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Protect your shed

by baely on 4/8/2026, 3:03:33 AM

https://dylanbutler.dev/blog/protect-your-shed/

Comments

by: netule

This post really resonated with me. Through the daily drudgery, I lost that spark that drove me to programming in the first place as a kid and became disgruntled with it for a while. It wasn't until I pushed myself to get back to hobby (or shed) programming that I rekindled my old passion and, as a result, find my day job much more bearable.

4/8/2026, 3:26:12 AM


by: adrianwaj

Is there a place where people can document and share the things they are tinkering with in the shed?<p>I had this idea where people&#x27;s inventions&#x2F;devices could be sent around in a &quot;pay-it-forward circle&quot; for learning and inspiration. People already do that with crystals.<p>Also, can being aware that x number of people are working on the same thing yield to development in the state-of-the-art if they start working together?<p>I suppose there&#x27;s always that tension between DIY&#x27;ers bouncing ideas off each other vs prototypes built in fitted-out research labs to think about.<p>Is this idea anything more that just the addition of another sub-reddit or using existing teamwork software?<p>If you had something to share, how would you choose it amongst the 10&#x27;s or 100&#x27;s of things you have already built? Maybe you&#x27;d need commercialization help? Are there liabilities and risks in sharing DIY devices?<p>I&#x27;ve been thinking about <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openhardware.directory&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openhardware.directory&#x2F;</a> and <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ohwr.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ohwr.org&#x2F;</a> - maybe if you list your projects, agents can do the work of bringing people together and finding new ways to develop them. It&#x27;s about value-adding on top of decentralized and disjointed projects. An easy way to construct plans or follow them? How to minimize duplicated work across the world?

4/8/2026, 5:26:22 AM


by: franciscop

I did this for ~10 years, and absolutely no regrets, it was a lot of fun and the side projects gave me energy.<p>Nowadays it&#x27;s hard though, learning a new language, with a gf and a full-time demanding job, I don&#x27;t have a lot of time to be tinkering. I do feel a bit sad about this but just assumed it&#x27;s just life, and cannot imagine with kids how impossible this&#x27;d be.<p>I did look at doing some basic housekeeping with LLMs (updating deps, standardize testing across projects, etc) and realized I have literally 200+ side projects, most of them websites&#x2F;JS libraries&#x2F;React libraries. I was a bit baffled, of course 80% of it is trash, but I was kind of amazed at how many things I&#x27;ve actually done.

4/8/2026, 4:26:37 AM


by: vachanmn123

Everytime I go back and look at some of my older projects, I am in awe of how much I had done in the short while when I was working on it. Side Projects are kind of the only real way I think one can learn software engineering. Great read

4/8/2026, 4:30:33 AM


by: d--b

Personally, I am over side projects.<p>Did them, the games, the websites, the failed startup thing.<p>I just do other things now.<p>Building finance stuff during the day, doing little computer outside work (a bit of 3D printing here and there).<p>It’s fine. My career’s fine. The work doesn’t suffer from it.<p>Do I have the spark? Idk, I feel I am too old for that spark shit. There is work to do, I do it. If it’s tedious, I’ll drag me feet a while, but eventually it’ll be done. It’s just work.

4/8/2026, 4:55:11 AM


by: skyberrys

It is about finding balance between building in your shed and building skyscrapers.

4/8/2026, 4:31:31 AM


by: ad8e

The second half of this article is detected as AI by pangram: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pangram.com&#x2F;history&#x2F;63fdecd4-f932-4fad-af60-da9928ea1d33" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pangram.com&#x2F;history&#x2F;63fdecd4-f932-4fad-af60-da99...</a>

4/8/2026, 5:26:32 AM