Not to mention that the cybertruck has nearly the same dimensions as the f150 (https://youtu.be/sLvopc9oI4A?t=199) and has a shape that is more likely to cut you in half if it were to hit you. It also has a payload that's more comparable with a ford super duty and will likely weight more than the lightning to support that.
Thanks for your honest feedback and letting me know which features you find value in.
Can I reach out to you for future feedback when I'm reconsidering plans?
> Why S3 rather than an entirely free service like netlify, github pages, or surge?
I wanted to start with something that was simple and scalable. At one point I tried using github for hosting, but managing commits got a bit complicated. There are also some limitations on repository size. Although it wouldn't become an issue for a long time if images were uploaded to S3 and the content to github, I would have had to integrate with multiple platforms.
I am open to adding additional hosting solutions, but I wanted to launch to get a pulse on what folks would like those options to be.
> Isn't one of the main advantages of medium the discovery element?
This is definitely one of the main values that Medium has to offer. It's also not the only reason people want to share their thoughts. I wanted to offer the flexibility to own your content and not be locked in to a platform (All HTML files for your site remain in your control). There are a lot of ways to promote your content, if Medium happens to work best for some folks, It could be a good idea to cross post on Medium.
As Mead evolves, I'm open to making promotion of your content on other services easier and in as many cases as possible, automated.
For exercise: I've found riding a bicycle to work to be my least hated form of exercise. I force myself to start every Monday riding to work. If I don't ride on Monday, the rest of the week is shot. When I do ride, I try to make it as enjoyable as possible. If I'm feeling unmotivated, I'll glide to work without breathing heavy at all. I just have to lower the bar so much that I'll at least do it. Often, I get motivated half way to work and pedal harder anyway.
For side projects: I've been tying this in with other habits. I get up at 5 every morning and drink coffee, read for a bit, and make at least 1 small contribution to a side project. Maybe it's a meaningless refactor or fixing a typo. At least I see the green activity in Github and continue building a habit of at least looking at and thinking about the projects I'm working on. The end result is that some weeks are vastly productive while others hardly mean anything.
What I've noticed is that motivation and productivity are a cycle and when I enjoy my daily habits enough (with no particular outcome in mind), I stick with things long enough to see compounding results.
TLDR;
Focusing on outcomes makes you aware of how you're not meeting them -> Demotivation
Building daily habits with vague goals and enjoying the ride -> Compounding results and satisfaction in hindsight
EDIT: Here's a google form for anyone who wants to keep in touch https://goo.gl/forms/liv1JpAdKOjc4wJ23
Hang on, lemme eat my own foot.
Also, image uploads baked in would be a huge plus (but totally not necessary out of the gate).
It also enables a cloudfront distribution with the bucket.