Work with the garage door up

(notes.andymatuschak.org)

47 points | by jxmorris12 1 day ago

11 comments

  • mattkevan 45 minutes ago
    Genuinely curious where the best place online to do this is today.

    Until recently my reflexive answer would have been Twitter, but [gestures vaguely at the state of it].

    Would it be Substack, Bluesky, Mastodon, a personal blog, or somewhere else?

    Maybe I'm overthinking it, but it's hard to know where to get started.

    • malshe 10 minutes ago
      I would begrudgingly suggest LinkedIn. I have seen a bunch of professors doing it there successfully. There they also promote their Substack which LinkedIn allows. I remember Elon had banned Substack on X at one point.
    • burnt_toast 35 minutes ago
      Niche forums are still alive and well.

      I run a blog and like to write about projects but it's hard to get feedback there unless you're willing to moderate comments. As a work around I started sharing build threads on places like garagejournal and you can get a lot of good feedback.

    • stronglikedan 20 minutes ago
      > would have been Twitter, but

      Still is (X), despite the people who would fool themselves into thinking otherwise.

      • threetonesun 1 minute ago
        X doesn’t even allow for non-logged in users any more, forget about the blatant racism from its owner and occasional child porn. Who even knows what algorithm it uses to show content any more. Anyone still posting there is either wildly ignorant or completely ok with this, and in either case it’s hard to value anything they say.
    • simonsarris 39 minutes ago
      > but [gestures vaguely at the state of it]

      Everyone wants to gesture vaguely at the state of it but it's still by far the best place. Just use the site the way you want to use it, post the way you wish others posted, and mute stuff you don't like aggressively.

    • oliver236 24 minutes ago
      isn't it called x? why do you say twitter?
      • wpm 10 minutes ago
        Cause X is a stupid name
      • stronglikedan 19 minutes ago
        because everyone deadnames things they don't like, while claiming it's somehow evil for others to deadname things they like. i.e., they're virtue signalling
  • mapontosevenths 1 hour ago
    I very much agree with this author, and the sort of open source ethos it embodies.

    However, as a corporate stooge I have a hard time balancing my natural desire to work with the garage door up and my "neighbors" (legitimate) need for me to turn my terrible garage band music down and only show up after practice is over (when I have a nice deliverable).

    Does anyone have any tips for finding the right balance? What is the professional development teams version of working with the garage door open?

    • LatencyKills 1 hour ago
      I was also a corporate stooge (at both Apple and Microsoft). One of the biggest differences in culture was exactly this point. At Apple, it was encouraged to share your successes and failures in real time across teams. At Microsoft, there was so much infighting and competition that you tended to share nothing until you were ready to release. For example, someone on the Windows team wouldn't want to give away a cool solution that could be "stolen" by the dev tools team. This resulted in walled gardens that were protected at all costs.
    • Lalabadie 51 minutes ago
      So long as this is about sharing on the Internet, the fun part is that no one is forced to be your neighbour. The question becomes whether you want to create the opportunity for kindred spirits to find you or not.

      In a corporate setting it's a bit different, since you need to create non-critical sharing spaces where it's okay to share that sort of progress.

    • throwpoaster 1 hour ago
      Seems related to the explore/exploit problem, where the standard answer is related to the answer to the Secretary Problem[0], with the important caveat that it depends on whether "passing" on an opportunity legitimately makes it unavailable in future.

      But another good answer is to open the door and trust the audience. The people who show up to the garage practice are perhaps not people who show up to buy tickets.

      Adopting a scarcity mindset, generally, is a bad idea.

      [0]:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secretary_problem

  • dmos62 2 hours ago
    How do you learn to share what you do, when you're not used to sharing at all? Should one accept that noone will read 99% of what one shares and just use sharing as a way to record and reflect on own process?
    • asa400 1 hour ago
      > Should one accept that noone will read 99% of what one shares and just use sharing as a way to record and reflect on own process?

      Yes, 100%. Almost no one has found either my public code or my writing useful, but the process of writing and documenting has been tremendously useful to help me clarify what I _actually believe_ at that point in time. This is the primary benefit.

      That said, a few projects have taken off unexpectedly and clearly helped some folks, and I've received a few cold emails from folks who somehow ended up on my blog, and all have been pleasant conversations!

      One thing I recommend is trying to lower the threshold of what is acceptable to publish. Publish scraps, publish "today I learned", publish "look at this stupid thing I discovered" stuff. Gradually your threshold will rise, but one mistake I see people making is the belief that they have to publish finished projects and novel-quality writing in order for it to be worth it. Nothing could be further from the truth.

    • theshrike79 2 hours ago
      I've "built in the open" before that was a thing.

      Just the fact that my Github repos are 99% public forces me to be diligent in what I commit (no secrets, nothing private)

      I have like one project with over 10 stars and a bunch of forks, but that's about it. I build stuff for me, not for others. If someone can look at my crap and get inspiration, it's cool but not essential to my happiness.

      Some people on the other hand LOVE the "community" bit of it, every single brain fart of them has a fancy landing page, 15 posts about it on different subreddits and substacks and it's basically a yt-dlp wrapper or something. That's not for me.

    • bombcar 2 hours ago
      Yes. The very act of sharing is a form of "rubber ducking" [32] which will help, even if you're Truman and nobody else exists.

      And even if nobody else exists, you do [99] and can later look back at your sharing and glean insights, even if "wow look how little I knew and how far I've come".

      [32] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_duck_debugging

      [99] https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/59

    • twosdai 2 hours ago
      I think if you make the sharing intentional to specific groups or specific people with high quality work, people will be interested.

      So you can biforcate your sharing somewhat. 99% of your content of sharing will not be watched initially, but if you trim it and edit it intentionally well for an audience who care, people will come to see more of what you have.

      Many "influencers" share a lot on twitch and then cut up the best part of their stream into a 2 minute video byte for youtube. As an example.

    • sanex 1 hour ago
      1. "Nobody" will likely read it. Don't overthink, don't be shy. 2. If you don't post you won't put the effort in to make it good. Finish your thoughts, fix your grammar, add headers and bullets and tags and pictures.
    • voidUpdate 1 hour ago
      I do exactly the second part of this. Nobody is going to read what I write, so I just write about what I did, how I did it and what I was thinking when I did it. Not everything has to be written as a perfectly cited essay, but often just noting down what you did can be helpful in the long run. Sometimes I've thought of something, remembered that I did something useful and related in the past and dug out an old article to consult my previous thoughts
  • endymion-light 1 hour ago
    I like the concept of this, but it does feel horrific to share on most social media. I already share a lot of work I do in local dev chats etc - but there's something about the X algorithm that makes sharing anything feel terrible.

    Although weirdly i've found youtube to be really good in terms of getting audience for smaller works, and annoyingly linkedin seems to actually share inside your network.

    There's just something about Twitter/X that is a complete shout into the void when posting about in-progress dev work that feels awful.

  • BoostandEthanol 45 minutes ago
    Goes both ways. I had a phase of trying this and found I had to invest as much or more effort figuring out how to document stuff for the eyes of an outside observer as I did on the actual task. Guess maybe the answer in my case is to not make it accessible, but does that defeat the purpose?
    • stonogo 25 minutes ago
      I don't think it defeats the purpose. Your audience will find you. Once that happens, you will start getting feedback, and then you can decide how to handle that. Closing the door just means your audience can't find you in the first place.
  • dcchuck 1 hour ago
    I enjoyed the sentiment, thank you for sharing.

    Came to post about the site. My first reaction to the layout was "Oh, must be optimized for mobile." Then I clicked a link in one of the articles and it opened alongside it. Very slick. I enjoy this! It enables that "wiki deep dive" style of browsing. I suddenly want to read all your notes.

  • singpolyma3 1 hour ago
    This is one of the core spirits of open source
  • booleandilemma 58 minutes ago
    I don't know if I trust this as much as I did in the past. There's lots of competition out there. Lots of AI companies that want to slurp up data. It's a nice warm and fuzzy thing to say but I don't think it helps you, it just helps competitors get the jump on you.
    • simonw 25 minutes ago
      Fear of AI companies "slurping up data" being used as a rationale for not sharing anything is one of the most underrated harms of the whole current AI mess.
  • tristor 27 minutes ago
    I'm kind of disappointed that this is about social media presence and not the physical world. I am a big proponent of working with your garage door up, quite literally, and I make it a point to do projects in my garage or my driveway, visible to my neighbors. I also make it a point to interact with my neighbors if they're doing a project and offer a hand or company (if they're interested in either). This is part of how I've built community around me in the places I live. Doing things like helping someone replace a valve cover gasket and spark plugs at 11PM so they could get to work in the morning when they were already too deep in fixing their only car; baking bread and running my smoker in the driveway and then offering BBQ sandwiches to my neighbors; setting up my jobsite table saw and miter saw in the driveway when doing home improvement projects, only to find out a neighbor is a tiler and can help me finish out my shower after I do the framing; etc.

    I have found a lot of value in being open to other people, when I'm actively engaged in something. It's not even about displaying competence or showing off (which is how I look at people doing the same on social media), it's about doing your own thing in a way which is inviting rather than offputting, so if somebody wants to ask questions, give a helping hand, or just feel comfortable doing their own thing in a way that's inviting, you help create that sense of community and ambience around you. This is a stark contrast to many places around, at least the US, where something as simple as working on your car in your driveway might be punished. Community is built, and we're all part of it, and working in the open is one of the best ways to help build community.

    To that point, though, there /used/ to be a place to do this online in an honest way, which was niche forums. I wrote and posted many of the how-to guides for one of the popular cheap enthusiast car platforms I used to own on the niche webforum for that platform, in part because there wasn't much material out there so I knew I'd actively be helping others to document and photograph my work for sharing online. But now those forums are mostly gone, replaced by Facebook groups, and across the net the signal to noise ratio is completely skewed. Trying to work in the open online is screaming into the void, and if someone does notice it is actively offputting because it comes off as insincere and self-aggrandizing. It is absolutely not the same as literally working with your garage door open.

    • nemomarx 25 minutes ago
      This works pretty well for physical projects but I think coding in your garage with the door open would not invite a lot of conversation or connection?

      Maybe it would be a nice wfh office in the summer, though.

  • throwpoaster 1 hour ago
    I recommend running this by legal if you are funded, however, I am not a lawyer.
  • jdrormdj 1 hour ago
    Could someone from california explain "garage door up" reference? Is it like pretending to be early apple or HP, and starting chip factory on backyard reference? Or some sort of open door policy?

    I just do not get it. If you own a house, you have $1m capital to deploy towards business. You do not have to invite random people and dogs from street, to steal or pee on your expensive equipment.

    If you actually have serious workshop like restoring cars or building something, rent a warehouse. HOAs have strict rules about chemicals, noise and vans parked on drive way!

    And if your goal is to reach people, there is much better way to do that!

    • atroon 16 minutes ago
      > I just do not get it. If you own a house, you have $1m capital to deploy towards business. You do not have to invite random people and dogs from street, to steal or pee on your expensive equipment.

      The author is talking about, more or less, gentrified light industrial spaces that have been taken over by artisans (wood workers, glassblowers) and noting that on the walk to work or in the neighborhood, the author _sees_ those people working, producing product. Whereas the reality for 'knowledge work' is essentially the opposite: you see finished products on twitter and that's it.

      This is not talking about using your residence garage as a shop, although I suppose it could be.

    • somehnguy 54 minutes ago
      I believe you may be overthinking it a tad. I take it just to mean "work in the open".

      As an example - at my home unless the weather is poor I always leave my garage door up when working on something, whether vehicles or other projects.

      This is mainly for sunlight and fresh air but the end result is the same. Any neighbor or passerby can see what I'm doing, and in rare cases may actually be able to help or offer advice.

      • jdrormdj 46 minutes ago
        I get leaving garage door open, just for ventilation, but I always lock the main gate on driveway.

        Letting random people to freely roam around workshop seems incredible reckless, dangerous, and like a pending lawsuit! The glassworkhop referenced earlier is working with liquid that is over 1500c! It can amputate a hand in seconds! The same with carpentry, my circular saw does not even have a safety conductivity switch!

    • IncandescentGas 48 minutes ago
      > If you actually have serious workshop like restoring cars or building something, rent a warehouse. HOAs have strict rules about chemicals, noise and vans parked on drive way!

      I'd never buy a home in a HOA, because I don't need this guy telling me how I can use my garage. City ordinances are already good enough, when it comes to sane noise and parking rules.

      • walthamstow 14 minutes ago
        I know this is miles off topic but the very concept of HOA is insane to me as a Brit. Can they really fine you, then take your house if you don't pay the fines?
    • criddell 57 minutes ago
      I think "garage door up" means "in the open".