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I'm tired of there not being a middle ground, so I build things myself

The author expresses frustration with the lack of moderate options in various domains, leading them to take a DIY approach by building their own solutions rather than settling for extreme or unsatisfactory choices.

Background

- This is a personal essay by an indie developer/creator frustrated with the lack of "middle ground" options—tools that sit between simple consumer apps and heavy enterprise software. The author argues the market is polarized: you either get something overengineered and expensive, or something too basic to be useful. - "I will build it myself" is a common DIY refrain among developers: rather than accept off-the-shelf solutions, they roll their own. This piece resonates with the "build your own tools" ethos popular in maker and "indie hacker" communities (e.g., people on X/Twitter, Hacker News, or GitHub building small, opinionated software for themselves or niche audiences). - The post is the author's manifesto for a new approach: building small, targeted, and human-scale products that serve real needs instead of chasing venture-scale growth. It taps into a growing backlash against bloatware, SaaS subscriptions, and VC-funded software that prioritizes investors over users.