Apr
13
2007
0

To Geek Or Not To Geek

Today, I had an interesting discussion with some of my collegues about the life of a software engineer. My two cents:

1) the amount of fun one can have doing X is inversely proportional to how many people can do X, where X can be anything from watching TV to writing prototype.js.

2) the amount of money that one can demand and, more importantly, get is inversely proportional to how many people can do his/her job.

Well, the point that I was trying to make is that unless you are “Master of Your Domain” you can’t have real fun or make real good money in a job.

To me, the second point is pretty obvious and the first one is an interesting way to look at things. The first one is actually a rebuttal to all those guys who think that geeks are missing out on funs in life.

This must be an exaggeration but the kind of “high” that Sam Stephenson would have got from writing prototype.js would need a lifetime supply of crack otherwise.

Written by Bhabishya Kumar in: Programming |
Apr
06
2007
1

UNIX not my cup of tea

I was initially trying to host this blog at Slicehost which offers bare bone Ubuntu VPS with no pre-installed software. Going by Geoffrey Grosenbach’s article, I thought it might be a good time to finally learn Unix. But it was not to be…

The worst qualities of other VPS Hosting Providers mentioned in that article holds true for Slicehost too, i.e. “requires knowledge of Unix sysadmin”. I guess its not much of a problem for someone used to development on UNIX, but for a guy like me who never had to work on UNIX in entire software development experience, it was a nightmare.

Things didn’t go as smoothly as mentioned in their wiki. At every step, something failed and I had to provide some kind of hack to make it pass. Even the windows hack didn’t help.

Without Windows Explorer, Mouse, Ctrl C, Ctrl V., I feel totally handicapped on UNIX and my productivity goes down drastically. The infinite vi, ESC+INSERT, ESC+wq! killed me. Even the basic operations like scrolling up the ssh console to see the top of error stack trace or copying a block of code from a web page to a file were beyond me.

So, I realized that I was not actually learning anything. Even if I had made it work somehow, something would have broken on future deployments. I decided that I should concentrate more on Rails coding rather than deployment.

Then I came across WebFaction Rails Hosting and their Control Panel Demo. I used their Custom Install Script for Mephisto and got this blog up & running in 10 minutes.

So what about UNIX hacking? Maybe in the next life!

Written by Bhabishya Kumar in: Programming, Ruby on Rails |

Powered by WordPress | Aeros Theme | TheBuckmaker.com WordPress Themes