DiGrande.it

Blind, Braille and Embossing Technologies

This site uses cookies to personalize content and ads, provide social media features and analyze links. By closing this banner or continuing to browse, you consent to their use.
Read the DiGrande.it Cookie Policy

If the information doesn't reach you, the value gets lost

Updated the 05/22/2025 08:00 
 

Year after year, I realize that one of the most difficult things — truly difficult — is informing the people who use Biblos about the new features, the changes, the improvements I introduce.

And yet, the tools are all there: I publish updates, maintain the website, write on the blog, send out a newsletter, update the manuals, post on Facebook, X, and Telegram, create videos for Youtube

Despite all this, what I communicate seems to reach only a small portion of users. I don't know if this is a common issue for all developers who are lucky enough — and responsible enough — to have many users, but it's a situation I find myself living daily now.

I end up spending more time explaining what Biblos does than helping it grow. Communicating has become a job within the job — as essential as writing code, if not more so. And that makes me reflect.

It makes me think about the relationship between those who create and those who use, between those who inform and those who listen, between those who build something for others and the way that something actually reaches its destination.

Because if the information doesn't get through, the value of what I create gets lost along the way.

Maybe the time has come to change — together — the way we stay connected.

If you use Biblos, help me improve communication: choose a channel, follow me, subscribe, share. Let others know where to find me, help me reach you — and become the voice of Biblos yourself.

And if you can, help me feel less alone: comment, forward Biblos news, talk about it in the groups you're part of. Even the simplest gesture matters. 💙

For further support you can subscribe the Biblos Group on Facebook.