joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Why I hate Rails
The author lost me at complaining that you need to know Ruby to know Rails. In case this was not self-evident, the Rails guide itself says plainly and early:
"If you have no prior experience with Ruby, you will find a very steep learning curve diving straight into Rails." http://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html#guide-ass...
Where did anyone hear and/or read otherwise? Similarly with all the other complaints. To me, they sound like straw men.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Why Every Office Should Switch To Walking Desks
I heard a good idea - the faster you walk, jog or run; the faster your internet connection.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Growing By Shrinking
I love getting paid to program. The trick is in carefully selecting projects, teams, and clients plus actively setting expectations (e.g. staying in the driver's seat) such that you are not working on other people's schedules. Otherwise, yes, freelancing turns out to be just like having a boss. And that's no fun.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: How to calculate your hourly rate
I've tried fix-rate project delivery. It's a nightmare. Either you spend so much energy up-front to document in detail the finish line, or you spend so much energy on the backend fighting scope creep. Maybe I did it wrong the times I've tried.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: How I Fired Myself
make that 5
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: How to calculate your hourly rate
Will you happily pay $20k if you know that someone else, billing by the hour for the same quality of work, will cost you $10k?
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Why we love Twitter Bootstrap and why you should too
"Ignore advanced web developers complaining about ‘not another Bootstrap website’" I agree. It's your customers that matter. And unless you're building a product for advanced web developers, pleasing them should be no matter to you.
I've shown Bootstrap sites to non-developers and the response is usually that the sites look nice. Never has it been "ug. boostrap?".
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: The Glass Bicycle
The image shown in this article does a good job of highlighting the usefulness of Glass. It's not just a heads up display. It's the smarts of knowing where you are, what you are doing, what you plan to do in order to provide relevant information in an automatic and unobtrusive way.
"Oh, I see you're at the airport and you have tickets on flight 644. Here's some useful departure info." Instead of finding a departure screen or tap-tap-tapping on your phone - it's just there.
http://img.svbtle.com/dcurtis_24516029389500_raw.jpg
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Crossing The Street
You forgot one type of person. "People who wait for the walk sign because they've got other things on their mind and make the conscious choice to leave deciding when to cross the street up to the street light." Waiting for the light lets you cross the street with hardly any thought at all, freeing that thought up to do other things.
These people realize you can only do so many tasks so why not delegate the least value-added (what are you going to gain by earning 15 seconds) of the tasks to someone - or something - else? It's a no-stress, win-win to give yourself one less thing to worry about.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food
If "a colorie is a calorie", then why do you single out "eating too many carbs and sugars" as the cause of your occasional weight gain?
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Home office produces hardest workers
When I compare my 15 years in the office to my 7 years full-time telecommute, I can say without a doubt that I get a lot more work done working form home. Anyone who hasn't experienced the huge amount of time wasted in big-corp office environments hasn't worked in big-corp offices.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: A user is trying to steal from us and I don't mind
How do you know when a user is using stolen credit cards?
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: A simple solution to credit card fraud, and why you won't see it any time soon
I'm not convinced of the premise that credit card companies have no incentive to reduce fraud.
"Fraud isn't costing them money, it is costing you money. [they] pass the cost on to you, the consumer."
That's true of any business really. Increased costs get passed onto the consumer. But that doesn't stop other businesses from trying to reduce costs.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Rails Has Turned into Java
Let me try another way. Some Rails apps that are too unwieldy are barely even Rails apps. They just happen to have Rails at some layer of the tech stack, but also have many other non-Rails components such that saying "Rails" has become too complex is disingenuous.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: How Stripe built one of Silicon Valley’s best engineering teams
If it has no bearing, wonder why it's even mentioned in employees' bios. Just out of convention?
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Rails Has Turned into Java
You're doing it wrong! Do not slap frameworks and complexity on top of Rails. Rails' strength has been unchanged from day 1 - "favoring convention over configuration".
Rails is for building web apps. 99% of the world's web apps will work fine with Rails, an RDMBS, a web server. That's about all you need. Anything else is probably just developers wanting to play with the latest toys.
So yes, if you try to avoid Rails' conventions, you will have trouble. But it's not Rails' fault.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: How Stripe built one of Silicon Valley’s best engineering teams
Despite the consensus that college has little value to hackers, Stripe team members come largely from Stanford, Harvard, MIT and other major universities. Is this and the fact that Stripe's products are highly regarded just a coincidence? Would it be the same team and products without the team members' Ivy league credentials?
I think the answer is no and no. The benefits of college education are widely underestimated.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Your startup is a long race – plan accordingly
Why does success == exit? I guess to each his own, but I would hate to be working for years on something with the goal being some finish line, especially when often "exit" for the founders means being sucked into another organization where you have even less control over choosing your work. So many other ways to measure success that this story falls flat for me.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Tips for work-life balance
It's almost like the diet and weight-loss industry. We spend way more time and effort on trying to solve the problems than on preventing them in the first place.
Want to balance work/life? Here's the secret formula which I'm giving away for free today only:
Work 40 hours / week
Sleep 56 hours / week
Play 72 hours / week
This formula covers everything discussed in the blog post. What's surprising about it is that it is nothing new!
We're way overthinking this. The American workforce has been getting up, going to work, coming home and enjoying time with friends and family and hobbies for decades without having an industry of workflow systems and work-life balance editorials. But to make it this simple sells no books, attracts no seminar attendees, and brings in no blog readers.
joedev
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13 years ago
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on: Posterous will turn off on April 30
"Electric word life, it means 4ever and that's a mighty long time"
Forever is longer than a lifetime and we've seen how well just simple "lifetime" hosting promises go.
"If you have no prior experience with Ruby, you will find a very steep learning curve diving straight into Rails." http://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html#guide-ass...
Where did anyone hear and/or read otherwise? Similarly with all the other complaints. To me, they sound like straw men.