Storage that actually knows what your stuff is worth. Stowzilla picks it up, catalogs everything, and lets you retrieve or resell on demand. No listing. No packing. Built in Ruby 3.4.
Catch @stowzilla pitching at Ruby Runway, July 15 at Community Day.
https://t.co/abenfJUyVL
Most people have better tools for searching a store full of things they do not own than for searching their own garage. That is backwards. Your own stuff should be searchable.
https://t.co/OIf3UPFTM7
This tweet (and the mozzarella stick one too, if I'm being honest) make me feel like Mitch Hedberg at the Monster Magnet concert: I cheered after the tortilla part!
“can i start you off with an appetizer, maybe 30 tortillas?”
“god no, i can’t eat that many tortillas!”
“how about if cut them up into triangles, fry them in seed oil, & serve them with some salsa?”
“omg that sounds delightful”.
This video is to remind many of you that you need to finally jump and go all in on your side hustle … please my friends stop 🛑 letting fear hold you back … so many of you have created interesting and sustainable side hustles without realizing their are your actual careers and businesses ….
PS: go to https://t.co/j8WInrt9vR at 9am ☀️ ET ..
I’ll be live and hanging #garyvee
On Memorial Day, we remember America’s fallen service members and the families who carry their memory. May we meet this day with gratitude, humility, and respect.
Tanner Hegert was great on the latest episode of @AjOsborne1's Self Storage Income podcast where he spoke about storage pricing.
Small operators apparently do not love the low intro rate / rent increase model. But the big REITs made the market efficient. Customers shop the move-in price. Local operators have to compete.
The customer thinks, “I only need this for a month or two.”
Then a year passes and the unit is still full.
And now they barely remember what is in it.
They know there is probably something important in there. But sorting it, moving it, and selling what they no longer need is a whole project.
So they keep paying.
That is the problem Stowzilla is built for.
Not every storage use case. Not pianos, heavy equipment, or full-house moves.
But for the stuff that fills closets, drawers, garages and sheds that you bring with you move after move and takes up valuable storage space in your home making self storage appealing because you feel like you live in a storage unit already. We think pickup + inventory + resale is a better answer.
Make the stuff visible again.
Bring back what matters.
Sell what does not.
Tanner's comments come in around 19:52 in the episode"Scaling to 13 Facilities (2,800+ Units) with Self Storage Development" https://t.co/KDd6Qqmp9C
We love to use AI to build the tools that build the tools.
We use Kiro (Claude under the hood) to quickly build Terraform providers. This reviewable code then stands up consistent infrastructure.
the funny thing about vibe coding is everyone assumes building the app is the whole job now
and for most stuff, it kinda is
...but enterprise is a completely different beast
say someone builds something great in replit or lovable or just raw claude.
it works. they bring it to the company
then IT asks where the data lives, who has access, and whether there's an audit trail
and the app is dead
because the app was maybe 10% of the actual problem.
the other 90% is the trust layer underneath (governance, compliance, permissions, data isolation) and nobody thinks about it until someone asks
superblocks is interesting to me because they specifically built for that 90%.
you describe what you need, their ai builds the app, and it comes out with all the necessary enterprise stuff already baked in.
> who's allowed to access it
> what data it can touch
> every action logged
> everything running inside your own cloud
etc
your security team gets one dashboard showing every app across the org + who built what
instacart/sofi already build and manage their internal software through it
the AI companies that solve the trust layer like this are going to EAT the enterprise market imo