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davideisinger.com/static/archive/brainbaking-com-u5mnoz.txt
David Eisinger 83da500b59 Dispatch #13 (March 2024)
Squashed commit of the following:

commit 374f11cf61378b109d171fc6e2b4c93bad099d21
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Mon Mar 4 23:25:53 2024 -0500

    finish post

commit f0164e4ee203115e1c8e85b10ac472b08993063f
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Mon Mar 4 01:00:22 2024 -0500

    march progress

commit f71d1ea7a289e5c6ee47241a2e944395d7cacfb2
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Mon Mar 4 00:38:52 2024 -0500

    march progress

commit 4b0c67be3a34a9b0cc12d324a2064dc8a5d52d16
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Sun Mar 3 23:16:42 2024 -0500

    march progress

commit e8e07658b2a0c8c54177224648f28951e88afb15
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Sat Mar 2 23:11:48 2024 -0500

    improved arcus

commit 09636c0c606e8497c6e9f6b92842ce3cbbcc0710
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Thu Feb 29 22:21:06 2024 -0500

    Arcus

commit 2f055e02e78eb9f1116a035c6e733cdc9012dbfe
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Wed Feb 28 15:58:37 2024 -0500

    Post update

commit 4bbfffe52a5a007bf48b733791bbfca77e4b0cf0
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Tue Feb 27 13:55:02 2024 -0500

    Update date

commit 21ebf24f05c07637e832851388b545e45707a32d
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Tue Feb 27 12:49:51 2024 -0500

    post notes

commit 64ec1bfbf0096813a84909d88a5ccccf5a076198
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Wed Feb 21 13:56:21 2024 -0500

    add docker-compose systemd

commit fcffb11087bef0afcc51a3c3bc5f16e935e2ae4c
Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com>
Date:   Tue Feb 20 23:44:06 2024 -0500

    start march dispatch
2024-03-04 23:26:10 -05:00

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[test-img]
[1]skip to main content
[2]Brain Baking navigation toggle
• [4] Brain Baking
• [5] Archives
• [6] Subscribe
• [7] Works
• [8] About
• [9] Links
[10]
Publish Your Work
[11] 31 January 2024 | [12]braindump
As an electrical and mechanical engineer, my late father-in-law was an expert
in crafting home-grown black boxes that meticulously—and sometimes also
miraculously—executed certain tasks in and around the house, such as
automatically opening and closing the curtains based on the position of the sun
(that included LEGO Technic radar work), routing audio and video from the
doorbell to the TV or smartphone when someone pressed the button, or mediating
the central heating based on too many factors. He also loved building things
that werent really needed, just for fun: how about a full-size sixties jukebox
emulated with a couple of Arduino boards, where each mechanical piece was
hand-cut?
When I asked him why he doesnt take pictures of each project to document and
publish them online, to inspire others, he was never interested. Most of these
projects arent well-documented privately either, leaving us now with
unsolvable puzzles when things break. But his ideas, as with all ideas, were
gradually formed by studying ideas and projects of others, so why not come full
circle to again share what youve made? I never really got an answer as to why
not.
When I talk to friends about blogging, or more generally “putting stuff out
there”, the vast majority of them dont care, and that comes across as very
strange to me, since I do. Not everyone has the urge [13]to write in public.
Yet publishing your work comes with so many advantages that I dont even know
where to begin to list them. I think many people underestimate the value of
sharing what youve made.
Austin Kleon wrote a whole book about this [14]called Show Your Work!, which,
as Austin puts it, is a good starting point for people who hate the very idea
of self-promotion. Perhaps I should have given a copy to my father-in-law,
although I doubt that would have changed anything. He was content tinkering in
his cellar without letting the world know what he made. Yet if he did, more
people would have made something based on his work. And that feeling of
contributing is amazing.
It doesnt take a genius or a huge project to make a bit of an impact. Just
influencing your own “tribe”, as Seth Godin likes to call it, is more than
enough to get a positive feedback loop going. As a silly example, I fooled
around with hacking a [15]Phomemo M02 thermal printer a year ago, and I just
found out that theres a Node CLI module on GitHub that thanks my article for
pointing them in the right direction. Conventional contributions to existing
open-source projects is of course the obvious other example, but its not even
needed to go that far. I sometimes just write about things I tried—and often
failed—to do, and it always puts a smile on my face when I notice someone
picked that up.
I dont create or publish in the hopes of influencing others. I create things
because I have an urge to create. But it sure is great to help others along the
way, however small my contribution might be. I dont care about being found
online and I am certainly not actively pushing my stuff down others throats
(Kleons rule #7: Dont turn into human spam). I love reading about the
creation process of others. I love sharing my creation process. Its almost
second nature: it feels like a wasted opportunity to do something good in this
world if I didnt.
If you made something, great! Why dont you tell us about it? Its simple, you
just need to hire a VPS, configure iptables, download and customize a Hugo
theme, write front matter and markdown, have a CI pipeline setup, and install
Nginx. Ah, dang it!
[16] You Might Also Like...
• [17]On Writing For Yourself In Public 06 Nov 2023
• [18]Phomemo Thermal Printing On MacOS 03 Feb 2023
[19] Bio and Support
[20] A photo of Me!
I'm [21]Wouter Groeneveld, a Brain Baker, and I love the smell of freshly baked
thoughts (and bread) in the morning. I sometimes convince others to bake their
brain (and bread) too.
If you found this article amusing and/or helpful, you can support me via [22]
PayPal or [23]Ko-Fi. I also like to hear your feedback via [24]Mastodon or
email. Thanks!
JavaScript is disabled. I use it to obfuscate my e-mail, keeping spambots at
bay.
Reach me using: [firstname] at [this domain].
↑ [25]Top [26]Brain Baking bv | [27]Archives | [28]© CC BY 4.0 License.
References:
[1] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/#top
[2] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/#
[4] https://brainbaking.com/
[5] https://brainbaking.com/archives
[6] https://brainbaking.com/subscribe
[7] https://brainbaking.com/works
[8] https://brainbaking.com/about
[9] https://brainbaking.com/links
[10] https://brainbaking.com/
[11] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/
[12] https://brainbaking.com/categories/braindump
[13] https://brainbaking.com/post/2023/11/on-writing-for-yourself-in-public/
[14] https://austinkleon.com/show-your-work/
[15] https://brainbaking.com/post/2023/02/phomemo-thermal-printing-on-macos/
[16] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/#related
[17] https://brainbaking.com/post/2023/11/on-writing-for-yourself-in-public/
[18] https://brainbaking.com/post/2023/02/phomemo-thermal-printing-on-macos/
[19] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/#bio
[20] https://brainbaking.com/
[21] https://brainbaking.com/about
[22] https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=R2WTKY7G9V2KQ
[23] https://ko-fi.com/woutergroeneveld
[24] https://dosgame.club/@jefklak
[25] https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/publish-your-work/#header
[26] https://brainbaking.com/bv
[27] https://brainbaking.com/archives
[28] https://brainbaking.com/copyright-and-tracking-policy