Back on X, building Kiboh.
Kiboh is built on one core belief:
The manager-report relationship is the most slept-on lever in any company.
But come review time? Data's scattered across Slack threads, emails, docs, random notes, even paper scribbles sometimes. Most of the real stuff gets forgotten. Managers guess. Recency bias takes over.
So we built the opposite: continuous tracking of relationships and commitments, AI spotting signals along the way, and reviews actually grounded in real evidence instead of vibes or whatever's freshest in memory.
The cool part, though? Once you start mapping how relationships and knowledge actually flow in an org, you spot the hidden stuff most companies only catch too late:
- Who the true knowledge hubs are
- Where the quiet bottlenecks hide
- Who's a walking bus factor
- Who's quietly nearing retirement
Building in public from here. More soon 🚀
Shipped managed hosting for EmDash, Cloudflare's new open-source CMS. Sign up, pick a template, get a site. Free tier available.
Early access. Feedback welcome.
Been dabbling on-and-off with building in public for a little while now. Today I'm shipping something new.
DashHost is managed hosting for EmDash, the open-source CMS that Cloudflare launched as a WordPress successor. Serverless, TypeScript, sandboxed plugins, built-in SEO, AI-native.
Problem is, deploying EmDash today requires developer-level Cloudflare knowledge. Workers for Platforms, D1 databases, R2 buckets, wrangler configs. Most people don't want to deal with that.
DashHost abstracts all of it away. Sign up, pick a template, choose a subdomain. Your site is live in moments. Connect a custom domain. SSL is automatic. Usage tracking and billing are built in.
Five templates. Free tier available. Paid from $19/mo.
I'll be upfront. This is early access. EmDash itself is v0.1. DashHost works but has rough edges. I'm not pretending otherwise. But the foundation is solid and I'd love feedback from anyone interested in where CMS hosting is heading.
https://t.co/oz5THAvLpQ
Been dabbling on-and-off with building in public for a little while now. Today I'm shipping something new.
DashHost is managed hosting for EmDash, the open-source CMS that Cloudflare launched as a WordPress successor. Serverless, TypeScript, sandboxed plugins, built-in SEO, AI-native.
Problem is, deploying EmDash today requires developer-level Cloudflare knowledge. Workers for Platforms, D1 databases, R2 buckets, wrangler configs. Most people don't want to deal with that.
DashHost abstracts all of it away. Sign up, pick a template, choose a subdomain. Your site is live in moments. Connect a custom domain. SSL is automatic. Usage tracking and billing are built in.
Five templates. Free tier available. Paid from $19/mo.
I'll be upfront. This is early access. EmDash itself is v0.1. DashHost works but has rough edges. I'm not pretending otherwise. But the foundation is solid and I'd love feedback from anyone interested in where CMS hosting is heading.
https://t.co/oz5THAvLpQ
@Shpigford@schwabsauce It does mention that they’re still going to give it a shot.
I’d love to see Digg make a come back. I basically dropped Reddit when they paywalled their API (and killed third party apps).
@Shpigford The bots are getting a bit much, for sure. I barely have any followers and even I end up with bot replies on some of my posts. The slop is so obvious too.
Started working on a cool new project. There are a few competitors in the market but they’re way over priced and not keeping up with the times. I’m seeing a golden opportunity just waiting for someone to grab it. Aiming for $10k+ MRR!
Stay tuned for a launch announcement soon.
@d4m1n The only crap part is the free tier CI minutes doesn’t come close to what you get with GHA.
But if you put a $4 VPS up on Hetzner Cloud you can use a self hosted runner at unlimited usage. That’s a huge step up over GHA self hosted runners, which you’d still have to pay for.
@Shpigford@phuctm97 Yup, 100% this. I’ve been using it in Conductor to do my reviews before making my PRs. It’s been great for the reviews and likely could improve considerably if I took some time to put together some good custom instructions for the reviews.