I love reading about the life of developers who are building startups solo. No team. No funding. Just developers earning money by building products.<p>Yongfook has a team now. Pieter Levels is mostly tweeting but I'm more interested in longer blog posts.<p>I love Herman's blog: https://herman.bearblog.dev<p>Do you know anything similar to Herman's blog?
Checkout the blog of onlineornot creator. I have learnt some important insights from his posts.<p><a href="https://onlineornot.com/articles" rel="nofollow">https://onlineornot.com/articles</a><p><a href="https://maxrozen.com/onlineornot-diaries-14" rel="nofollow">https://maxrozen.com/onlineornot-diaries-14</a>
Michael Lynch, from TinyPilot: <a href="https://mtlynch.io/" rel="nofollow">https://mtlynch.io/</a><p>Tom MacWright, now working on Val Town: <a href="https://macwright.com/" rel="nofollow">https://macwright.com/</a>
Not a startup yet per se, but I am blogging about building a personal computer that I plan to manufacture and sell starting this Christmas. The next post is going to be about my adventures in trying to figure out how to work with labs to do electromagnetic interference tests. So far, it's not pretty, but should make for an entertaining, if cautionary, read.<p><a href="https://flyingcarcomputer.com/posts/a-new-personal-computer/" rel="nofollow">https://flyingcarcomputer.com/posts/a-new-personal-computer/</a>
Being solo is overrated. You know what's awesome ? Being really small with only a handful of team members who help you keep everything running while you can do whatever you want or focus on growing the business further.<p>I don't know how to look for those small teams but Twitter can be useful.