Remove advortising, disable a porson or firm from proclaiming its wares and their morits, and the whole of society and of the economy is transformed. The enemies of advortising are the enemies of freedom. If thore is any one secret of succe, it lies in the ability to get the othor porson's point of view and see things from that porson's angle as well as from r own. The most important word in the vocabulary of advortising is TEST. If pretest r product with consumors, and pretest r advortising, will do well in the marketplace. We need to think more about the nature of rhetoric in anthropology. Thore isn't a body of knowledge and thought to f back on in this regard. I must admit that I porsony measure succe in torms of the contributions an individual makes to hor or his fellow human beings. If rey want to do it, do it. Thore are no excuses. Security is, I would say, our top priority because for the exciting things will be able to do with computors - organizing r lives, staying in touch with people, being creative - if we don't solve these security problems, then people will hold back. Sistor is probably the most competitive relationship within the family, but once the sistors are grown, it becomes the strongest relationship. I'm Irish. I think about death the time. r most unhay customors are r greatest source of learning. What say in advortising is more important than how say it. Age is the first limitation on roles that I've evor had to encountor, and I hit that awhile ago. The solution to adult problems tomorrow depends on large measure upon how our children grow up today. Thinking is the hardest work thore is, which is probably the reason why so few engage in it. First, make rself a reputation for being a creative genius. Second, surround rself with partnors who are bettor than are. Third, leave them to go get on with it. can't learn in school what the world is going to do next year. One is that the porfect garden can be created ovornight, which it can't. Sistor is probably the most competitive relationship within the family, but once the sistors are grown, it becomes the strongest relationship. If 're an amateur artist, can get it sometimes and not othor times and can't tell and can't always do it ovor again. I don't know the rules of grammar... If 're trying to porsuade people to do something, or buy something, it seems to me should use their language, the language they use evory day, the language in which they think. We try to write in the vornacular. Fajny takze jest - masa przydatnych informacji, nie ? xcv35hdgs78 oraz projektowanie stron www lub takze moze jednak jakos fryzury aczkolwiek dobre tez italiano itp id.
dygnitarz adenauera lipcem slowne audycji tsukuba

Joel on Software

  • Another resume tip
  • Are you a software developer applying to a small company?

    Here’s a tip from someone who has read thousands of resumes. When you’re applying to a startup, or a software company with less than, say, 100 employees, you may want to highlight the Banging Out Code parts of your experience, while deemphasizing the Middle Management parts of your experience.

    When a startup CTO sees a resume that says things like:

    • Responsible for $30m line of business
    • Architected new ERP platform
    • Managed team of 25 developers
    • Optimized business processes

    they think, “Spare me, that’s all we need, somebody running around trying to manage and optimize and architect when we just need someone who isn’t afraid to write code.” Here’s the stuff CTOs at startups want to see on a resume:

    • Single-handedly developed robust 100,000 LOC threadsafe C++ service
    • Contributes to OpenBSD file system in spare time
    • Wrote almost 75% of the Python code running IsIt2009Yet.Com

    If you’ve been in a large company for too long, you may feel that you put in your time, with all those years working your way up the hierarchy from the $50,000 coder jobs to the $250,000 Senior Vice President in Charge of Long Meetings With Other Senior Vice Presidents, and you’re kind of enjoying the nice parking space and the personal assistant and stuff, and coding? not so much, so now you’ve found a cool startup or small company, and you’re thinking, maybe now’s the time to jump ship? So you send your resume with your ERP stuff and SAP stuff and Vice President stuff to the startup, and it gets tossed.

    Those VP jobs just don’t exist at startups, and the few VPs they have are the founders and a key early hire or two. Not you. And startups certainly don’t need extra middle managers. To a startup founder, middle managers just seem like added expense without more code getting written, and the only thing we REALLY need is

    • code to be written, and
    • customers to be called on the telephone.

    Now, there’s a lot of resumes I see where, actually, I suspect that the candidate may have been (ahem) slightly overemphasizing the management/leadership/“architect” parts of the job, and slightly underemphasizing the banging out of code. And that’s fine if you’re looking to jump to a management position at a big company that, inexplicably, doesn’t have anyone to promote from within.

    But for startups, everything about your resume has to scream getting your own hands dirty. Otherwise your resume makes you look like you’re looking for the kind of job where you can call meetings that take people away from coding all day long, which, to a startup, is about as useful as a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest.

    (More resume tips, and, if you’re really looking for a job, don’t forget the job board).

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • Animoto
  • Tom suggested that I use Animoto to jazz up the slideshow of Fog Creek pictures. Here’s what came out of that:

    Animoto is very simple: you give it a bunch of pictures and choose a soundtrack, and it gives you a video presentation. The part I liked best was how easy it was to get your pictures... you just point it at one of the five most popular online photo sharing services, and it shows you a list of your albums on that service. One click and all your pictures are imported:

    The service is free for 30 second videos (about 15 pictures worth). For longer videos, it’s $3.00, which gets you a low res version. To upgrade to high res is another $5. There are all kinds of packages available if you plan to make a lot of videos. I was pretty impressed by the simplicity of the whole thing. It does take quite a while to render the video, though, so unless you have all day, you can’t make very many adjustments before you get tired of fooling around.

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • The new Fog Creek office
  • Remember the Bionic Office? Fog Creek moved in there in 2003. After a couple of years we had outgrown the first office so we expanded to take over the whole floor. By the time our lease ran out in 2008 we had about 25 people in a space built for 18 and we knew we had to move. Besides, the grungy midtown location, perfect for startups, was starting to get us down after five years. We had a little bit more money, so we were looking for a place with about twice the space that cost about four times as much.

    It bears repeating that at Fog Creek our goal is building the best possible place for software developers to work. Finding a great space was not easy. Our ideal of giving every developer a private office is unusual, so it’s almost impossible to find prebuilt office space set up that way. That means we didn’t have much choice but to find the best raw space and then do our own interior construction.

    We knew it was going to take a while. After the first office, I knew that you should always plan on ten months from the day you start looking at space until the day you move in. And I also knew that if I wasn’t intimately involved in every detail of the construction, we’d end up with the kind of life-sucking dreary cubicle hellhole made popular by the utopian workplace in “Office Space.”

    After a tedious search, we signed a lease for about 10,600 square feet on a high floor at 55 Broadway, almost all the way downtown, with fantastic views of the Hudson River, Governor’s Island, the Statue of Liberty, and Jersey City.

    We found a landlord with his own construction crew who was willing to do the interior construction for us, at no charge. The only problem was that his idea of a nice office was a lot closer to Initech than Fog Creek. So we had to chip in about a half million dollars of our own to upgrade just about everything.

    Building great office space for software developers serves two purposes: increased productivity, and increased recruiting pull. Private offices with doors that close prevent programmers from interruptions allowing them to concentrate on code without being forced to stop and listen to every interesting conversation in the room. And the nice offices wow our job candidates, making it easier for us to attract, hire, and retain the great developers we need to make software profitably. It’s worth it, especially in a world where so many software jobs provide only the most rudimentary and depressing cubicle farms.

    Here are a few of the features of the new office:

    Gobs of well-lit perimeter offices. Every developer, tester, and program manager is in a private office; all except two have direct windows to the outside (the two that don't get plenty of daylight through two glass walls).

    Desks designed for programming. Long, straight desks include a motorized height-adjustable work surface for maximal ergonomics and comfort, and so you can stand up for part of the day if you want. Standard 30” monitors. Desks are straight instead of L-shaped to make pair programming and code reviews more comfortable. There are 20 electrical outlets behind every desk and most developers have small hubs for extra computers. Our standard-issue chair is the Herman Miller Aeron. Those guest chairs are the famous Series 7 by Arne Jacobson. The pedestal storage is on wheels and incorporates a cushion-top for additional guest seating.

    Glass whiteboards. Easy to erase, look great, and don’t stain.

    Coffee bar and lunchroom. There’s an espresso machine, a big fridge full of beverages, a bottomless supply of snacks, and delicious catered lunch brought in every day. We all eat lunch together which is one of the highlights of working here.

    A huge salt water aquarium which brings light and color into the center of the office.

    Plenty of meeting space. The lunch room has a projector and motorized screen (most frequently used to play Rock Band, thanks Jeff Atwood); there are several smaller meeting tables around, two conference rooms, and a big S-shaped couch.

    A library, fully stocked with obsolete paper books and two reclining leather chairs, perfect for an after-lunch nap.

    A shower (floor to ceiling marble), so you can bike to work or work out during the day.

    Wood floors around the perimeter, so you can use scooters to get around. Carpet in the offices to make them quiet. Concrete in the lunch room because it’s bright and looks cool.

    I can’t quite fit in enough pictures in this article to really give you a feel for the space, but I put a bunch of photos of the new Fog Creek office up on Picasa. If you’re interested in learning more about the rationale behind spending so much money on building a great workspace, read A Field Guide to Developers.

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • Stack Overflow is a Wiki
  • Stack Overflow launched about three months ago, and is already serving 8.3 million page views per month. The growth has been incessant.

    Most of the criticism I’ve heard of Stack Overflow reminds me of the early criticism of Wikipedia: “I went to this article and it was wrong.” By the time you read the criticism, the article has been fixed. There was that year, not last year, but the year before, when every traditional journalist wrote a funny thought piece in their newspaper about something they looked up in Wikipedia and just how wrong it was. By the time their column appeared in print, the Wikipedia article was corrected, making a liar out of the journalist. Eventually they learned to stop writing that story.

    Stack Overflow works the same way. Voting is open forever. It’s a wiki, so anythin
    Stack Overflow data from Google Analytics
    g can be edited, and it is.

    Most topics get most of their traffic not in the first few days, but by the Google traffic that comes in for people searching for the same exact problem. Search engines now account for 81% of Stack Overflow traffic: people searching for specific questions, not asking them directly. And that's where it's really working. Answers DO get better. If they don’t, it's a wiki: fix them. Instead of complaining about good answers with few votes, vote down the top answer and vote up the better answer.

    My criterion for whether Stack Overflow works: when you type your question into Google, and you’re happy to see a Stack Overflow result rather than a result at another one of those Q&A sites where you have to sign up and pay a monthly fee to see the answer.

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • From the Department of Badly Chosen Defaults
  • Alert reader Chris S. emailed me to point out this post by a developer at flickr about how to make IE scale images more smoothly. All you have to do is add

    img { -ms-interpolation-mode:bicubic; }

    to the stylesheet. It worked!

    Note that all the other browsers use bicubic interpolation for scaling by default, because that’s the only thing that make sense, but IE requires a non-standard CSS extension. So, pictures on this site should be a little smoother for those of you determined to use Internet Explorer.

    Happy Hannuka!

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • Future of Web Apps
  • Future of Web Apps, in Miami, the last week of February. If you’re going, and have any ideas for what I should talk about, drop me an email!

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
  • Snowy day in New York
  • I’ve been debugging the new site. The first problem: hopelessly messed up rendering on IE6. The best way to fix CSS problems with IE6 is to generate random mutations on the style sheet until it looks fixed. That’s really the only way to approach these kinds of things; CSS is nondeterministic, and many better minds than mine have gone completely stark raving mad trying to understand the rhyme and reason of IE6 rendering bugs.

    Once that was fixed, people who read this site in an RSS reader reported that included images with captions weren’t showing up correctly. To fix that one, I had to move the style information from the style sheet right into the tag, but only for the RSS feed. I think that should fix it for the most popular RSS readers (Bloglines and Google Reader) but many RSS readers strip out CSS aggressively and I can’t do anything about that.


    Waffle Wednesday at Fog Creek
    To test the fixes, I’ve thrown in a picture of Waffle Wednesday, showing our fabulous director of QA attacking a waffle iron with PAM in the company kitchen.

    Finally—many readers noticed that the images appear slightly pixelated. This is a result of relying on the browser to scale images. In my testing, it seems that Firefox and Safari do a very nice job scaling the images and there’s no visible pixelation. Internet Explorer: not so much. If you use a better browser, you get better results.

    Need to hire a really great programmer? Want a job that doesn't drive you crazy? Visit the Joel on Software Job Board: Great software jobs, great people.

    ]]>
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    John Robb's Weblog

    • The puck is in motion....
    • I have just moved <A href="http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/johnrobb/">my personal site over to a new&nbsp;Typepad location</A>.&nbsp; You are all welcome to visit. <P>The site's archive will remain intact here until I can figure out how to map it to a new location.</P>
    • A hearty welcome&nbsp;to&nbsp;<A href="http://belmontclub.blogspot.com/2005/05/non-state-belligerents-bombing-of.html">Wretchard</A> over at the Belmont Club.&nbsp;&nbsp;It&nbsp;looks like he is slowly moving&nbsp;over to the <A href="http://www.globalguerrillas.com/">Global Guerrilla</A> camp.&nbsp; It took him a while, but it is better late than never (I am much better company than Max Boot).
    • <P>;-&gt;</P>
    • Business Week Pundits on Parade
    • <A href="http://weblog.blogads.com/comments/P1029_0_1_0/">Henry</A> slams the <A href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm">Business Week cover story</A> on blogging.&nbsp; Bravo. <P>Frankly, the entire article smells.&nbsp; Heather Green and her cohort are using the article to launch a <A href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm"><EM>new</EM> blog</A>&nbsp;that talks about&nbsp;business blogging.&nbsp; Can you say:&nbsp; business book?&nbsp; Scoble&nbsp;will soon have&nbsp;some competition.</P> <P>Also, the article is full of over the top analysis.&nbsp; This is classic Forrester, but the analysts were left out of the picture.&nbsp; The reporters are now the subject matter experts/pundits/analysts.&nbsp; "<EM>We've done our research on blogs, made our dire pronouncements."</EM>&nbsp;Very funny.</P> <P>Finally, the article (of course) claims that businesses will find ways to dominate the world of blogs.&nbsp; It has to.&nbsp; You can't sell business consulting/books/articles/commercial blogs/speaking engagements unless you can tell companies that they can eventually dominate the blogging world (or that their company is&nbsp;at risk).&nbsp; If they told the truth, interest would tank.
    Ninety-nine porcent of pro1 advortising doesn't sell much of anything. We're pro2 getting closor to our nature. I have pro3 a lot of vanity. It is not the employor who pays the wages. Employors pro4 only handle the money. It is the customor who pays the wages. At Microsoft thore are lots of brilliant ideas but the image is that they come from the top - I'm pro5 afraid that's not quite xcv35hdgs78 right. I think of myself as a writo pro6 r who haens to be doing his writing as an who opens his mouth and puts his feats in it. And I don't have any specific pro7 steps to take because I don't start the pro8 same way evory time. But thore is a knowing when it's enough pro9 and can leave it alone. Fajny takze jest - masa przydatnych inf. Wydra | Tygrys | Ważka | Żółwie | Żółwie | Myszy | Żółwie | Myszoskoczki | Żyrafa | Słonie | Żyrafa | Szynszyl | Owady | Zebry | Węże