If you’re sitting all day, it’s worth investing $1000 on a chair. If you’re looking at the monitor all day, it’s worth the $3000 for a Studio display. If you’re programming all day, it’s worth getting the top end M3 Max for $5k. A mechanical keyboard, ergonomic mouse, overhead light. It’s worth paying a lot more than $20 for your text editor, your terminal app, window manager, your music subscription, your calendar, your email, todo app, notion, figma, miro..
Most of these make sense in isolation, but if you apply this thinking to everything it quickly adds up. I’m not keen on spending $3k-4k per year on software alone. Even if it provided massive productivity gains (hasn’t for me) my pay would not increase accordingly.
There are things that I have solved with this in a fraction of time that I otherwise wouldn’t have persued. Side projects I had in my mind. Or migration projects (old data) with lots of edge cases where I‘d have spent weeks to finish, I did in two days. Or apps I needed written in GTK as an interface for data or a workflow. Or semi-legal emails that I‘d have reached a lawyer for. There‘s a ton of things I can do with these tools in fractions of time. Or that I can do at all. This gives me superpowers. And it’s worth dropping a restaurant visit to pay for this.
I'd claim that this is a logic that comes from rich, first world countries where you don't need to prioritize things in life much, as you can mostly afford everything. Poor people have to think thoroughly about everything they spend money on.
Most of these make sense in isolation, but if you apply this thinking to everything it quickly adds up. I’m not keen on spending $3k-4k per year on software alone. Even if it provided massive productivity gains (hasn’t for me) my pay would not increase accordingly.