caseydm's comments

caseydm | 3 years ago | on: GitHub Copilot isn't worth the risk

I was a naysayer but find copilot makes me more productive. Especially at writing tests. It's very good at recognizing patterns in your own work, and completing an entire test based on the function name.

caseydm | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Where are the good platforms for contract work?

I would give it another shot. Since your history is older you likely need to keep your rate at $60 for a while and complete a few jobs. But UpWork has the biggest market and there are plenty of people out there willing to pay for developers with a solid history.

People say it's underpaid or terrible, but part of that reputation comes from people doing one or two jobs and quitting. Plus, I've hired developers on UpWork and a lot of people suck at writing proposals. I have a lot of advice on that too.

caseydm | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Where are the good platforms for contract work?

I was very successful on UpWork. However, it is not something you can jump into with no work history on the site, like "I have 16 years experience so my rate is $125/hr." People don't believe you when you say that. They want to see proof from a third party. So you need to start lower ($30 to $50/hr), stay in a niche, and successfully complete jobs while gradually raising your rates.

When someone sees glowing reviews and completed jobs, you become the "easy button" and they will pay more to decrease their risk. When they see 10 completed jobs with 5 star reviews, all mentioning the exact type of work they need, they can be pretty sure the 11th will be successful. It's possible to charge $125 or more an hour on UpWork and have to keep your settings updated so that you are not spammed with invites.

caseydm | 3 years ago | on: Is the Ride over for Uber?

I agree that a small team of engineers can do big things. But 15 engineers to run Uber ride share in maintenance mode? That's insane. I would love to see a breakdown of each engineer's responsibilities in that scenario.

caseydm | 3 years ago | on: Why companies move off Heroku (besides the cost)

Heroku is my tried and true. I've likely done thousands of deploys over the years and have never had one go bad or leave my app in a bad state. I have rolled back an app a few times due to bad configs and it was always quick and left me with a huge sigh of relief.

That being said, they are very stagnant on features. A dyno has operated the same way, at the same size, at the same price for like 10 years now? The main features I would like to see are auto-scaling for all dynos and IPs that allow you to restrict database traffic. Render looks promising in that department and could likely get business from me if Heroku doesn't change in the next couple years.

caseydm | 4 years ago | on: Render: a Zero DevOps Cloud Platform

That's great. They make good points on securing databases as well. Everything has to be open with Heroku's basic dynos. It would be nice to secure PostgreSQL or Elasticsearch so the IP is not publicly available.

caseydm | 4 years ago | on: Render: a Zero DevOps Cloud Platform

I'm excited to see a solid competitor to Heroku. While I trust Heroku due to using it for so long, they have become complacent with pricing and features. For example, affordable autoscaling looks awesome.

caseydm | 4 years ago | on: Git undo: We can do better

This is a great idea. There are well-documented ways to undo things on stack overflow, but almost every way:

1. Has three competing ways available to complete the 'undo'

2. Every way has a scary caveat that the user must be aware of

It would be awesome to simplify the process for new users.

caseydm | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (June 2021)

Location: Omaha, NE

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Python, Django, Flask, Elasticsearch

Email: [email protected]

I specialize in the upkeep and growth of python web applications (website or API) built with Django or Flask. Hire me and my team to add features, improve performance, and keep your web app secure.

My service is best for applications that can be maintained by a single developer at around 10 to 20 hours per month.

See more at: https://pycare.com

caseydm | 5 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (July 2020)

  Location: Omaha, NE
  Remote: Yes
  Willing to relocate: No
  Technologies: Python Django and Flask
  Résumé/CV: https://pycare.com
  Email: [email protected]
I specialize in the upkeep and growth of python web applications. I can help you with:

- Content updates - Performance improvements - Security updates

My service is proactive and designed to keep a Django or Flask web app running in tip-top shape.

caseydm | 6 years ago | on: San Francisco Emergency Order Says Delivery Apps Must Cap Restaurant Fees at 15%

I was thinking the same thing. I used Doordash a while back and figured they were making good money based on the fees they were adding in, such as delivery fee, service fee, tips to the driver, maybe a markup on menu items. But then I discovered they are also charging commission to the restaurant for up to 30%! I've been driving to restaurants for takeout more often because the apps seem shady to me.
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