WHEN WHAT HOW Writing yesterday's post (which isn't yet posted because it turns out Aussies.space isn't back to accepting SFTP connections yet) seems to have firmed my resolve for business success quite significantly, even though I started it by questioning why I bother worrying about money in the first place. This morning I've been thinking about my 'big' website idea more seriously than I have for a long time - I might even try to find the messy bit of scrap paper that I plastered with dot-pointed ideas for it years ago. I'm mainly thinking about performance considerations. Minimum investment is always my aim, and with a website the running cost is directly associated with the software efficiency, so if I come up with the leanest possible configuration from the start, it should save me money later. How to decide on how long to work on this stuff though? Ideally all the original ideas would be implemented from the start, so that features don't unnecessarily need to be crammed in later. On the other hand, I went that route with my online store and it's painful how much effort I put into implementing, and thereafter supporting, features that I've never used due to physical problems with making their corresponding phisical products economically. Then later I did cram in extra features for selling products that _nobody_ ever bought there in the end anyway. It makes me sad whenever I work on it now. So I implement everything I can imagine then never use half of it, then maybe nobody ever takes any interest in the features that I do offer anyway. Or I make some core implementation and aim to build the rest later. The latter is obviously the common way to do things, but there's no way that I'm smart enough to work out all the right provisions to allow extra features to be bolted on efficiently later - the only way to get plans right in software is to implement them, at least so long as I'm involved. The one thing that I do have in my favour is that I don't need it now. The basic idea for this website has been in my head since sometime when I was still at school. It may only be because nobody else in the world thinks it's a good idea, but nobody's really done it yet, so it may be safe to continue taking my time. Then my only real deadline is that I need to have it making money before all my other income streams fail. Mind you, it's impossible to tell when that will be as well. All this uncertainty is really why I've never started working on it already. But I've wasted so much time on smaller projects that never went anywhere, maybe I should just try to wedge this in alongside those others? I just wish it wasn't yet another project involving me sitting at a computer all day. - The Free Thinker