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Hello everyone, it’s Tony again 👋 These days time flies so fast to me! I’m having so many updates in May that I want to share with you all. Let’s go! Welcome 128 new subscribers since the last issue! If you are new here, this is a monthly newsletter of my indie hacking journey. I try to document everything happened in the last month and share my insights and knowledge as much as I can.
over a year ago

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More from Tony Dinh's Newsletter

Late promotion update

Hi everyone!

5 months ago 79 votes
Nov 2024: My first million!

$1M in annual revenue, B2B sales, SOC 2, resellers, grow team, and other updates in November 2024.

6 months ago 92 votes
Get SOC 2 certified as an indie hacker

All the details about the process and the cost of getting SOC 2

10 months ago 134 votes
April 2024 updates, new product!

Traveled to Bali and Sydney, some updates on Typing Mind, and a new product.

a year ago 189 votes
Another 6-figure exit, and the future

I sold Xnapper, here is a quick update about the acquisition details

a year ago 178 votes

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Notes from Simon Willison's Interview on Software Misadventures

I just finished listening to Simon Willison’s interview on the Software Misadventures podcast. I learned a lot from the interview, so I wrote up my notes. This is not a summary of the whole interview, just the parts that were new to me or that I’d like to remember. Simon Willison on the Software Misadventures podcast Who’s Simon Willison? One of the co-creators of Django, the most popular web framework for Python. One of the most popular indepedent bloggers on Hacker News. For the last few years, has focused his blog primarily on AI, especially on applications of AI technology in everyday software development. Currently working on an open-source data analysis tool called Datasette. Plugins as a form of open-source contribution Original discussion

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How Marc Lou makes millions from great marketing

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My $6k Advance as a Self-Published Technical Author

I just received $5,947 in advance sales for my first technical book, even though it’s only 25% complete, and I’m self-publishing it. The book is called Refactoring English, and it’s a guide for software developers to improve their writing. In March, I ran a three-week pre-sale for the book on Kickstarter. The pre-sale raised $6,551 from 191 customers. After Kickstarter’s fees, I get $5,946.92, or 91% of the total. Proceeds from my pre-sale on Kickstarter

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The Tool That's Making Mobile Developers' Lives 10x Easier

Just hunted Boxo AI on Product Hunt which offers a key missing puzzle piece for mobile app developers

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Don't Marry Your Podcasting Platform: Host Your Own Podcast Feed

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