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I love my thinkpad, wrote up my experience with the Thinkpad T480 last year:

https://maxrozen.com/replacing-my-macbook-m1-with-thinkpad-t...

and a quick buyers guide here:

https://maxrozen.com/getting-your-own-good-enough-laptop-for...


Lenovo has fantastic recent refurbs. It's a bit of a game, but you can find some for around 400$ or less.

My big beef with Macs is I need BIG ssds. If I want to get a 4TB SSD on a Macbook it starts at around 3000$. Recently I purchased a laptop with 2 SSD slots, although disappointingly only one is easy to access.

I'm tempted to go to Microcenter and tell them to replace the stock SSD with a 4TB( the stock SSD is the one behind a difficult to remove heat sink), and then I'd put another 4 tb ssd. Alternatively I could just pay 800$ for a 8TB SSD, install it in a laptop that cost around 1300-1500$ and I'm only spending 2300$.

On a Mac that's about 5000$. I make music and hate external drives with a passion.


The HN thread responding to your T480 article is all that's needed to understand why it's not really a replacement for a MBP:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34878240


I never said I replaced an MBP with it, but okay, yeah, the build quality is not the same.

the devil doesn't need an advocate.

I did something similar to get OnlineOrNot's twitter handle - I realised that unclaimed names would 404 and so I set up a check to get an alert when that happened.

I run OnlineOrNot - https://OnlineOrNot.com

It started as just an uptime checker for websites, eventually I added support for APIs and cron jobs, and automated status pages (you may have seen this one yesterday: https://hackernews.onlineornot.com/)

I started it in 2021, I give it two hours a day before work every workday, and I cut scope on most features to ensure they're shippable in two hours. Then I iterate. It works because it's default-alive. I keep a full time job to be able to build it exactly how I want.

Like my React blog, I started it knowing thousands of others were doing the same thing. I made a bet that my unique perspective would be useful to others, and it paid off.

Has been above $500/mo since 2022, growing steadily since (still a few years away from being able to replace my salary).


This interests me because I recently started building my own monitoring service but stopped because of the existing / entrenched competitors. While it was fun to build the PoC I got to a point where it was becoming "work" and I questioned the ROI. How did you decide to persevere despite this?

I had a habit of building for two hours a day, so I didn't have a lack of motivation or anything, but what boosted it most was getting better at sales and marketing to make it worth building.

Interestingly it stayed up if you weren't logged in.

If you aren't logged in you get a cached version from the CDN/cache. Reddit works the same way.

Not completely, I'm not logged in on my work laptop and it was only working some of the time (and not like some pages were cached and some weren't, I was refreshing the same page and sometimes it worked and sometimes not).

That's how I concluded that it wasn't a ban on my account but rather more serious.

also went down if you went to login, and people's individual pages were also down. So as far as I saw the front page was up as long as you were not logged in, however I'm not sure if that wasn't just luck of the draw, I had one experience where it looked like maybe the front page was sometimes down for not logged in users as well.

on edit: ok others pointed out it was cached pages I saw. explains it.


That only worked for a while, eventually I couldn't load comment pages even logged out.

that'll be because it's served from cache when you're not logged in

Last year I predicted: People will continue to run websites, and need to know when they're down (god, I hope).

My 2026 prediction is that people will continue running websites and buiding web apps that need monitoring, more than ever before.


OnlineOrNot (https://onlineornot.com)

Planning on wrapping up the year with a year in review post (thankfully I've been writing monthly updates as I go, should save some time).

Apart from that, clearing up tech debt that helped me ship fast, but was ultimately a bad fit for the business (Next.js and GraphQL).


how many months ago? the RRP on that today is like 1k+: https://www.ldlc.com/en/product/PB00622951.html


globally yah, but local stores are slow to react to changes so as long as the stock doesn't run out you can get a decent deal.


Learn by doing, I used iFixit to replace my Pixel 3 screen/body, Pixel 6a screen, and a bunch of other mac fixes. You just get better from doing it.


legal entities cost millions to set up for big companies

many companies are afraid of the employment laws they don't fully understand

timezones/cultural differences

There are still contracts for working remotely at companies like this, but you've gotta be known for solving painful problems that they can't fix themselves


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