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Advice to college students

Monday, January 3rd, 2005

Joel Spolsky gives advice to college students, some of it is very good. One problem with it is that it’s clearly targetted at getting your first job after university, rather than thinking about whole career needs.

The importance of the grade point average, and the working through boring things is the main thing I disagree with. Some of the most productive software developers I’ve ever worked with, and most important members of the teams didn’t have a great record at university, they could’ve done if they’d worked at it, but they worked harder on other things.

Lots of people who find programming interesting and easy, find people hard, those developers who learnt the skills of how to interact with people are much better, you can roll them out in front of clients without the ruffled look and the buffy references scaring them away.

So what I do recommend

If you don’t need to, don’t spend all your time working like crazy to get good grades, leave the computer turned off and get out where people are. Walking up to a girl in a bar and convincing her that your worth talking to is a brilliant preperation to walking up to a client and convincing them you know what you’re talking about, you may not be a salesman, but if you’re going to do a good job capturing requirements from a client or one of your users, you need to be able to talk to them, and have them believe in you as an expert, not just as some shy geek. Standing up in front of your frisbee team and telling them how you’re going to get the frisbee to the other end will improve your explaining and speaking skills as well as any course on it (your teammates won’t take any crap, they’ll tell it how it is much quicker than in a course). It may take alcohol to get you up on stage singing I will survive in the local karaoke bar in front of 100 people, but it’ll still be more help in presenting at the conference than any course on Dynamic Logic.

The next thing is the importance of contacts in getting jobs, and university is a great place, to get an awful lot of contacts. When you’re playing football, or squash, or doing shooters off of naked hockey girls with your friends, it may seem like you’re doing nothing to further your career, but this is wrong, what you’re actually doing is getting yourself known to all these people who are going to have good jobs in the future, and are going to want to get that big wodge of cash from recruiting you, and want you to get that job because they like you.

Grades help you get your first job, they might help a little to get your second, they really aren’t worth much after that, your friends, the colleagues you’ve worked with, your ability to sell yourself, the things you’ve done in the previous career are all much more important. These things come from social skills, the stuff you’ve hopefully learnt a lot of by the time you’ve got to university, unfortunately all too many of the young CS students I’ve met are chronically shy and simply couldn’t sell themselves or make non-geek friends. You need non-geek friends, geeks often don’t move jobs, they’re happy getting paid enough money to keep themselves in coke and an internet connection - they don’t even need to pay for their software or pornography any more if they don’t need to. What you need is ambitious friends, then you can follow on their coat-tails to the interesting, well rewarded positions without having to do too much of that hard sales stuff.

Of course all this only applies if you’re good enough to get the grades required to get that first job without working yourself hard, then you’ll need to do it. Getting that first job is still difficult and important, but if you can get yourself good enough grades, don’t work like crazy to get them better, work on the other skills you don’t have. There’s no point being brilliant academically if you’re too shy to talk to the nice HR girl doing the interview.

Netcraft toolbar

Saturday, January 1st, 2005

Netcraft have released a toolbar that helps stop phishing attempts, it apparently provides information about where the site you’re on is hosted and more, looks very useful tool.

I say it apparently provides information, as I’m not willing to actually test it, because sensibly when I try to install it, IE6 tells me not to, warning about security inconsistencies. Looking at it’s because the MSI download is sent with a mime-type of text/plain. Along with the warning, IE actually renders the file as plain text, something that long ago IE got terribly wrong, good to see that it’s beginning to get better.

Netcraft, maybe testing your site in an up to date IE6 with Windows XP SP2 would be a good idea before releasing it? Maybe I’ll try again later once it’s fixed.

Firefox New York Times Ad - why?

Friday, December 17th, 2004

Firefox finally placed their advert in the New York Times, and it’s confused me a lot.

Firstly, why the New York Times? The web says it has a 1.1million circulation on a weekday (I couldn’t seem to find any readership figures, so we don’t know if 1 or 3 people read each copy, maybe US circulation co’s don’t collect this) So it has a lower readership in the US than both the Wall Street Journal and USA Today, quite apart from the readership size of papers in the rest of the world. Was it really worth $130,000 (or maybe only $50,000, I couldn’t find an answer to that) to talk to such a tiny part of the market?

One possible option would be the associated coverage such a stunt could generate would be worth it, you’d really be talking to lots of other people. However google news seems to be suggesting that there’s very little interest in it, currently there’s just zdnet, which are hardly likely to be people who’ve not heard of firefox.

Then there’s the oddness of the advert itself, I don’t get what it’s trying to say, very few non-tech web users I know even understand what a web-browser is, what they have on their computer is “the internet”. So the lead question is I think confusing, I asked some people, they’re not completely un-aware of what the internet is, and use it a lot - but they didn’t understand the question, of course these are all British, maybe New York Times readers are a different bunch, but I don’t see it.

Next there’s another huge firefox logo, another piece of branding completely un-understood by the target audience, what’s it doing there, sure you need to build a brand, but a cute logo doesn’t say, yeah, I’ll try that out, which is the aim of the ad. Where were the screenshots, the hook to interest the user? The “It’s not Microsoft” argument may well work in selling to geeks, I don’t see it as a strategy for the New York Times.

Then there’s the quotes, first is speed, now I don’t firefox faster than other browsers (other than mozilla) sure it is on some things, but it’s not on others, speed is also such a function of bandwidth, that I simply don’t think most people who will try it will agree with that experience, it’s not enough of a difference to be noticeable. So the lead quote, won’t be lived up to. My browser’s not crashed in as long as I can remember, (other than when using things like crash bug examples), users with lots of spyware and viruses installed sure do, but installing firefox doesn’t clean those out, so again, there’s a good chance the user will still see the same crashes. Spyware, there’s nothing about Mozilla which prevents a user spyware, so I simply don’t understand this claim.

Then there’s the link “getfirefox.com”, so what do you get if you enter that in google (lots of users see the search engine as the web, they don’t use the location bar) Google comes back with a description saying “Skip to main content. … ” hardly the best sales pitch. If you forget the .com and just say “getfirefox” google directs you to a site which says “Ist Firefox Ihr Standard-Browser? Dann geben Sie ihm doch Ihre Stimme!”, now I may be doing the New York Times readers a disservice, but I don’t believe they’re fluent german speakers. This sort of unprofessionalism hurts, it would’ve been so easy to have getfirefox.com have all the content, google would’ve loved it, and it would’ve worked for all these users, but the advert creators didn’t seem to think this through.

I’m sure the advert will pick up a few downloads, but how many and was it really worth the cost of achieving it? How many developer hours could’ve been bought with the money, how much hardware could’ve been donated to the dedicated folk. I was shocked to learn one of the developers I respect in Mozilla was using a machine that could take a maximum 128MB ram as his build machine, 1000$ on some hardware for 50 mozilla hackers, would I think have done more long term good than a pretty disappointing advert to well under 1% of the market.

203c

My Wordpress implementations was broke

Thursday, October 21st, 2004

It appears both comments and trackbacks were broken, rather annoying, I’ve managed to fix the comments, but I’ve not got time to fix the trackbacks right now. Sorry about that!

Voice over IP in the UK

Saturday, August 28th, 2004

I’ve recently been looking into a Voice Over IP solution for cheap communication to some guys around the world, aswell as providing a real phone number that can be published but routed easily, and cheaply anywhere in the world.

Voice Over IP seemed the obvious solution, so after a quick chat with some people, and a good read of VOIP.org.uk, I started testing voiptalk.org. It costs nothing to get set up for just an IP phone, and you just buy some talk-time if you want to call real phone lines. I picked up a soft SIP phone from x-ten and tried it out, here on my ADSL line everything worked great, calling out sounded good, there a few tweaks whilst I got the microphone balance right, but you always had to do that with mic’s.

I then spent 3 quid to get myself an incoming number - an 0870 number, so not cheap for people to call me, but still at least they can, I could also get voicemail etc. delivered by email, and outgoing calls are cheap all over the world. Getting a geographic number would be good, but that seems to cost 90 quid a year, so not really only useful if you wanted a presence in a particular UK region. Still it might be a good idea to get a London number, I’m looking for a job at the moment, and people always seem put off about my west-country address - even though it’s really just because that’s the only place I’ve got for a postal address.

SVG Editors Inkscape and Sodipodi

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

The battle of the O/S SVG editors is hotting up, both Inkscape and Sodipodi are gutsing it out, both are great, and it’s great to see competition in the marketplace - it always drives better tools!

Stag Weekends…

Sunday, December 7th, 2003

Last weekend I went off to Nottingham on a stag weekend for my mate who’s getting married (I guess that was pretty obvious, as I’d not go off for some stranger, and it wouldn’t’ve been a stag weekend if he wasn’t getting married…) We did all the normal stag weekend things - drunk a lot, humiliated the poor stag etc. We also went driving various things - a land-rover off-road on this course, little pilots and these weird quad-bike things - all a good laugh and very, very muddy. I didn’t learn much other than it’s surprisingly easy to drive around at high speed, despite being very hungover and after only 3 hours sleep.

We went to a lapdance club in the evening for an hour or so, and to help with Dan’s humiliation, and I really don’t enjoy these, not on ethical grounds or anything like that. It’s just I don’t feel the girls market themselves right to me - they have a very 1 dimensional idea of what men find attractive. So it’s always high-heels, lots of make-up, skimpy clothing (yes I realise that’s the point - but they do take it off…) These simply are not what I go for - so if you’re looking to attract me to your club - rethink your dress!

No markup perhaps more harmful?

Tuesday, September 16th, 2003

If you’re reading this in the RSS feed, then there won’t be any links, or any mark-up at all, it’s just text, you’ll need to read the HTML version to see the links and the pictures, this is because Escaped markup is considered harmful and I listen to Norm. However I’m too lazy to write the code to convert my HTML (XHTML being an irrelevance you shouldn’t deliver on the web to unsuspecting clients) into well formed XML safe for embeddeding.

This might be more harmful, in that with the links, you’re missing much of the content, mind you you’re missing the Zebras bums anyway, so come read the HTML with a CSS browser and images, and you get my boring musings, and the bums of stripey ruminants, so I’m not gonna bother fixing up my HTML so it’s safe for embedding, well not yet anyway.

Standards, who gives a toss?

Thursday, August 28th, 2003

Safari developers prefer broken mozilla compatibility to following the standard. Hyatt’s blog has a strange annoucement, that he’s having Safari fix-up <script /> to mean a properly closed script element in HTML, now because a UA should make best efforts to render documents that are crap, I can’t complain too much about the principle. We’re stuck with a big legacy from NN4 and IE’s brokenness. Yet IE and NN4 treat the standard correctly here, so there shouldn’t be any big legacy problems, the bug could easily be fixed in Mozilla and Opera. Hyatt says that “since Web sites are (amazingly) writing to it.” we’re stuck with it, rubbish, the pages must be tiny in number, fail to work in the majority of well behaved user agents (including normally bad behaved ones like IE).

To me it suggests that Safari is creating a browser for the wrong audience, caring more about addressing Mozilla compatibility for us geeks, than creating a useful User Agent that closely follows standards.

SVG and stuff.

Monday, August 25th, 2003

I was reading Hugh’s ramblings and he mentions that MS need to get on board with SVG, with him being baffled by the continued use of VML. Fortunately I think they’re not pursuing that so much any more - Visio now supports SVG having dropped many other formats, so I think the future looks bright.

Hugh also tipped me off about MaxF’s SVG Textorizer which has a picture of danbri converted to funky SVG. It’s annoying to learn that despite spending way too long on an IRC channel with these guys, I never knew of it… It makes me wonder what other fun stuff they’re doing which I’ve not heard about.

Also on the subject of SVG, I cleaned up the SVG IRC Logs front page, so now you (and google) can get at the logs.

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