Alot of these things do matter and it seems to me like all you're doing here is excusing bloat via hyperbole. I don't even agree necessarily with a lot of the parent comment, but I disagree with yours.
I think it may be a worthwhile question and I'm curious why you think this. Why shouldn't they? Is there a objective measurable reason remote employees shouldn't be paid the same?
Could you expand on that?
Lots of things wrong with this. Her handle "feministjourney" coupled with how she reacted by displaying this needless outrage in the public doesn't bode well for her general attitude. Whether or not you agree with the…
Of course it's worth noting that in a "remote-first"—a term I love and a principle I can get behind—environment, these people wouldn't have anything to do.
My comment was actually sarcasm, but it's worth discussing. What you describe is one way that an ideal process can work, but actually make things worse when put into practice by people whose job it is to meetings. You…
But how do you plan to be productive if you miss the daily scrum? Same experience here.
Do you mean that you spent to much time with not much to show and now have an apparent gap in work history? Is it more of a present feeling of being lost in the weeds of those projects?
Very good good point. That's something that's certainly crossed my mind a number of times and still does.
If anyone is interested in some specifics that I skipped over for the sake of brevity (lol) I'll keep an eye on this thread.
+1 internets for you. I wrote about my experience extensively in this thread. Didn't make any reference to these specifically but they pretty well hold true and existed where I last worked. Not so compelling for modern…
On Real Burnout —————————————— TL:DR; (Worth the read though) I recently—early last year—faced real burnout for the first time and it has had devastating effects for quite some time. Up until then I considered myself to…
I love this. It's such a depressingly accurate and concise depiction of the last office I worked in.
That certainly sounds nice but it's not true. Or at the very least depends on how you define software. If software is built upon an evolving platform (such as the web) and has a self-supplying revenue stream if it needs…
Every comment you've made in this thread has a tone of defensiveness and a lack of anything constructive as if everyone here is personally threatening you.
Wow. Significantly slower than the IDEs I used to think were bloated JVM beasts.
I believe the reason it's stalled is because the single developer moved to Berlin and has been pretty busy with that for a while. But, he does still seem committed and occasionally updates on Twitter. Only mentioning…
Just for comparison, this costs the same per month as a one-time purchase of Quiver (a notes app for people that don't fit the late nineties definition of creative) which is amazing, 3x the cost of a base DigitalOcean…
A contrived analogy for this might be something like "Why wouldn't you delete the data once you've rendered a graph of it in PNG?". Data is always important. Just as much so as it's original interpretation and…
Does this carry over to federal agencies as well? I know the state of access to journals and papers published by universities is a shitshow but don't know how it is at the government level.
In your first sentence which actions are you referring to?
How successful is the effort to convince clinate deniers as of right now? I see this as an archival effort. If the source is destroyed, this data, among everything else being archived, will still be around and publicly…
"A peek under the purple rug!" sounds awfully suggestive. I hope that's as obvious to everyone else.
In fairness, your question hardly reads as a question and much more like a halfhearted sigh from someone who hasn't given it much thought. In response to the mention of Google backing it, I don't see how how that should…
Which is a large cost no question. Especially with the size of the codebase you mentioned. What I'm interested in is how, if at all, the transition process is managed. YouTube's transition from Flash might be an example…
Alot of these things do matter and it seems to me like all you're doing here is excusing bloat via hyperbole. I don't even agree necessarily with a lot of the parent comment, but I disagree with yours.
I think it may be a worthwhile question and I'm curious why you think this. Why shouldn't they? Is there a objective measurable reason remote employees shouldn't be paid the same?
Could you expand on that?
Lots of things wrong with this. Her handle "feministjourney" coupled with how she reacted by displaying this needless outrage in the public doesn't bode well for her general attitude. Whether or not you agree with the…
Of course it's worth noting that in a "remote-first"—a term I love and a principle I can get behind—environment, these people wouldn't have anything to do.
My comment was actually sarcasm, but it's worth discussing. What you describe is one way that an ideal process can work, but actually make things worse when put into practice by people whose job it is to meetings. You…
But how do you plan to be productive if you miss the daily scrum? Same experience here.
Do you mean that you spent to much time with not much to show and now have an apparent gap in work history? Is it more of a present feeling of being lost in the weeds of those projects?
Very good good point. That's something that's certainly crossed my mind a number of times and still does.
If anyone is interested in some specifics that I skipped over for the sake of brevity (lol) I'll keep an eye on this thread.
+1 internets for you. I wrote about my experience extensively in this thread. Didn't make any reference to these specifically but they pretty well hold true and existed where I last worked. Not so compelling for modern…
On Real Burnout —————————————— TL:DR; (Worth the read though) I recently—early last year—faced real burnout for the first time and it has had devastating effects for quite some time. Up until then I considered myself to…
I love this. It's such a depressingly accurate and concise depiction of the last office I worked in.
That certainly sounds nice but it's not true. Or at the very least depends on how you define software. If software is built upon an evolving platform (such as the web) and has a self-supplying revenue stream if it needs…
Every comment you've made in this thread has a tone of defensiveness and a lack of anything constructive as if everyone here is personally threatening you.
Wow. Significantly slower than the IDEs I used to think were bloated JVM beasts.
I believe the reason it's stalled is because the single developer moved to Berlin and has been pretty busy with that for a while. But, he does still seem committed and occasionally updates on Twitter. Only mentioning…
Just for comparison, this costs the same per month as a one-time purchase of Quiver (a notes app for people that don't fit the late nineties definition of creative) which is amazing, 3x the cost of a base DigitalOcean…
A contrived analogy for this might be something like "Why wouldn't you delete the data once you've rendered a graph of it in PNG?". Data is always important. Just as much so as it's original interpretation and…
Does this carry over to federal agencies as well? I know the state of access to journals and papers published by universities is a shitshow but don't know how it is at the government level.
In your first sentence which actions are you referring to?
How successful is the effort to convince clinate deniers as of right now? I see this as an archival effort. If the source is destroyed, this data, among everything else being archived, will still be around and publicly…
"A peek under the purple rug!" sounds awfully suggestive. I hope that's as obvious to everyone else.
In fairness, your question hardly reads as a question and much more like a halfhearted sigh from someone who hasn't given it much thought. In response to the mention of Google backing it, I don't see how how that should…
Which is a large cost no question. Especially with the size of the codebase you mentioned. What I'm interested in is how, if at all, the transition process is managed. YouTube's transition from Flash might be an example…