Was going to mess around on a synth patch I've been working on lately but one of the cases wouldn't power on properly. It worked fine last night, but I guess I've got a bit too much power draw happening there. Not surprised as it's my cheapest case and there's a few things in there with higher power requirements. Taking one module out got it powering back up again but I decided to just move everything into a case with a beefier power supply.
Production test roast of the new decaf Peru turned out nicely. Doesn't taste like a decaf. It's also retailing $7 per pound more than it was the last time I sold a decaf Peru (granted, it's been a while, it's only $2 higher than our most expensive decafs otherwise currently on the shelf). Unfortunately, it does look like as I sell out of our current stock the replacements are going to cost more. I'm still buying less so that if prices come down I'll be in a better position to lower mine too.
Evaluating the new decaf Peruvian coffee that was delivered yesterday. This is one of those that's hard to screw up as it's delicious across a broad range of roast levels and the changes are somewhat subtle. If you're the sort who has strong preferences for a particular roast level you can probably just roast it like that and expect to get something nice as a finished product and if you're not that skilled at controlling the roast you can be off by a lot and still end up close in the cup.
Today's coffee delivery has arrived. I've also placed an order for a couple boxes of this one to arrive soon. I'll have to charge a lot for it and I expect it to sell out pretty fast. https://royalcoffee.com/product/3427097000044428849/
@mhoye The trick is to just call more stuff copilot.
@ekaitz_zarraga No worries. Best of luck to you if you give this a go and if you have any follow up questions I'm always happy to chat about that.
@ekaitz_zarraga @mhoye Before working on this, I had a conversation with another shop owner in the same industry at a trade event and he was very excited about his new ecommerce site, but then revealed that he'd gotten 0 orders through it (he still had old fashioned mail order customers), so my priorities were: 1. Doesn't cost if there aren't sales. 2. Can be built quickly with tech I already know and am comfortable with. 3. Easily integrates with my existing site.
@ekaitz_zarraga @mhoye Happy to talk about that. Most of the user facing site is static content regenerated as needed by Jekyll. Shopping cart, checkout, and the order fulfillment stuff for staff is done with tiny C++ programs (written more like C but bringing in some of the safer standard library stuff to hopefully avoid most of the footguns, PHP would honestly be a better choice here, I just hadn't used that in ages) sharing some common utility code. PostgreSQL, Stripe, and Shippo also used.
@mhoye I tossed together my own thing. Very barebones, but it only incurs costs when I'm selling and the code is small enough to fit in my head when changes are needed. I do not recommend it.
Today's coding was mostly just reading documentation that's a bit too diffuse and figuring out what all goes where to make the computer do what I want. There are examples out there that are all not quite what I need, but now that I've sorted out the foundation there's a lot that I can build on top of today's work. I could have taken a few different approaches and not had to go through the hassle, but the end result of today's work seems like it'll be nicer to work with in the long run.
Sorting out coffee purchases. I probably need to spend about $10K now-ish and then more next month. Slim pickings on decafs right now, but there are some interesting things that I think would be fun to bring in as limited edition coffees. I'll need to convince my sister that that's a good idea so we'll see how that goes.
@mhoye Wisconsin wants to know what's wrong with the rest of the country.
Author of Typica software for coffee roasters.