![]() ![]() I'd love to continue working for myself forever. ![]() Do you think you'll go back to working for a company (perhaps a smaller one?), or do you see yourself working independently for many years? > From a quick skim of your site it looks like you've worked at large companies and now are doing some independent projects. The article does define it, but it's a little buried. > I still don't know what KVM stands for! Do you think you'll go back to working for a company (perhaps a smaller one?), or do you see yourself working independently for many years? I ask because (a) I'm also casting about at a similar point in my career doing independent projects, but (b) I've never worked at a truly large company, and (c) (someone like) you seem(s) like you'd be a great colleague to work with, and (d) my vague ambition is to work for a small company with skilled colleagues that I can learn from and to work on "technical" projects as opposed to product development but (e) I guess, when I see talented people such as yourself apparently rejecting the conventional job market, I partly infer that they've looked at what's on offer and declined and thus that I'm deluding myself in thinking that I'll find something in the conventional job market that I really want. From a quick skim of your site it looks like you've worked at large companies and now are doing some independent projects. ![]() This isn't an area I know anything about but I really enjoyed your write-up (I still don't know what KVM stands for! But I get that you wanted to act as a physical keyboard and display over IP). (As a side-benefit of that, as long as the computer's BIOS understood Thunderbolt well-enough to display anything during boot, then even Bluetooth peripherals would also work during boot.) you'd manage the pairings through the OSD of the display) and then these devices would be presented through the display's USB controller as always-on direct-attached USB devices - much like VM hypervisors present host-attached Bluetooth HID devices to their VM guests. Change the input on the monitor, and the USB-controller PCIe card in the display would be hotplugged out of one computer and into the other.Įven more ideally, the display would also have a built-in Bluetooth controller that stays active regardless of the USB controller's attach state, such that Bluetooth peripherals could be paired to the display itself rather than to the OS (i.e. I feel like the ideal here would be for there to be a Thunderbolt/USB4 display which has multiple Thunderbolt "source" ports, and also USB-C connectors for peripherals, where the display itself is acting as a USB controller available over Thunderbolt-PCIe, with the USB-C sockets attached to said USB controller. ![]()
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