Cool infographic illuminating some differences between Web Designers and Web Developers.
Source : SixRevisions
Cool infographic illuminating some differences between Web Designers and Web Developers.
Source : SixRevisions
Google may be helping us to find content faster and better. But Google is definitely changing the way we learn, think, organize and work.
Internet is a medium based on interruption — and it’s changing the way people read and process information. We’ve come to associate the acquisition of wisdom with deep reading and solitary concentration, and there’s not much of that to be found online.
– Nicholas Carr
( Read/Listen to NPR Interview with Nicholas Carr here Or Download MP3 )
You can read the first article that voiced the concern and later grew to a book called “The Shallows” here: “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”.
The Productivity Paradox
Little experiment that is worth trying, if you haven’t yet : Try blocking access to Internet for your Software development team and see how it would impact the overall productivity and quality of the team.
Listen to this wonderful conversation between Scott Hanselman, Martin Fowler and David Heinemeier Hansson happened back in 2007 before we ever heard of ASP.NET MVC. Transcript here.
Scott sits down with Martin Fowler of Thoughtworks and David Heinemeier Hansson of 37 signals and talks about beauty, making developers happen, the death (or life) of HTML, the future of Microsoft, and asks if we should care about Rich Internet Applications. DHH is the creator of the Ruby on Rails framework, and Martin Fowler is the Chief Scientist at ThoughtWorks, well-known systems architect and Extreme Programming expert.
So delighted to see such a bold and open discussion between passionate developers with completely different backgrounds and ideas.
Some how, this podcast explains a lots of things that were introduced in ASP.NET after 2007. Not suggesting that this has anything to do with that, but probably things must have been already moving in that direction, part of that led to an open discussion like this.
It is totally surprising to see no comments on this podcast. But this is one of the best of conversations out there.