I think that is going to be my new wallpaper.
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 8:25 PM, Martin A. Brown wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> 10 Pick one favorite specific topic, any topic (XML parsing; Unix
> process handling; databases). The topic matters for you.
> Learn it deeply. Keep learning it. The
Hello,
10 Pick one favorite specific topic, any topic (XML parsing; Unix
process handling; databases). The topic matters for you.
Learn it deeply. Keep learning it. The topic matters less for
others (unless it is specifically within the computer science
discipline).
Freeside is more makers. I haven't gone but have known people that
have. You might find some arduino supposedly, but not much coding
otherwise and you have to pay membership fees. It is more social than
technical, I think. And your car will probably be broken into. I will
check out the python-atlan
>>I don't know where you're geographically located, but if you are close
>>to Hacker Dojo, they're good people.
>
> That looks pretty amazing. I am in Atlanta, but I may take a bus out
> there just to check it out. I lived in LA for a little while and
> venice beach, santa monica, and the desert-y
Thanks to everyone.
>> practice. That programming doesn't have to be a solitary thing needs
>> to be strongly emphasized, because the media likes to exaggerate,
>Yes, This can't be stressed too much. Industrial coding is a team activity not
>a solo process.
This is particularly good advice for
On 12/05/14 18:47, Danny Yoo wrote:
practice. That programming doesn't have to be a solitary thing needs
to be strongly emphasized, because the media likes to exaggerate,
Yes, This can't be stressed too much. Industrial coding is a team
activity not a solo process.
In fact one well known a
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 1:47 PM, Danny Yoo wrote:
> >> I have never known anyone that works in this industry.
>
> Just as a side comment: there are probably several folks on this
> mailing list whose job description would match "working in industry".
>
One big step is "program for someone else".
>> I have never known anyone that works in this industry.
Just as a side comment: there are probably several folks on this
mailing list whose job description would match "working in industry".
> You could be expected to work as pat of a team - anything from 4 to 400
> other developers. That will
On 12/05/14 01:12, C Smith wrote:
I have never known anyone that works in this industry. I got one job
transforming xml (should have used xslt, ended up using sed and python
regex scripts) where the guy asked me how much I wanted and I threw
200 bucks out there because I could get a room for two
What is a difficult problem that if I could solve it would indicate I
am ready to begin looking for a job? I realize that solving just ONE
problem isn't too meaningful, but I am looking for a level of
difficulty or some sort of gauge as to what a good programmer would
consider difficult. What would
Probably off-topic for the list but i'll let some of the others weigh in on
that. This is more for help with the python language itself.
But i'll weigh in. Programming is difficult work. It's definitely a
profitable career. Its hard to say how much you'll make since it varies
depending on loca
I have never known anyone that works in this industry. I got one job
transforming xml (should have used xslt, ended up using sed and python
regex scripts) where the guy asked me how much I wanted and I threw
200 bucks out there because I could get a room for two weeks at that
cost. He just laughed
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