Just wanted to show off this present from my son πŸ₯°πŸŒΈ (sorry don't know how to describe this item properly πŸ˜₯) image
Was asked "why are you asking for money to develop something that's gonna be open source anyway" Um...
There's a service called "certifier" which is basically sending certificates as a service and it's like $110 a month. πŸ˜Άβ€πŸŒ«οΈ I wrote a Python script to do the same thing for PyLadiesCon for free. I should take some kind of entrepreneur bootcamp to learn how to charge people for things, however, if you need to issue attendance certificates for your event for free, read my blog:
Folks don't understand how open source contributions work. If you want a feature, you don't come and say "make me this feature". Instead, you open a PR and ask for it to get merged. Folks don't understand how community conferences work. If you want something to happen in the conference, you don't come and say "make this happen for me". Instead, you say "I want to volunteer and do this for your conference". #opensource #community #conference
I've been using 1password for maybe 7-8 years and I know a lot of friends in tech are also using it (or similar technologies). I'm wondering though, how widely used is it outside of tech communities? I'm wondering about entities like small local businesses, accountants, clinics, school teachers, how do they manage their passwords and login credentials? Do they write passwords in sticky post-it paper? Maybe I don't wanna know the answer? πŸ˜