Time: 37:24 | 5/16/2011 | Download MP3
Summary
Jason and David answer questions posted by readers at Signal vs. Noise. How did David became a partner at 37signals? What happened with the affiliate program? What is David’s take on methodologies like Agile or Waterfall? How do you move beyond a lack of motivation? Will David ever “retire” from Rails development? How did Jason advise Groupon? How do they prepare for public speaking? Do they play the stock market? How do they deliver criticism/praise? What advice do they have for a young programmer? When was the first time they realized they wanted to do their own thing?
More episodes
Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or RSS. Related links and previous episodes available at 37signals.com/podcast.
Mo
on 17 May 11David,
i have a question about the reliability of the Rails development process. I’m concerned with the incompatibilities each new version brings to the apps people have. Isn’t it a waste of time, money and talent to rewrite half a app to match a new Rails version instead of investing this time (thus money) to work on features and and a better user experience? Do I have now to go to .NET or some other sh**t, to get to use my code for years and not only, if the next “merb guy” thinks it is good to kill half my code and half the gems i use. because he like per example :remote => true better than form_for_remote?
mriegger
on 17 May 11Nice to hear the 37 podcast again.
DHH
on 17 May 11Mo, you don’t have to upgrade. You can keep using the same version of Rails that you started your app on. For years. We have a few apps that we didn’t upgrade for years.
Mo
on 18 May 11David,
thanks for the quick answer. But will using an old rails version not be a security risk? Are there still updates coming after 2.3.11 if there surface security problems one day?
It would be great, if you could do a Podcast or Blog Post about how your Strategy for your Apps looks like about the new Rails version. After all, Basecamp is probably one of the biggest Rails Apps out there and the “mother” of Rails. Perhaps also other people would be interested in the business strategy side of Rails.
Keep on the good work!
Greets vom Germany
Mo
Michael
on 18 May 11DHH: ”...shit.”
pause
ML: ”...and that about wraps it up…”
Matt
on 18 May 11Thanks guys, enjoyed that. Not related but I was thinking the other day about how you guys get customers. An example:
My friend emailed me a podcast you did last year. I started checking the blog occasionally. I bought rework a little later on and got a lot from it. I lent rework to my brother in law. My brother in laws friend was looking for project management software so my brother in law signed him up. 37 signals got a new customer.
Ronnie Swafford
on 18 May 11David,
I love what you said about if you are a programmer right now and you’re not working you’re not doing it right.
Jason and David,
How do I set up a tour of the new office the next time I’m in Chicago?
Thanks for everything you do and taking the time to contribute.
Anonymous Coward
on 19 May 11@37signals
I wonder how frustrated you get repeating the same 2-3 “lessons” in every talk/article/blog-post/etc
This discussion is closed.