c_t_montgomery | 3 years ago | on: Linear.app
c_t_montgomery's comments
c_t_montgomery | 5 years ago | on: Ask HN: What is your strongest argument against remote work?
In my experience, it was far easier for me to get burned out when working remotely versus in an office with other people. And when I did get burned out, I found it harder to get back on the other side of the hill when I didn't have a community around me.
Also, if I look at the ~7.5 year tenure at the company — my most productive and happiest times were when I was located onsite at their HQ.
Just my $0.02; happy to talk more in detail over email (in profile).
c_t_montgomery | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: My new employer have a stock options program, what should I know?
The best resource I’ve found so far that does that is this - https://www.holloway.com/g/equity-compensation
Good luck!
c_t_montgomery | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: Are you glad you dropped out of college?
I dropped out just over 6 years ago to join Pinterest (I still work there). It’s the second best decision of my life (besides asking my wife to marry me).
How much longer do you have left in college? Do you enjoy it?
Obviously this is a case by case basis, but my thought process was -
1. I went to a decent regional school (nowhere near Ivy) and had a below average GPA (2.7 IIRC).
2. The cause of that low GPA was due to me spending my free time hacking on things, not studying.
3. Worst-case, I try and interview at a bunch of places and don’t get any offers so the decision is made for me.
Fortunately for me, I didn’t have a ton of student loan debts due to scholarships, so financing the education was not a factor in my case.
I had 1.5 years left. I loved college and some parts of school. It was really hard to leave. Looking back, I’m glad I did it but it was a rough few years seeing all of my friends have the time of their lives while I was working (even though I’ve loved my job). Once everyone graduated all of that FoMo went away. That’s also when new grads who were my age also started working there, which was nice.
Graduating from the university I went to wouldn’t have put me in a better situation relative to other applicants (meaning, I would still be going up against Ivy grads for the jobs I was after).
I ended up dropping out after being offered a promising job opportunity and I’d recommend that route to you if it’s possible. It makes the transition a lot easier.
Hope that helps! Happy to chat more via email. c at cnnr dot me.
c_t_montgomery | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Examples of great landing pages?
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN Air or Pro?
It has to hustle to keep Photoshop or XCode open longer than an hour or so, though.
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Who took a chance on you?
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Tools of the trade, 2013 edition
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Not for sale
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: What's the going rate for software internships?
In the bay area, I've seen from $15—$40/hour. In my home town (Kansas City) and college town (St. Louis), I've seen between $8 and $20.
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: A Smart Name Brainstorming And Domain Search Engine
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Codemirror v3 released
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Thoughts on dropping out to do a startup
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Thoughts on dropping out to do a startup
I was in a similar situation as you, except the opportunity came to me as a sophomore, instead of a freshmen. Let me preface by stating that I think college is an extremely invaluable resource to grow up and learn outside of the classroom. I did, and love it.
If I were you, assuming you do get an offer, I'd register it as a co-op with your college. I did that last year with Lift (http://lift.do), and think it was the best way to go about the situation. Here's why: it's still a full-time job, you're still technically a student, and you don't pay any tuition. If you like it, great — stay out there. If not, no harm-no foul, and go back to school.
Happy to chat over email with you, if you'd like. Look in my profile for contact info. Good luck!
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: PonyDebugger: Chrome Developer Tools for Native iOS Apps
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Good iOS Tutorials?
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Bootstrap Tour: Quick and easy way to build your product tours
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: 51,000 6 character domains
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Zurb launches Foundation 3
c_t_montgomery | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: CLI for Domainr
Very nice.
It's critical to our eng, design & product processes.
We switched from another tool because the other tool was painfully slow. It was a night & day difference. It's been about a year now since we've fully committed to Linear. I'm very glad we have!
We use their cycles feature heavily. We ship our app weekly, and our product development process is split into three 2-week cycles that form a "milestone". We model that work accordingly in Linear.
We also use their "Projects" feature quite heavily. We'll often have folks working across a few projects a time. This feature helps my ADHD brain understand what the most important thing across any number of ongoing projects is, and then focus on accomplishing that.
Personally, the best feature for me is the speed of the app. That, alongside the keyboard shortcuts, make it pretty hard to give up.
Another thing I particularly like about Linear (aside from speed, product polish & wonderful design) is how you can opt-in to using it more. If you just want to use it as an issue tracker for teams, that works great! It's how we started. But you can also grow into the product more as you harden your processes or figure out what works best for you.
tl;dr — I can't imagine ever using another tool to help build products besides Linear.