Hackvana (TOP →)

So here is to Mitch Altman and Hackvana. May your warehouses be organized, your DHL labels print clearly, and your return to shipping be swift.

Mitch has been transparent about the hiatus. Running a global logistics solopreneur operation is brutal. However, the spirit of Hackvana remains alive. It proved a radical concept: Why We Still Talk About Hackvana Hackvana matters because it represents the best of the maker movement: Decentralized, helpful, and scrappy. hackvana

This is where Hackvana enters the chat. At its core, Hackvana is a group-buying and forwarding service . But calling it just that is like calling a Swiss Army knife "a metal stick." So here is to Mitch Altman and Hackvana

Like many global logistics operations, Hackvana was hit hard by the post-pandemic shipping chaos, skyrocketing fuel costs, and the sheer administrative burnout of dealing with international customs. Running a global logistics solopreneur operation is brutal

You look at DigiKey or Mouser. The parts cost $20. The shipping? $35—if you want it in less than three weeks. Now multiply that pain by 20 different suppliers.

For the uninitiated, Hackvana isn't a flashy consumer product or a billion-dollar SaaS platform. It is a quiet, ferociously effective logistics and community service run by one man: (yes, that Mitch Altman, the inventor of the TV-B-Gone).

If you have been deep in the hardware trenches—designing a PCB in KiCad at 2 AM or trying to source that obscure OLED breakout—you have probably heard the name whispered in Discord servers and Reddit threads: Hackvana .