Monday, June 2, 2014

Avisi B.V. 2014


The first type is inimitable in what he/she does. You can’t keep up with the speed of his work. He writes thousands of lines of quality code where others write 10. Or he writes 10 lines of code where others need a thousand. He comes up with frameworks that make you think: I could have thought of that (but you’re always late). It’s the kind that always thinks he’s right. And it’s the darnest thing, he always is.
The other great type is the kind that works in a different pace. He/she takes all aspects in consideration. Writes less code, but tirelessly picks up the dirty work that also needs to be done. He reads documentation and… writes documentation. He communicates with and cares about customers. Often also the type that grabs you a cup of coffee.
Comment
You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>
Recent Posts Using Pixelapse as a designer among developers Continuously exercise your code ownership Software Development Without Relations Don’t team up with a Type III developer My deep-dive into website development Two-factor authentication on OSX (a YubiKey example) eco bubble Content management with Prismic How to keep a fast build with Browserify and ReactJS It’s eco bubble not about development stupid! New virtualization infrastructure One awesome eco bubble (build) stack from the present Why you should use BrowserSync How we didn’t want to use Mongo, but ended up using Mongo Adding value to integration – eco bubble evolving from the trade mission Techday ‘Go’ at Avisi. Join us! HTML5 canvas in the browser eco bubble and on the server Integration is often like a trade mission Atlassian Stash – private repositories What’s on your mind? We’ll blog about it! JIRA Agile – Card colors
Agile Atlassian Atlassian Experts Automation Big Data camel Conference Confluence Database Development Devoxx Esconfs Eurostar Event GIT HTML5 Intranet eco bubble Java Javascript JBoss JIRA Learning Manchester Marketing Maven OnDemand performance Product Requirements Results Scala scrum Security Selenium Social Software eco bubble Software Architecture Software Development Spring Techdays Techniques Testing Tooling Trust Wallboard
Avisi B.V. 2014

No comments:

Post a Comment