Good read, i totally agree with some of the points made.
This is sweet! I'll consider using it for an upcoming project.
Facebook, twitter, start with your social graph and if you've got the audience it will pick up.
Sweeeeet
You should start by learning HTML, CSS, javascript. Although not necessary, learning a server side scripting language like Python or Ruby will help. Good luck!
I have a similar problem - i'm studying electrical engineering (currently in 3rd year) but i'm passionate about programming and web development. I recently wanted to switch to software engineering but i realized that…
He's looking for an elite community full of Excel hackers? I think.
Personally i would definitely take the job, given that the projects that you'll be working on are interesting. Seeing as you are pretty dedicated, you can study / self-learn on the side.
Rather than just copy/paste, study the code and try to understand how the author is doing what he's doing. I study other people's code all the time in order to learn new concepts. Then, you can use what you learned and…
Looks great, it also has an HN feel to it. I'm also in the process of building on a chat app as a fun project.
I would definitely start working on the idea and come up with a prototype.
http://bitbucket.org here
Good read, i totally agree with some of the points made.
This is sweet! I'll consider using it for an upcoming project.
Facebook, twitter, start with your social graph and if you've got the audience it will pick up.
Sweeeeet
You should start by learning HTML, CSS, javascript. Although not necessary, learning a server side scripting language like Python or Ruby will help. Good luck!
I have a similar problem - i'm studying electrical engineering (currently in 3rd year) but i'm passionate about programming and web development. I recently wanted to switch to software engineering but i realized that…
He's looking for an elite community full of Excel hackers? I think.
Personally i would definitely take the job, given that the projects that you'll be working on are interesting. Seeing as you are pretty dedicated, you can study / self-learn on the side.
Rather than just copy/paste, study the code and try to understand how the author is doing what he's doing. I study other people's code all the time in order to learn new concepts. Then, you can use what you learned and…
Looks great, it also has an HN feel to it. I'm also in the process of building on a chat app as a fun project.
I would definitely start working on the idea and come up with a prototype.
http://bitbucket.org here