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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 27th, 2023

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  • Ok, the first thing you need to do is to take all of your ideas and put them together in your head, and then sit down and document them. Come up with a coherent idea. Don’t worry, right now, it’s just a bunch of ideas flowing around in your head, and we all understand that. Write these ideas down and come up with something that makes sense and you would feel comfortable in saying and explaining to someone else.

    Once you have something coherent, talk to some people that have experience in that area. See if the idea makes sense to them. See if they and some of their contacts would sign a letter of intent to purchase. Only if you can get a few signers would I even then think about writing any software. No sense in wasting time on something no one will buy.

    Good luck!




  • Fully remote is a horrible idea, like really, really bad. Sure, everyone thinks that fully remote is great because it is great for them. However, it really isn’t. Why? Simply because less work is done. I remember reading a study regarding remote work done back in about 2015. The finding was that when remote work was allowed, not fully remote, just some remote, there was less work that was done. In software development, there was source code checkins. Checkins fell off significantly on Fridays. Management decided that people were required to be back in the office more, more checkins happened, and more software updates were completed on time. Life feels much more transactional in a mobile environment. There is much less interaction. There is much less interaction. There is much less brain storming.

    Quite simply, I’m not a fan of full remote at all.



  • You are in an entrepreneur group. There are also a bunch of startup founders here.

    I have found that cheap offshore outsourcing is a really bad idea. This is from experience. You yourself say “relatively cheap hourly salary”

    In the startup world, development requires a lot of back and forth communication. I have seen a lot of this. You have a couple of customers and you’ve had some success, so you think this will work with everyone. You might have had some customers that document to the nth degree what needs to happen. You’ve had some “big clients,” though I’m not sure what you mean by that. The startup world is completely different. Entrepreneurs live in a world of constant change. Entrepreneurs are a very different world where there is only one person likely able to do things. They don’t have time to document things

    I’ve heard these and similar claims from others. I’m sure that you’ve had great people that you’ve worked with on your side. I’m not bad mouthing you. I’ve never seen this model work, ever. I’ve got friends of mine in London that have used Eastern European software outsourcing, and none of them have had any success. To have success with software, you have to have people that you trust and to work with on a face to face basis where it is easy to have communication back and forth. In my consulting work, I’ve had to pick up the pieces from these failed efforts. In the startup world, All I ever saw was garbage, they couldn’t even get the graphics right.

    Reddit is full of people that don’t know about software development. I hope they don’t make a mistake and think that cheap out sourcing will work.