1. Search my competitors and collect 3-4 ToS pages
2. Read each of them and copy their paragraphs into mine
3. Re-word some to make sure my ToS is unique. If something is too confusing or too much, delete.
4. Stop worry about it until my startup gets some traction.
The whole process should not take more than 2-3 hours. If you pay $$ or take days on ToS while your startup is not even getting traction, you're doing something seriously wrong (in term of time spent).
I use shared hosting too and I got into cPanel like 3 times a year for 2 min each. Sure, it needs to be there but regardless it fills the needs already.
1. Firefox crashes would take down the entire browser, not just specific tab
2. I often load a lot of tweets in Twitter.com tab (back 4 hours). This causes Firefox to freeze.
3. If I refresh the slow tab, I watch memory not being clean and still stay there for several minutes. Chrome clears memory very quickly.
4. Why is the space around address bar so large? They are like 15 px top and bottom. What a waste.
5. Postman is only Chrome
6. Chrome Dev Tools is 10x better
I have no complain about CSS rendering issues or anything like that. It's mainly just performance. Also I tend to use Firefox in the firewall because the Proxy feature works quite well to connect to my internal lab.
The pricing seems cheap if I read it right. I only ship few hundred items per month and it's small enough to fit in my basement room (100 sqft). So I guess storage cost is like $50/mo and $3/item shipping out? That's not bad at all if correct.
You have fine grained control of your packaging and inserts. These things make a HUGE difference in customer perception and overall happiness. Opening a package should be a joy not a chore, and if you can get a surprise in the box then do it.
Syser claimed to be that replacement. But in fact it's too old, unstable and nobody using it. Now everyone is using WinDbg for kernel/drivers debugging. It has terrible command syntax, but with PyKD extension and some customisation it's usable. See those slides[1] on how to do that. Also, there is another way to work with WinDbg protocol - using radare2[2]. Beware this support is in early development and may be unstable. But, unlike original WinDbg, it is cross-platform tool without external dependencies and completely free and open source.
I like this comment. A lot of initial sales are just pure relationship: you know someone who knows someone or randomly someone saw or met you at Meetup, website, forum... Maintaining the first deal is hard though because it's a tricky road: Do you have to do what they ask or do you think the market is bigger than just this one specific use case? Eventually the first 10 Enterprise customers are the ones who pay the bill.