Going All In
Today, I am taking on Read It Later, iPhone development and Idea Shower projects full-time.
Two years ago, I worked for a small web design agency in the Twin Cities and on one random night after work I built a little project. A few months later I decided that I really liked making these little projects and made the call to leave my job and focus more time on my projects while doing contract work part time.
But as the last two years have gone by, in order to make a living, I found myself working full time on contract work and having little time to apply to my own ideas. And again, two years later, I have found myself seemingly in the exact same place again.
However, this time, one thing is different. That little project I started 2 years ago has started to do something I never planned on: it started making money. It’s not enough to quit working and live on an island and it’s not enough to cover my previous contract income, but it is enough to make me believe that I can finally get to where I wanted to be all along: making a living from users, not clients.
It is not going to be easy. Yet, as nervous as I am to take this risk, I’ve found that in my short 25 years on this planet, I’ve never regretted doing something. My only regrets have ever come from not trying something. In the end, if I fall, I can pick myself up and try something else.
Idea Shower is coming back. I’ll be launching the 2.0 version of Read It Later (which is going to rock, I’ll have you know), and then I’ll be moving onto 3 other projects I plan to launch within the next 6 months.
Stay tuned.
4 Earthquakes, 1 Tsunami, My Laptop, and Me: Two weeks from Japan
Fushimi Inari ShrineData
As much as I’d like to run free, there is one cable that you can’t let go of as a web developer and that’s an internet connection. I think without a doubt, this is the biggest hurdle I see to a mobile work life: It’s incredibly expensive. AT&T offers 50MB of international data for $60/mo and good luck if you go over, because at $0.005/KB viewing the homepage of Techcrunch once would cost you $2.50 alone. 50MB is hardly enough to get you through a month, and probably not even enough to get you through a day or two of solid internet use. SoftBank, the major carrier of the iPhone in Japan’s prepaid SIM cards for international visitors were comparable in price as well. In order to conserve my precious MBs, I kept my phone’s data connection disabled unless I absolutely needed it. The result meant that during the day, while I was out and about, it was used primarily to keep tabs on things, while everything else was left for the morning and night where I could use the connection where I was staying.Reverse Teathering
While in Japan I stayed at both a friend’s house and for a few days, a hotel. At both locations, no wireless was provided, but instead a hard LAN connection. This meant that I was still unable to use my iPhone without cracking open the data connection. But with a laptop, I discovered that you can use it has a router to create your own wireless network from the hard line and use that to connect your phone! I wrote a separate post on how to set that up here: Reverse TeatheringOffline Everything
The other way I conserved my data was by making use of the WiFi connection to download everything I’d need for the day. For websites and train schedules I used Read It Later (shameless plug!). However, the most important thing to have when traveling? (Well, outside of a towel) Maps. With an iPhone, you get very accustomed to having an always accessible GPS in your pocket. But with the limited and expensive data, you’ll surpass the cost of your college loans within minutes of panning around the Maps application. The answer is an excellent little app called OffMaps which allows you to download maps for just about anywhere so you can use your GPS offline later on. I’ve written a separate post about that here: OffMaps - Offline Maps and GPSBatching
The whole point of traveling is, well, traveling. Moving, getting out, seeing, doing. But it’s difficult to do this when your work is piling up in front of you. This is why it’s incredibly important to make your time count as much as possible. While I was abroad I didn’t answer any emails or messages on Twitter until two specific times in the morning and at night. Generally people are happy as long as they get a reply back within a day so the delays were acceptable. By grouping everything together and tackling it all at once, it made getting through my work significantly faster. During the time I was there, I never felt overloaded or feared things were not getting done. By spending 1-2 hours in the morning and some time at night to clear my plate, it left the rest of the day for me to get out and play.The Life
Sunrise from the top of Mt Fuji after an 8hr night climb.