synnik | 14 years ago | on: SOPA: The End of the Internet as We Know it
synnik's comments
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Desingineer – the mythical person every startup is looking for
And... I think you are taking on more than you need to for the discussion at hand.
If you are an excellent JS programmer, you don't need to keep up on the latest libraries. You can code what you need yourself. Sure, maybe you do something from scratch that could have been done with a newer library, but the 10 hours you lose there is more than made up by not having to do those 15 hours a week keeping up.
Likewise on your other tech points. Constantly churning your toolkit doesn't speed you up. It slows you down. There is a balance to be found where you keep up "enough", but still focus the majority of your time on delivering work.
I choose to spend a day or so each month trying to keep up, then roll with what I know for a while.
Likewise with some of your other activities. Meetups and business models? They may help you be a consultant, but that is adding yet a 4th role to the topic at hand.
Many of your other points also apply more to a consultant than a heads-down designer/coder.
In general, it sounds like you are trying to be an even rarer breed. More power to ya, but it may be overkill for most people.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: I’m too lazy to be a HTML developer
I have not really had to re-learn file IO since then.
Clearly there are new things to be learned... (do usb sticks even have sectors?)... but having that low-level experience tends to be more than enough for a front-end web developer.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Tweet temporarily derails SOPA debate
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Tweet temporarily derails SOPA debate
And the new bosses can change. Obama's election was the result of almost nothing other than: "I'm not the status quo." And he won.
So vote out every incumbent in the next election, and the message will get across loud and clear. Maybe the next generation will start with similar problems, but they just got told clearly that if they want to keep their jobs, we want CHANGE.
And politicians do what it takes to get re-elected. A clear message that change is desired will change this country.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Tweet temporarily derails SOPA debate
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Don't Outsource
A whole web site, with linkbait headlines, set up to tell one story? Their about page doesn't even say they are trying to start a discussion... it just rehashes the story. With a few other pages to give a token appearance that they will tell more stories later.
I am sure there was fault on both sides, and I am equally sure the other side would have a vastly different story.
But this whole site sure looks like juvenile vengeance.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: The real reason you can't hire developers....
If those phone screens do not turn into full interviews or offers, that is a statement on how they went, not on company responsiveness.
Frankly, I don't think your stats show a lack of response at all. I think they are very reasonable, as some level of non-responsiveness is natural, when you account for the fact that you gave them enough information to summarily dismiss you from consideration if you don't match their needs or culture.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Louis C.K. experiment results: over $500,000 in 4 days
I think the same model needs to be employed, without any commentary, to get a true measure of the mechanism.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: JQuery.Gantt
1) If you are going to suggest such a massive scope of changes, offer to help instead of just dumping a list out there.
2) Check to see if the poster on HN is actually the author of the article. Doesn't look like it in this case, so you may be talking into a vacuum.
3) I love that timeline widget. But it is one of the most un-intuitive and complicated things I have ever seen. I recommend re-coding its functions into a simpler library vs. adding even more complexity to timeline.
4) Dependencies can get evil. Your suggestions add quite a lot of complexity into footprint of plugin. I fear that the end result might look good to a coder, but be a bit of a nightmare to actually use in a production environment.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Hacker Soundtrack: Star Trek TNG Ambient Engine Noise
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Rickshaw is a JavaScript toolkit for creating interactive time series graphs
I'm unlikely to even considerer another library until they match that feature.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: You've Probably Read Enough
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Show HN: Early Adopter cred from your Twitter & Facebook IDs
I personally have the entire app platform disabled on my account, and do not intend to turn it back on.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Living Earth Simulator will simulate the entire world
But it is always interesting when we catch up to classic sci-if and work towards actual implementations of what was pure imagination only a short time ago.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Facebook security hole allows viewing of private photos
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Why I Will Never Feel Threatened by Programmers in India
That, in turn, is why you need to give very explicit instruction, and why much of the work needs a lot of QA.
Knowing this also makes it a lot easier to interview firms or individuals, looking to their own personal motivations to see whether they match the overall cultural trends or not, and thereby you can build a better team.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: You'll Get a Cow if You Work at This Company
Nobody is questioning that you believe in what you do and are doing well at it, and enjoying your work. What we are questioning is your methods.
Let me put it into perspective (my perspective):
If you want to donate $2000 dollars to heifer.org for each employee, just do it. Don't put it in my name. I have my own charities, and would prefer to make my own choice.
Don't buy me a bike. I am disabled and that perk just slaps me in the face with it.
Don't buy me beer. I do not drink, and find the implication that drinking is required for your culture to be a little creepy.
Don't say that I am getting $2000 for R&D. That is pocket change for true R&D, and makes me worry that not only do you not handle budgets well, but that the companies future innovation funding could get messed up in HR negotiations.
The bottom line is that most of your perks scare me. Not because there is anything wrong with offering them, but because it shows a severe lack of empathy for the diversity of people in this world.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: Amit Gupta Could Have Marrow Transplant by End of Year
But there is a very reasonable answer - he is bringing to light a gap in the availability of bone marrow for his particular ethnicity. It is not that he is personally more important than anyone else... it is that he, and others like him, are under-served. Using his connections to raise this issue not only helps him, but should help anyone in his same situation.
synnik | 14 years ago | on: You'll Get a Cow if You Work at This Company
Maybe they are find people, and maybe it is a fine company. I have no way of knowing. But this approach does not appeal to me, personally because is feels like it is trying too hard.