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    Dev Log#noecrafts

    Revisiting owned domains & shaping 2026 focus and goals

    Ebru
    Ebru
    2 min

    Today I went through the domains we currently own, something I like to do from time to time to stay conscious about what we’re carrying forward versus what we’re just renewing out of habit.

    We have 12 domains in total. Two of them don’t have anything deployed at the moment, but they’re still part of ideas we care about, so instead of letting them sit empty, I decided to give them a minimal base again — something that can slowly find its organic place until we’re ready to pick them up properly.

    • listpie.app [log]

      This was the very first app I built while learning Swift: also my first iOS app published after graduation. Over time, maintaining it became hard as my experience and priorities shifted. Still, it holds emotional value, so I want to bring it back in a simpler form.

    • runwildpeanut.com
      Originally bought for a small apparel brand idea. It requires far more dedication than we can give right now, but I don’t want it to be an empty placeholder either.

    I already ran a few small prototype experiments for both, just enough so they’re alive again while we keep renewing them. I will be taking a few days for each to finalise and publish.

    2026 focus pyramid (docs-style)

    Inspired by the visual pyramid, this is how things look going into next year:

    #### Main focus
    1. Kit of Happiness
    
    #### Keep alive
    2. Mockup Generator  
    3. Temettü
    
    #### Seed & observe
    4. Stampie  
    5. OneWeek.dev  
    6. Listpie
    
    #### Plant & forget (for now)
    7. Langnotes
    8. Go Berliner  
    9. Run Wild Peanut  
    10. Infie  
    11. Kvik
    12. Noe Crafts (main studio landing)
    

    This structure feels honest. It removes pressure from everything needing to “perform” immediately and gives each project a clear intention.

    Side note:
    I also finally gave up and bought a new computer today. They were asking for another screen replacement again, which no longer felt reliable. It was time for a reset, tools matter when you’re building for the long run.

    Overall, today felt less about output and more about alignment.
    Putting things in their right place makes the next steps feel lighter.

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