![]() ![]() Last year I started a BookStack YouTube channel and I have continued to enjoyĭeveloping these videos throughout 2022. With the result which provides full control and customizability along with an overlay help interface to help It’s something I wanted to add for a long time to empower keyboard-focused workflows and I’m really happy Personally, my favourite feature within the above has to be the interface shortcuts from our v22.11 release. Upon developing, updating & revamping existing core features to strengthen the spine of the platform. There’s not actually that much new in terms of added subsystems, but there’s been a lot of focus Looking back across that list, it reflects the past year’s focus on refinement. Large range of added visual theme system partials for view customization.Added “Activity Logged” and “Page Include Parse” logical theme system events.Significant preview performance & stability increase.Code editor redesign and code-language favourites.Webhook debugging support and extra detail.Data streaming upload/download support for large attachments.Redesigned content permission management.New “Local (Secure - Restricted)” image storage option.Hierarchy (Book & Chapter) conversion/promotion.Page-level WYSIWYG and Markdown editor switching.The below lists many of the major additions and changes made within these: Throughout 2022 we’ve had 8 feature releases and 20 patch releases. Generosity and help in working towards a sustainably funded project. I’m about 75% of the way there, with me continuing to take a hit from my savingsĪ very big thank-you to everyone that has donated or purchased a support service offering, for your It reflects some significant growth that shows covering my living costs could be a real possibility. ![]() While this isn’t really anywhere near the expected salary for a full stack lead web developer, Overall I’ve seen just over £15k of revenue from these sources over 2022. The support services have also had a positive impact, providing about £3k of revenue since launching to act as a significant secondary source of revenue. The donations via KoFi have helped add to this in the form of additional one-off donations totalling about ~£310. Overall, across the year, these have totalled about £11.8k providing a great foundation of income. Sponsorships have continued to grow, both in the base of small contributors in addition to a few large (>£100) monthly sponsors. Is thanks to a sponsor pre-paying for a year. The May payment was missed and rolled into June hence those anomalies. The monthly amount is variable due to multiple factors. GitHub sponsors acts as my primary income. The below chart shows rough high-level monthly revenue (excluding taxes and most costs): Now we’re at the end of the year, I can provide a more detailed view of the figures. In the “Seven Years of BookStack” post, where I also provided some high-level income details. I’ve shared some more in-depth thoughts and findings in regards to project finances The GitHub sponsors have continued to grow.I created a focused donation page and added KoFi as a donation option.I started offering official paid support services.In the past year the following developments have occurred in respect to funding: Some very kind support from my parents (albeit against my own advisory). I started the year with some support via GitHub sponsors in addition to ![]() Of not being employed, with BookStack being my main focus instead. With 2022 over I now have experience of spending a complete year Terms of the codebase but also elements of the wider project as a whole. In this post we’ll look back on how the project has progressed over the year, not just in During the year BookStack had a few milestones which included ![]() Dan Brown posted on the 5th of January 2023 ![]()
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