kabuks | 3 years ago | on: Dwell House – 540 sq ft prefab home that you can add to your backyard
kabuks's comments
kabuks | 4 years ago | on: Japanese Dome House
kabuks | 4 years ago | on: Show HN: Zomes. Zonohedral Bioceramic Domes
It’s been surprising how much overlap there is between software product development and ‘real’ building. Also how different they are.
Anyway, I’ve never launched anything without announcing it here first. Would love to hear your impressions.
Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.
kabuks | 8 years ago | on: Dev Bootcamp Shutting Down
kabuks | 8 years ago | on: Dev Bootcamp Shutting Down
kabuks | 8 years ago | on: Dev Bootcamp Shutting Down
kabuks | 8 years ago | on: Dev Bootcamp Shutting Down
kabuks | 10 years ago | on: Guide to Your Equity
https://github.com/clef/handbook/blob/master/Employment%20Po...
With a 6 year vesting schedule a new employee is 'buying' 0.1% worth of shares for 30k in salary. A 30MM valuation, or 5X the 6MM cap on the convertible note.
kabuks | 12 years ago | on: Holacracy is Bullshit
Six months ago, I switched my company (over 50 full time employees in 3 cities) to Holacracy.
I'm here to tell you that I'm 100% convinced that it's a huge step forward in terms of any organizational system I've come across.
There's nothing 'flat' or 'manager-less' about it. It's a complex and intricate system that leads to greater clarity, less politics, and better distributed decision making.
Accountabilities are clearer, meetings are more efficient, and more voices are heard. Holacracy explicitly avoids design/decide by committee.
If you're running a company with more than 10 employees, I highly recommend you take a serious look at Holacracy. It's the best decision I've made by far, and I'm never going to work for, or start another company without running it this way.
If you're earnestly curious, drop me a note and I'll be happy to talk about it more with you.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Donglegate: Why the Tech Community Hates Feminists
I have been very surprised at the discrepancy between the level of dialogue.
When the discussion on HN is around almost anything, I find myself often learning, and surrounded by comments that are smarter, and more informed than any I would find in the real world.
When it comes to gender issues though, I think we as a community in general tend to be pretty behind.
I truly love HN. More than any other place on the interweb, this one has impacted my life in very real ways. I do however, cringe when the topic veers towards sexism. I think we can do better.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Bot that retweets pictures of people's credit cards
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Fired SendGrid Developer Evangelist Adria Richards Speaks Out
Regardless of what you think of Adria's actions, it's not hard to imagine that the last two weeks must have been hellish for her.
I think it's brave and noble for her to make (what seems to me) to be an attempt at civil dialogue.
In effect she's saying: I want to keep talking about this, and including everyone in the conversation. After all she's been through. That's an impressive thing to say. Regardless of how many lawyers it got filtered through.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: The Hacker School Experience
Not sure if they attached it 'easily', but that comment was squarely sexist in my book. Even if it was well intentioned.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Dear Hacker Community – We Need To Talk
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Dear Hacker Community – We Need To Talk
a. Resist the urge to pick apart the OP's life and criticize how/what she said.
b. Honestly reflect, without shame or blame, about what you know of sexism. What do you understand of it? What do you understand it's roots are, and how it works? What do you think your responsibility is, as a man, and as a member of this community?
I invite you to do this, because it's a charged topic, but an important one. See if you can look past the hurt feelings and accusations, and sincerely reflect on what you can do to understand how sexism works a little better, and address it.
EDIT: I am by no means an expert on the topic, but I've spent the past few years earnestly looking at how oppression works and keeping an open mind. I was truly astounded by the magnitude and difficulty of the problem.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: How Dev Bootcamp Is Transforming Education To Focus On “Extreme Employability”
Just over a year ago I posted this: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3267133
And this community's response is what convinced me to ditch my startup and start devbootcamp.
I only know very few of you people in person, but I'm sincerely grateful for the impact you've had on my life. Thank you!
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: DevBootCamp: Learn Ruby on Rails in 9 Weeks
If you can think of better ways to encourage more balance in our industry I am sincerely open to suggestions.
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Dev Bootcamp is the future of our industry
Education is a nuanced and rich topic, and shouldn't be reduced to "CS GOOD. DEV BOOTCAMP BAD" or the other way around.
We're in a market right now where companies are willing to take on total beginners who show potential, and pay them to continue learning our craft. What the hell is wrong with that? And are you suggesting that we stop teaching new developers in order to protect people's salaries?
As far as I can tell, there will be high demand for good engineers for the foreseeable future.
And please don't reduce our work to "can build a Web app from following tutorials on RoR". You clearly haven't met any of our graduates. It pisses me off that you dismiss everyone's hard work without knowing anything about us.
<general plea>
Will everybody please get off their fucking high horse (Yes. I realize I'm on one too). Our industry is young, and we're all just figuring this out together. Nobody has all the answers and few things are black and white. Especially when it comes to the mess that is education and vocational training in this country.
</general plea>
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Our Ridiculous Approach to Retirement
http://www.forbes.com/sites/thebogleheadsview/2011/01/28/thr...
kabuks | 13 years ago | on: Sexism red/yellow cards at Defcon
I would argue that more software projects fail because of lack of social skills than lack of hard skills. IT absolutely requires social skills.
Also. Not a box. zomes.com