Haha, I suppose it's a bit risky to put spinning skeletons on your website these days since your potential future employer could see it. People are still making super cool and unique websites on Neocities[1] though.
> My superpower is being vague and mysterious. Unfortunately these people in particular are very paranoid and anti-social and have a strong distrust.
I appreciate the effort, but I think not clicking on untrusted links from random emails is common sense these days.
Too many scams out there unfortunately, and "let’s build the future together" sounds like a typical crypto/web3 email scam.
I like the idea with the flyers though.
> I am aware that it won’t happen. [...] No one cares and I should just fuck off. [...] I’m also sure that if anyone ran the code themselves they’d see immediate success and traction. [...] I’m sure no one is reading this either.
You're being unnecessarily hard on yourself, many people have faced the same problems before [0].
"You work on a project that does not deliver immediate or steady results; all the while, people around you work on projects that do. You are
in trouble. Such is the lot of scientists, artists, and researchers lost in society rather than living in an insulated community or an artist colony." [1]
You're trying to gain your first users in a space with a lot of competitors. Reading a business book would be more helpful than beating yourself up.
"The common wisdom was that it was more or less impossible to bring a new IM network to market without spending an extraordinary amount of money on marketing. The reason for that wisdom is simple. Because of the power of network effects, IM products have high switching costs. To switch from one network to another, customers would have to convince their friends and colleagues to switch with them." [2]
> "Our customers were not intimidated by the idea of having to take their friends with them to a new IM network; it turned out that they enjoyed that challenge."
I'm confused, did he type them up on a computer that was not connected to the internet/school network but was physically connected to a printer close by? Why didn't he and the secretary copy emails from/to some form of portable storage?
Before "Information Systems" there was no need for a company/college wide network; computers with printers on the same desk were a replacement for the typewriter.