By Casey Liss
Footguns

I tend to feel… strongly. That applies to most aspects in life, including when I find a company whose product(s) I really enjoy.

Those products tend to share common traits; they are often simple on the surface, but have surprising depth to them. They can mold themselves to fit my needs, but once that mold is set, they get out of my way. But more than anything else, they tend to be reliable. I fell in love with Apple because, back in the mid aughts, their products really did just work.

I think my appreciation for a product crosses the rubicon into love when it regularly and repeatedly demonstrates one trait: respect for the user.

Even an unreliable product can keep my trust, enthusiasm, and love, if I can tell that those who make it have a deep respect for me.


Many years ago, Eero sponsored my podcast. They were kind enough to send a three-pack of base stations, and I have not looked back. Eero was simple to use, but powerful enough for the needs of a superdork like myself. It largely remains so to this day.

However, a few years back, Eero fell victim to every corporation’s favorite thing: recurring revenue. Eero started quietly pushing Eero Plus, a subscription service that I was largely uninterested in.

Over the years, this has gotten more and more aggressive, and, annoyingly, more and more has been gated behind Eero Plus. I love that I can see totals for downloaded and uploaded data in the app, but every time I want to dig deeper, I see this upsell, and I grumble.

Unlock more activity: Monitor your network for threats and more

This is not respect for the user. This is enshittification. It’s a foot gun.

As I write these words, I still use Eero in my house. I still recommend it to most people. But instead of an unequivocal, no-caveats “get this”, my advice is now “get this if you’re not a power user”.

I plan to replace my Eero setup with Ubiquiti equipment later this year.


Sonos is the classic example of “once you experience it, there’s no going back”. I was able to buy some Sonos equipment at a steep discount, and I was woefully unsure if I had just wasted a still-considerable amount of my money.

Within the first 48 hours, I was a Sonos superfan, and started evangelizing their products to anyone who would listen. All it takes is walking a portable speaker from one end of the top story of my house, past the music playing in my office, past the music playing in the living room, past the music playing in the porch, to the backyard. Somehow — by ✨ magic ✨ — the music was perfectly synchronized the whole way. The speaker in my hands was perfectly synchronized with the office, the living room, and the porch. Incredible.

While that still remains true today, the Sonos app has been an utter disaster. Around this time last year, Sonos put their own needs over their users’, and foisted a completely-rewritten app upon their entire userbase. This app was (and remains!) deeply maligned. At this point, a year later, it’s usable, and I generally don’t have problems with it.

What was once an unequivocal recommendation to friends and family — “You should get a Sonos system; just tell me how much you want to spend” — has now become “well, I still recommend a Sonos system, but there’s some things you should know…”.

It didn’t have to be this way. This is not respect for the user. While I wouldn’t go so far as to say this is enshittification, I will say it’s 100% a footgun.

Indiana Lang said it extremely well:

We need systems that prioritize stability over flashy new interfaces, and functionality over form.


This week, the chickens that have been wandering around have come home to roost. Synology, of whom I’m such a fan that every time I bring them up on ATP, Marco hits a vibraslap for both humor and emphasis.

Synology were kind enough to send me a filled, 8-bay network attached storage device back in 2013. Within a couple months I was in love. Having infinite storage available really changes how you think about your digital life. While a Synology is not for most people, it’s 10000% for people like me. I would not and did not stop talking about them. I’ve personally sold countless number of Synology units by my enthusiasm alone.

This week, things finally changed, officially. Synology will be restricting features for those who do not use Synology-branded drives. Drives that are bog-standard enterprise hard drives, possibly with some custom firmware in them.

Why? For more revenue. Footgun.

I’m not sure if I was more of a fan of Synology or Sonos, but suffice it to say, I was a superfan of both. I just replaced my original Synology last year, and I’m sad to say that the one I just got is likely to be my last. While I love having a place to store files, run Docker containers, and handle Dropbox, I don’t want to be on this ride. I don’t want to reward their greed. I’m out.

Whenever this Synology dies, I’ll be replacing it with a UNAS Pro.

Synology have turned off so many of their most ardent evangelists. Just so they can sell some overpriced hard drives.


It doesn’t have to be this way, and we saw that earlier this year from Apple, of all people. The kings of margins; the kings of SeRvIcEs ReVeNuE.

Up until the recent release of the M4-powered MacBook Air, a simple question always had a difficult answer: “What computer should I buy?”.

The answer depended on what you were doing with it, how much you wanted to spend, how long you wanted to keep it, and more. Maybe it’s a MacBook Air. Maybe a MacBook Pro. And even if it is an Air, you should definitely upgrade the RAM, and possibly the SSD.

It was complicated.

Now, as of the $999 M4 MacBook Air? “Buy a M4 MacBook Air. Upgrade the RAM or SSD, in that order, if you have the means. But it’s okay if you don’t.”

Done.

The opposite of a footgun. A problem solved. Solved by respect for the customer.


Capitalism sucks, but it’s the system we have, and I don’t know a better one. But as a small-time capitalist myself, I keep wondering why Callsheet has been so well-received in the market. A lot of it is luck, but I think it boils down to two simple facts:

  1. IMDB does not respect its users, which it demonstrates in new and fantastic ways every time you use it
  2. Callsheet does.

I endeavor to keep it that way, for as long as y’all will let me.