Details
-
Skills.Net Developer
Joined devRant on 4/11/2016
Join devRant
Do all the things like
++ or -- rants, post your own rants, comment on others' rants and build your customized dev avatar
Sign Up
Pipeless API
From the creators of devRant, Pipeless lets you power real-time personalized recommendations and activity feeds using a simple API
Learn More
-
In a similar position to you. I think it just comes down to the language you use. If you say something like: I would like to propose the following standards to improve our software quality and here are the reasons why/what this would achieve. Then it means the same thing as some people here don't have a clue what they're doing and create technical debt but comes across much more positively. Good luck with whatever you decide to do
-
@Devnergy no paid OT. Just us panicking, stressed 9-5 keyboard punishing code monkeys!
-
@RiderExMachina thanks man. It is worth it. Today we were able to have much more realistic and positive conversation about our approaches to new projects as a result of screaming for a new approach, but would be nice if just occasionally someone else took the shouty role! Or people just listened the first time. Even better! =)
-
.
-
0 warnings? Pah. Photoshopped
-
I had both my fingers crossed for a deployment 2 days ago and adrenaline rush was real. Have since spent most of last 2 days with little sleep migrating from a pot luck chance of a build and working site in production after a deployment to clean build working everytime. Adrenaline junkie I ain't.
-
Hopefully that made more sense. Very sleep deprived today!
-
So I have a backlog in Jira with a whole bunch of existing bugs in production which I am being asked to provide estimates for and to plan a sprint with these estimates. Is it common practice to work on production issues in sprints? If so how do you estimate a bug without finding the cause of it which is most of the effort required to fix it?
-
String.Replace("sadly", "luckily");
-
Subscriber++
-
So much this. To the cold guy: wear a fucking jumper
-
This needs to go in an essential guide to project management in software development
-
Used Kafka and Zookeeper running in Docker containers in swarm mode; publicly available on Docker registry, and they worked out of the box. Really good for prototyping
-
@magicMirror yeah I'm working on it. Trouble is I've ended up with the responsibility of maintaining environments without any training or authority to optimise/automate the process
-
@hube true enough! But the second 100% is put of work hours and is my hobby!
-
Wait. What are you saying here... all the world's problems CAN'T be solved by C#?
-
10/10 would get StAAS from Amazon. 100% uptime
-
Hanselman is great. His show is featured among a whole bunch of .net focussed podcasts here http://thesoundof.net Great site. Listen to these for my comute. Would heartedly recommend Coding Blocks. Funny guys with some great insights and discussion on a range of topics
-
Tough lesson to learn. But well handled and good for you!
-
Gotta say, huge fan of "son of a motherfucker". Isn't that how the son was born in the first place? Most logical swearing ever =)
-
Where's the BitBucket love?
-
@heyheni yeah I thought so. To be honest, haven't had the time to look at any of them, but did catch a Dot Net Rocks podcast interview with the creator (http://thesoundof.net/shows/...). Sounds like a great tool for new developers.
-
Learn Docker, in Docker. Dockerception
https://www.katacoda.com/learn -
Relate to this so much but with Dota 2
-
Follow follow follow following the yellow brick road.... of failure
-
I'm in the process of trying to roll out a custom VM image on Azure. Holy fuck. The documentation is confusing, all over the place and missing the most important steps.
Actual Azure Doc quote:
"To do this you will need to setup a reverse proxy moon connection with extra flump.
Now you've done that...."
Wait what, how was I supposed to do the made up thing? -
Suave
-
Redis Cluster is awesome. After using SQL databases for years, just recently started playing with a persistent Redis store in my free time. I'm blown away by the performance
-
Missed a trick there. Should've been GoodBoyK9
-
What did this post have to do with "dev things" ;)