Good Stuff 40 - Building Digital Lemonade Stands with AI
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Episode 40: Building Digital Lemonade Stands with AIHosts: Pete and Andy (celebrating the big 4.0 at the beach)Episode 40! Pete launches his first digital lemonade stand with Ambulando—a habit tracker you pay for by the hour (4 sats). They explore what it means to build permissionless micro-businesses in cyberspace, why you should just build something (anything), and how their methodologies keep evolving between planning and iteration. Plus: the architect vs gardener approach, pluggable databases, and why Marginal Gains is going public.Key Moments:[00:57] 40 episodes without missing a week—including Christmas and New Year's Day[02:17] Digital Lemonade Stands: concept from Episode 22 with Gigi about permissionless cyberspace businesses[04:00] Ambulando launched: habit tracker with encryption, stores in cloud but can't see your data[05:20] Pay-per-hour pricing: 4 sats an hour, buy a day/week/21 days—fractions of cents[06:44] The beauty of digital lemonade stands: could be anything, ultra-low barrier to entry[07:26] What do we build? The prioritization question—answer: something, doesn't matter what[09:52] Using Nostr for identity and encryption, Bitcoin for permissionless payments[11:25] Marginal Gains evolution: started as Slack clone, became planning space for Wingman[13:30] The controller plane: task on Kanban has threads, whiteboard, context—then sends to Wingman[16:41] This has evolved dramatically based on how we actually work, not how we planned[17:30] Andy's two-instance approach: coding agent + planning/conversation agent in parallel[20:37] Third space problem: dump ideas in Miro/Obsidian but never look at them again[21:25] Stepping away from rigid documentation—more like tending a garden than following blueprints[23:30] Pendulum swing: from planning everything to live dictation, now back to solid plans[25:20] Claude comes to work drunk sometimes—you adjust your management style accordingly[28:36] Garden vs Architect: George RR Martin's two types of writers (still waiting for Winds of Winter)[33:35] Claude Co-Work concerns: YOLOing it onto your main computer gives it access to everything[36:24] Domain expertise unlock: people with specialized knowledge can now build their own tools[40:51] Recursive boards: every Kanban has a board, every task has a board, boards all the way down[46:59] Most AI is sold on laziness—instant gratification vs engaged iteration[49:53] Your job is to steer it: infinite space of what AI can build, you guide it to what you need[52:14] Friend of the pod invite code coming—special access inside Marginal Gains[53:12] Wingman should read transcripts and create tasks automatically[54:58] Look Marks: tag it anywhere, access it anywhere—not siloed bookmarks[57:00] Coming this year: pluggable databases and storage you control, used in SaaS appsQuote: "It's going to build whatever it wants to build if you just let it do that. But you don't have to let it do that. You can just steer it. You steer it over here, it's just going to build whatever you want to build."