also have ambitions to start their own product business. What do you think?


Thanks for the comments! Bonus stories for you wonderful HN'ers:

My dad started out as an auto mechanic and painter. He decided to setup his own shop with his first cousin and it was a disaster. They butted heads constantly. My dad sold his shares to his partner and moved on to other things. They tried it, it didn't work out, and so they moved on. Throughout my childhood our family was very close with my dad's first cousin and his family. They relationship is still strong today.

My mother and her brother had a dispute about money over fifteen years ago. They still do not speak today.

Family and friends can be tricky when it involves money, there is no question.


See this: "My mother and her brother had a dispute about money over fifteen years ago. They still do not speak today." - This is exactly what is the norm when mixing business and family and it's absolutely heart breaking. I can't imagine how you must feel. :(


This is my favourite comment so far.


It was very tempting to make that comment. Thanks to schenectasy for stepping up for all of us.


“[In 2003] hosting PHP was not as trivial as it is today.”

Really? I think it was. I setup a PHP hosting company in 2002.

"Ghost is a Tesla."

Aw man...


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