@RyanHayes The problem I find is that many questions get answered so fast, some quite good answers end up at the bottom and don't get voted up because they below some with 10s of votes.
I'm in the process of starting my tiny startup... and my goal is to try to have something like fogcreek, here in Guadalajara, Mexico, a place where programmers are treated respectfully and just the best place for programmers to wanna work in
@FranciscoNoriega after about ten years I decided that the format of writing long articles saying "I did it this way. You should do it this way" is... well, boring, and also, a little bit bankrupt.
@JoelSpolsky Wouldn't make sense to invite the speakers from the DevDays 1, hopefully, with an updated content? Plus, considering the popularity of SO, it may not be an issue finding new speakers, I am guessing.
@vehomzzz just organizing all the speakers turns out to be a full time job. It took me months to do that for 10 x 6 = 60 speakers in the first dev days
is there anyone out there like me, who has an issue with calling it "the cloud". I mean, it feels like traditional server hosting with new lipstick on it
@chris I'd like to see it made easier to move services from one vendor's cloud to another, such as if they all supported the same API. Then it'd be more cloudish
@JoelSpolsky was always curious if Jon Skeet is working for SO, despite his, possible, non-compete with Google. The quality of his answers shows as if he would =)
I remember watching a Jon Skeet presentation and emailing him at 12am my time and getting a reply and having conversation with him, it was quite nice, and he's very personable
@JoelSpolsky our group is having issue justifying buying new servers (considering our budget isn't that great) for SharePoint 2010, are you aware of any CMS systems which can compare?
@rchern: oh, thanks, but I was looking for something analogous to a nod and a smile. The message wasn't really interesting or useful. Perhaps I should spend less time on Facebook.
I don't mind cold, what I have an issue with, is the constant freeze/thaw that happens here. And driving on snow doesn't scare me, it's inexperienced drivers that do
The invention of the heater came a lot sooner than the air conditioner, though, so the colder countries were able to be productive year-round before the hot ones were
@RakshitPai, I listened to a TED talk by swedish professor Hans Rosling. He said that compared to swedish students, indian students works hard as hell. (Not his exakt phrasing)
@wilhelmtell I think they also bargained for ridiculous amounts of beautiful woman... Its one of the things I remember the most to my trip to montreal... they were.. everywhere!
@chris at this point, trying to "read the tea leaves," i.e., conduct Microsoft kremlinology, is sort of like eating sunflower seeds = net calorie loss.
@FranciscoNoriega I friggin love this city. It's a love-hate relationship of sorts. I so wish there would be more software jobs here in Montreal. :-S But the girls here are probably the only reason why the temperatures don't drop past minus fifty.
The one good thing is that C++ has plenty of new features allowing you to talk directly to managed code, so there's no reason to .NETIFY anything. Just keep patching it, and when you need big new chunks of code, write them in C# and call them from C++
@JoelSpolsky Managed C++ is like speaking French with an English accent. It makes no sense, it's not pretty and you lose either distinguishing cultural traits.
it was great for IMing, it felt pretty good. but I had to switch back because it was impossible to use other QWERTY keyboards and friends couldn't use my keyboard
@wilhelmtell the second thing I remember was that all the 8 of us that went in the trip ended up with our butts in the ground at some point... massive slipage! And some friends where actually from there too! hehe
@wilhelmtell it only makes sense if you don't feel like throwing away and rewriting a lot of existing code, but you still need big new features that you really want to write in C#
@Carson i tried it for like a week... according to a friend, it improved his typing speed by about 5 wpm, but killed his QWERTY typing speed, so he didn't recommend it
our issue is time. It's frankly easier to pull my C++ knowledge from college and learn the MFC I need to than rewrite a large application from scratch.
@CarsonMyers My friend uses it. He switched because he only used his index fingers to type on qwerty. Now he types crazy fast, but on dvorak. So if you need to re-learn typing, it might be a good idea.
@CarsonMyers yeah I tried it for a couple months... if you are really proficient in QWERTY it will be hard to get really fast in Dvorak... but it WILL kill your QWERTY skills, probably reduce them by over 50%
@JoelSpolsky I'm currently team lead and I've been approached by another manager under the same product who is looking for a technical lead...I'm interested, but this manager is remote, I'd be interested in your opinion on remote managers?
@CarsonMyers by brother and I switched at the same time, but we both switched back. Had to hunt and peck on QWERTY. I wonder if I did it like @rchern it would work. Ditto on prefer Dvorak
@Erik either is painful, we've been spoiled for a long time with .NET, trying to get something as simple as a directory listing from C++ is an exercise in gymnastics
When I learned Dvorak several years ago, I used ABCD: A Basic Course in Dvorak.
It is very low key, nothing flashy. However, I found that because I wasn't focusing on flashy gimmicks, I was focusing on the typing. Seems like that is how it should be. It took me a couple days to get to a pass...
@CarsonMyers Nope, just layouts setup in Windows. I have Dvorak > Qwerty > Japanese > Hebrew setup in that order. Though Japanese and Hebrew I don't use as often.
@CarsonMyers I speak English. I learned about of Japanese before I traveled to Japan, and want to continue to learn it. Same when I visited Israel. If there were more hours in the day I'd love to learn more Hebrew and then more Japanese.
"On January 1, 2005, Serbian Post introduced a six-digit address code for each Serbian postal address, to replace the previous 5-digit postal code." Thanks Serbian Post Office!
@wilhelmtell oh yeah I just remembered something... you guys are at -13 C but you got heaters there... when it gets cold here (say about 5-10 C) we have nothing but blankets, lots and lots of blankets. And Pijamas.
I learned Hebrew for a couple months, then ended up working 90 hour weeks for a project at work the couple months before my trip to Israel, went cold turkey on learning Hebrew and pretty much forgot everything I learned. I was not happy. When I travel I like to experience the culture and learning a bit of the language is included in that for me.
has anyone had any success with the new Dynamic type in C#? I tried using it with Excel and it threw an except because a range had a number in it instead of a string. Or rather the secret sauce of "guessing" converted the value at runtime and my app crashed
@rchern stupid adult life... Studied japanese for a year and then I had to quit studying japanese when I started working half time while finishing uni a few years ago.. I really really liked it
@JoelSpolsky do you think that the 8 hrs/day standard is any good? I think that 6 hrs would be a lot better, 8-2, less "after lunch sleepiness" induced lack of productivity (we have lunch at 2), less "Im been here all day long I wanna go home!", more time to do personal stuff, family, learn japanese... sigh
@FranciscoNoriega I think it's much better to give programmers a quiet space to do their work. Even if they all share the same office. Sometimes you can't tune everything out with headphones. Basically I agree with Joel on the private offices matter
@FranciscoNoriega or more so, I start work at 6am most days, and end at 2pm. My employer is great about, "we don't care when you complete the work, as long as it gets done ontime"
@JoelSpolsky @FranciscoNoriega Yea, What's the workday (in general, not counting release madness) at FogCreek? Do you guys provide those perks to keep devs there day and night (I've seen that places before..60+hrs the norm...more on releases)? Or is it really Heaven?
@Chris, yeah definitely... the 6 hrs thing would just be on top.. I mean everybody willingly stays extra hours from time to time when in the zone or just when excited about something.. but it sucks when you are completely out of the zone and there is just about 40 mins left and you HAVE to stick to the schedule and just sit there waiting for the clock like Fred Flinstone
@FranciscoNoriega yes, but you need to earn it. Some other groups (we are a small group in our division), don't have that opportunity because of contact with outside clients. Most our stuff is for internal people
@JoelSpolsky would i be way off if i said your company doesn't really bear the israeli startup spirit, nor the american corporate spirit? how would you describe the mantra of fog creek in a sentence?
@Chris I don't know if it is just because must companies think they must stick to the schedule because thats how its been done for ever.. or just the lack or management to grade their workers performance by merits/goals rather than by office hours... or who knows maybe once you start a business you see thats the best/easiest way.....
@Chris... yeah, when there are outside clients its pretty much out of the question...but for internal stuff
did anyone else felt motivated to create, but at the same time kind of depressed of not having done something really great after watching The Social Network? :P