| bio | website | gingerbreadsoftware.co.uk |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | 30 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 5 months |
| seen | Mar 18 at 14:49 | |
| stats | profile views | 30 |
I am a C# developer and web designer.
I play guitar in Lynchburg (The band, not the city).
I have an unhealthly love of the Telecaster.
I'm a tech-nerd.
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Jan 17 |
awarded | Mortarboard |
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Jan 17 |
revised |
Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion added 1253 characters in body |
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Jan 17 |
comment |
Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion I can see how you got that from what I wrote. But what you have taken from my comment was not that which was intended, so I apologies for not being clear. However, I didn't say that people who enjoy programming outside of work are fanatical ninja-uber-nerd who cracks off to StackOverflow and have no life. I said people who identify as a fanatical ninja-uber-nerd who crack off to StackOverflow have no life. Do you identify as a fanatical ninja-uber-nerd who crack off to StackOverflow?
Think about it. If I wasn't in to programming, why would I spend my time posting here?.. |
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Jan 17 |
comment |
Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion He doesn't spend his free time writing code. He doesn't join in arguments about different bloggers opinion on the latest coding fad. He is always telling people to stop trying to make it so complicated. He is not a nerd and work is not his #1 prority in life. So how do you spot a "somewhat" passionate programmer? Does choosing a degree & career in programming not suggest some amount of passion? Just because the candidate doesn't identify as a fanatical ninja-uber-nerd who cracks off to StackOverflow, doesnt this just mean he's not a total geek who has a life outside of the office and? ... |
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Jan 17 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Jan 17 |
comment |
Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion Yes, always up vote me :D |
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Jan 17 |
comment |
Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion And before you all start to vote this down ask yourself, are you voting it down because it's a WRONG answer, or because you disagree? Remember: this is a subjective question and answer community. If everyone votes down things which they disagree with (rather than things which are WRONG) the community with die a death and every answer will be a populist point grab... |
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Jan 17 |
answered | Choosing between two programmers: experience vs. passion |
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Jan 15 |
answered | Unobtrusive JavaScript (regarding asp.net mvc3) not clear |
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Dec 29 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Dec 29 |
accepted | How to manage tailored/branded web tools? |
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Dec 22 |
awarded | Student |
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Dec 22 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Dec 22 |
comment |
What job is better for a newbie, one that requires you to create a new program frequently, or something like software maintenance? Do you mean to say "you will have more freedom in a new project which is good" or did you mean "a new project will be better if you have strict guidelines"? |
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Dec 22 |
comment |
What job is better for a newbie, one that requires you to create a new program frequently, or something like software maintenance? if you don't have the right manager/tech-lead a "new project" role for a newbie quickly becomes a real sink/swim type situation. |
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Dec 22 |
awarded | Editor |
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Dec 22 |
revised |
What job is better for a newbie, one that requires you to create a new program frequently, or something like software maintenance? added 2 characters in body |
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Dec 22 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Dec 22 |
answered | What job is better for a newbie, one that requires you to create a new program frequently, or something like software maintenance? |
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Dec 22 |
asked | How to manage tailored/branded web tools? |