Okay, maybe I misunderstood what you were saying then.
But still, I insist that it's important to understand that, even if we share some similarities based on our interests/skills/work, we come from different backgrounds and have different priorities.
And part of the issue here is probably how people are framing things when they write about their experience.
In tech, some of us are coming from a world of nerds where the norm is to be mater-of-factly, while some others are more extroverted and tend to put emphasis on random boring things.
Regarding this post in particular, I was more concerned about how the author was amazed by the fact that a 2025 computer could run 10 services in parallel... or that relying on a proprietary service (Claude) to manage all their setup was giving them "a strong feeling of independence".
1. The "unlocked" framing implies capability, not time preference
2. General technical literacy has declined: non-SWEs used to torrent, use DC++ extensively, etc.
I was not comparing Plex to torrenting. I was observing that basic file-sharing knowledge used to be common and now is not (see Netflix et al).
> time and energy being the focus
Sure, that is fair. But that is a different claim than "Tailscale unlocked self-hosting for me" which is how it is often framed.