Perpustakaan
Buku yang sangat mempengaruhi cara aku melihat sistem, kerajinan, dan kerja.
The book that named what I'd been doing instinctively, seeing leverage points in every system I touch.
Changed how I think about interfaces, not just digital ones, but pump panels and journal clasps too.
The intellectual foundation for why I run three companies instead of scaling one.
Economics as if people mattered. The book behind my subsidy analysis.
The best articulation of why hand skills matter in a digital age.
Architecture as a process, not a product. Directly influenced how I think about websites.
Kalo cuma bisa baca empat buku tahun ini, pilih yang ini.
The best book on what happens when open-source logic meets platform economics. Required reading for anyone building in public.
Short, brutal, correct. Should be given to every UMKM founder before they build anything.
Positioning explained by someone who actually does it. I recommend this to every client.
The reason this website exists. Build in public. Document the process.
Judul yang diterbitkan di bawah imprint Hibranwar.
What happens when craft economics collides with platform economics, written from the inside.
Following Rp 976 trillion to see who actually benefits from Indonesia's subsidy structure.
Short stories about work, ambition, systems, and the people caught inside them.
Buku yang belum ada tapi harusnya ada. Kalo kamu nulis salah satunya, kabarin aku.
A practitioner's manual on pump failure modes, written by someone who has been called at 3 AM to fix them. Not an engineering textbook, a field guide.
A book about adhesives in book conservation, covering the decisions behind every choice of wheat paste, PVA, or methyl cellulose. The kind of knowledge that only exists in workshop conversations.
A data-driven investigation into how much Indonesian UMKM producers actually pay to marketplace platforms, not just the commission, but the hidden costs of visibility, returns, and algorithmic dependence.
How the plumbing, wiring, and digital systems behind Indonesian cities actually work, told by the people who maintain them.