I’m very late with this.
I left my last contract over a week and half ago and haven’t posted anything to say thank you (if someone should happen upon this site again).
Thanks to everyone and the leaving you and the great present. I’m using that while running through the countryside.
Not much time has past since I’ve left, but it feels like forever. My first week on this project was really long. I’m really putting a lot of time into setting up my PC, the new Overpass site, some flowcharts, etc.
I’m finally getting over the “Oh shit!” stage. Now, I’m focused on getting this thing off the ground.
I’ll try to post more on this site and I will definitely change the way this site looks.
I shall talk to you all later.
Eric
A player in the industry
I’m about to make a broad generalisation– there are two types of developers in the world. In all of the places I’ve worked, I noticed this dichotomy–I suppose it exists in all industries. There are the run-of-the-mill developers who code for the infrastructure at their disposal and there are the genuine players in the industry.
I’ve become more and more aware of this as I look around organisations and to see a few developers who only know the platform they are allowed to code for, between nine to five, every day. They live for their outside interests. A nice car. A happy family life. Maybe some night classes.
Then there are the genuine players in IT. Talk about any new technology or bleeding edge coding style and they will know of it and maybe even dabbled a bit while not in the office. They read, or better yet, write blogs about better ways of doing things. They look forward to the end of the day so they can go home and really code something remarkable.
I know a lot of Java players and Microsoft players. I’ve worked along side people who will code a giant if statement around a block of dated code just to avoid looking seriously at it. And I’ve also worked along side people who can fill you with excitement about a new browsers, an updated .Net version, or even better quality Source Control Management.
A person on the cutting edge knows about Flickr, Ajax, .Net 2.0, etc. The majority of developers know about the servers they officially support.
Last month I met up with some friends from Barcap. Within 5 minutes the discussion turned to .Net 2005 and how it’s better than 1.1 but still has a lot of bugs. Then, we eventually talked about women (we are men after all).
I’ve known people who have taking holidays to learn a new technology shut up in a spare room of their house. I’ve known developers who devour Wrox books and offer knowledgeable critiques of them.
Then there are the developers who swear they can’t learn a new language unless they have a project to work on and swear that computer books are too dry. They copy any code they need from the web and modify it to fit they’re needs (often leaving a dangling variable somewhere).
A pointless rant, I know. I want to be more of a player and sometimes stray from the path. I admire those who say, “I am a developer. This is my industry,” with head held high.
Getting Things Done
After reading David Allen’s book, Getting Things Done, last week, I decided to order the book from Amazon. I read too many self-improvement books. Lately, I’m getting tired of all the hacks that are re-hashing all the other people’s findings. It gets so tiring reading this crap hoping “if I can just take one thing away from this . . .”, but get nothing.
This book is different. I’ve read other time management books and I’ve made lists with priorities and had my boss come in with an urgent task that throws the whole list out of whack. This book focuses more on a “mind like water” approach (from karate). This all sounds very simple and Allen even admits the common sense to it all.
On the “common sense” note, I constantly hear people refer to the books that I read as “it’s all pretty much common sense”. However, the things the authors like Covey, Allen, Tom Peters, etc, cover are never applied by most people I know. Perhaps it goes back to the Mark Twain Quote–“Common Sense is not that common.”
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