Hey. I liked your feedback, so I updated the website.
You can give it a shot in VM - I've done testing on macOS, and then used Ubuntu 24.04 home box to install it, also in multipass. In GitHub I put howto.
It's not self-hostable yet: I'm thinking about adding this option. I think for now I'm trying to see if people would like to give it a shot and try it out.
Because when I'm running infra just to manage scripts for me I want them in proximity to other apps or services I'm already running. There's very few SaaS that will offer a way to connect privately (e.g. Tailscale).
Ultimately I want this in my stack. Autokitteh let's me do it my way, so this is a deal breaker for me. I also don't want to get stuck in SaaS only to have it enshittififed in a few years.
US is the same. I no longer know is someone is using long-distance lights or normal lights, or whether they are wrongly adjusted. But driving at knight, especially with folks right behind you is hard.
Thanks! Perhaps you can test new upcoming workers. There'll be more tools for document processing and rendering, with some examples of what can be done with them.
You submit heavy duty jobs without worrying about infra, and we take care of execution. We're starting with PDF extraction. Audio transcoding + STT (speech to text) is next. Video transcoding will follow.
This allows you to have $5/mo VPS and get media operations figured out.
It's interesting how nobody talks about due-diligence being completely broken. We raised $$$ from many VCs and the DD for some of them was crazy: line item by line item with calls to customers etc. Tech folks were on phone with me and had to explain them stuff step by step, revealing a lot of confidential recipes. Also did this for bigger customers. And the $175M deal.. isn't there an earnout? Like $10M cash now, 1/4*$175 wired on 1yr cliff, and then the rest over 4 years if some milestones are hit? The whole thing looks weird.
> It's interesting how nobody talks about due-diligence being completely broken.
The majority of the talk around this case has been about the due diligence failures. The judge even called it out.
Consumer businesses are harder to vet. It's not like a B2B with a dozen top customers where you can call them all and confirm that sales are happening. Non-response and customer churn is expected to be a high and changing number. From what I read she also invoked various privacy law excuses to give them the run-around while they were pressured to close the deal.
But JPMorgan's failures don't excuse the criminal actions. If someone enters your house and steals your computer, it doesn't matter if you negligently left the door unlocked. A crime is a crime.
>From what I read she also invoked various privacy law excuses to give them the run-around while they were pressured to close the deal.
And that should have been a massive red flag for JPMC. They should have nope'd out of that deal on the spot.
I run a hybrid B2B and B2C consumer packaged good company. I have a few small investors. They know who my top clients are, because they ask in good faith, and I answer in good faith.
> I run a hybrid B2B and B2C consumer packaged good company. I have a few small investors. They know who my top clients are, because they ask in good faith, and I answer in good faith.
Right, because it's easy to share your customer list when you have a small number of customers and they are repeat customers.
Her company helped with student loans. Her customers were mostly one-time customers. The customer count was supposed to be indicative of how many new college students they could expect to sign up each year.
Right but the privacy law excuse is nonsense. All such laws (possible exception of medical data) allow for 3rd parties to be "read in" on the data for legitimate purposes. Source: worked as a consultant for companies with private data for 20 years.
Oh don't worry, the judge absolutely LIT UP JPMorgan in the judgement. This is only a taste
> Still, the judge criticized the bank, saying “they have a lot to blame themselves” for after failing to do adequate due diligence. He quickly added, though, that he was “punishing her conduct and not JPMorgan’s stupidity."
That’s not how it works in venture. Investors want to be rewarded immediately. There might be an earn-out, but it’s relatively minor as compared to the purchase price – maybe 10% to 25%. And just as often, it’s not an earn-out of the original purchase price – it’s an incentive to outperform on top of the purchase price.
I think there is so many factors involved. I've been in ones where they are cutting the check before the elevator pitch has finished. If the founders are rock stars with prior receipts, then that DD goes out of the window. Especially if there is likely to be a ton of competition.
https://wkoszek.github.io/easyforgejo/