Patents and the little guy working at home
Patents can look impressive, but for a solo engineer or small startup, they can also be an expensive distraction. This post argues that the patent system is badly broken and points to Don Lancaster’s advice, which is simple, avoid the mess unless you are operating at a very large scale. It is a blunt, practical take on when patents may not be worth the hassle at all.
Public speaking
Presenting technical work is unavoidable for embedded engineers, but few get formal training on how to do it well. This post gives practical, low-overhead tactics: use a single person focus to steady nerves, build a bullet point memory palace to guide remarks, time your talk with about 100 words per minute, avoid reading slides, and rehearse on camera. These tips make talks clearer and less stressful.
Getting smacked by the long tail of poor design habits
Bad design choices in embedded products have a habit of coming back years later and biting the people who made them. Drawing on decades of consulting and product support, the author reflects on version control, part selection, comments, manuals, and usability choices that seemed harmless at the time but became costly in the field.
Scorchers, Part 1: Tools and Burn Rate
Small purchases often pay for themselves faster than you expect, and Jason Sachs walks through the math to prove it. He shows how to compute a fully burdened labor rate, including taxes, benefits, overhead, holidays, and productive hours, then compares that rate to the price of common tools. The practical conclusion is simple: if a sub-$100 utility saves about an hour of productive work, just buy it.
Thoughts on Starting a New Career
Changing jobs can be a reset button for your engineering momentum. Jason Sachs reflects on leaving a 16-year role to join Microchip as an applications engineer in motor drives, and he distills practical advice on early-career choices, mentorship, networking, interview tactics, and keeping skills marketable. The post also highlights workplace factors and small perks that affect productivity, giving embedded engineers actionable steps to plan a career transition.
Organizational Reliability
Here is a compact playbook for making your engineering team reliable, pulled from a handout Jason Sachs saved from Doug Field. It highlights disciplined commitment habits, clear absence and missed-commitment notifications, explicit handoffs and read-back practices, and resisting "manytasking" through ruthless prioritization. These are simple, immediately actionable behaviors that can lift a team's delivery and reduce chaos heading into the new year.
Thoughts on Starting a New Career
Changing jobs can be a reset button for your engineering momentum. Jason Sachs reflects on leaving a 16-year role to join Microchip as an applications engineer in motor drives, and he distills practical advice on early-career choices, mentorship, networking, interview tactics, and keeping skills marketable. The post also highlights workplace factors and small perks that affect productivity, giving embedded engineers actionable steps to plan a career transition.
The Backstreet Consultant
A distinct market has grown between Arduino-wielding hobbyists and professional embedded engineers, fueled by cheap boards and maker culture. This post maps that market, shows who the "backstreet consultants" are, and explains why clients hire them for one-off prototypes instead of full product development. Read it to understand the economics, common project types, and how professional engineers can adapt to this new client funnel.
Organizational Reliability
Here is a compact playbook for making your engineering team reliable, pulled from a handout Jason Sachs saved from Doug Field. It highlights disciplined commitment habits, clear absence and missed-commitment notifications, explicit handoffs and read-back practices, and resisting "manytasking" through ruthless prioritization. These are simple, immediately actionable behaviors that can lift a team's delivery and reduce chaos heading into the new year.
Pay it Forward
A popular car bumper sticker reads, "If you can read this, thank a teacher!" I might say, "If you can read THIS (article on Embedded Related), then you've been blessed with great experiences and/or great educators or volunteers that got you excited about tech and helped you believe that you had a future in this field!" Why not pay it forward by helping other children have those same great experiences? As we enter another season of giving, I hope you consider doing what you can to support the hundreds or thousands of non-profit organizations, educators, and volunteers around the world who are getting kids excited about tech the same way YOU got excited about tech. In this article, I'll share with you a handful of organizations that I know of or donate to that have this mission. How do you like to give back?
The Teardown Conference Call for Proposals is Open for Another Week!
The Teardown conference "Call for Proposals" goes until Wednesday, January 15th! Get yours in soon!
Your Career Archive
Background checks have turned routine hiring into a paperwork sprint, and many engineers find themselves scrambling for proof. This post shows how to build a practical career archive of job records, education documents, and tax/payroll forms, plus advice on redaction, storage formats, and backups. Capture verifiable details when you get them to avoid last-minute stress and make future vetting simple and reliable.
Getting smacked by the long tail of poor design habits
Bad design choices in embedded products have a habit of coming back years later and biting the people who made them. Drawing on decades of consulting and product support, the author reflects on version control, part selection, comments, manuals, and usability choices that seemed harmless at the time but became costly in the field.
A Sneak Peek at the 2024 Embedded Online Conference
Keeping embedded skills current is non-negotiable in 2024, and the Embedded Online Conference brings keynotes, workshops, and talks to help you do it affordably. Jacob Beningo highlights a lineup that includes Elecia White, Jack Ganssle, Phillip Koopman, hands-on workshops like GitLab CI/CD and Modern C++ interface design, plus talks on Linux hardening and safety. Early-bird pricing and on-demand access make this a practical way to learn continuously.
Public speaking
Presenting technical work is unavoidable for embedded engineers, but few get formal training on how to do it well. This post gives practical, low-overhead tactics: use a single person focus to steady nerves, build a bullet point memory palace to guide remarks, time your talk with about 100 words per minute, avoid reading slides, and rehearse on camera. These tips make talks clearer and less stressful.
Pay it Forward
A popular car bumper sticker reads, "If you can read this, thank a teacher!" I might say, "If you can read THIS (article on Embedded Related), then you've been blessed with great experiences and/or great educators or volunteers that got you excited about tech and helped you believe that you had a future in this field!" Why not pay it forward by helping other children have those same great experiences? As we enter another season of giving, I hope you consider doing what you can to support the hundreds or thousands of non-profit organizations, educators, and volunteers around the world who are getting kids excited about tech the same way YOU got excited about tech. In this article, I'll share with you a handful of organizations that I know of or donate to that have this mission. How do you like to give back?
The Backstreet Consultant
A distinct market has grown between Arduino-wielding hobbyists and professional embedded engineers, fueled by cheap boards and maker culture. This post maps that market, shows who the "backstreet consultants" are, and explains why clients hire them for one-off prototypes instead of full product development. Read it to understand the economics, common project types, and how professional engineers can adapt to this new client funnel.
The Teardown Conference Call for Proposals is Open for Another Week!
The Teardown conference "Call for Proposals" goes until Wednesday, January 15th! Get yours in soon!













