Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-20 Thread Redvers Davies

> IIRC, Sim City is one of Ken Livingstone's favorites.

There can't be the option to revoke all bird feed sellers permits.



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-20 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Alex Page ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 09:27:18AM +, Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
> 
> > It should be mandatory for all public servants to be adept at Sim
> > City.
> 
> IIRC, Sim City is one of Ken Livingstone's favorites.
> 

yip, and all devoted Sim City fan's sooner or later get bored
and decided to see how they can screw up their City. Oh I know
i'll make trafalgar square a pedestrian only zone 

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 03:34:31PM +, Leon Brocard wrote:
> 
> > OK. We might as well do this quickly, how about Monday 12.30 at the
> > New World restaurant in Chinatown. Everyone who is vaguely interested
> > in a Perl Consultancy of some sort is invited.
> 
> Count me in.
> 
> The New World's on Gerrard St, isn't it?

Gerrard Place.

-- 
Piers




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Paul Makepeace

From: "Greg Cope" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> No - just dont like the gun ho lets fry anyone on deathrow - and now a a
> great chestnut one of them got to be president ...

Fear not so much a leader of the Free World(tm) who is demonstrably unable to
form grammatically correct sentences in his one, only native tongue but the
fact that he's attempting to install one of the most hard-right anti-choice
judges in existence to Attorney General. Abortion is barely even legal here;
they'll be chasing womens' right to vote next...

> > No, cable installation "engineers". All cable company phone
> > support/accounts.
>
> Luckily I've not suffered from those.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/5/16186.html

Paul





Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread David Cantrell

On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 03:34:31PM +, Leon Brocard wrote:

> OK. We might as well do this quickly, how about Monday 12.30 at the
> New World restaurant in Chinatown. Everyone who is vaguely interested
> in a Perl Consultancy of some sort is invited.

Count me in.

The New World's on Gerrard St, isn't it?

-- 
David Cantrell | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/

   Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Alex Page

On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 09:27:18AM +, Dave Hodgkinson wrote:

> It should be mandatory for all public servants to be adept at Sim
> City.

IIRC, Sim City is one of Ken Livingstone's favorites.

Alex



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Natalie Ford

At 14:55 19/01/01, Neil Ford wrote:
> >Dave Hodgkinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >Mmmm... so, when are we going to have a meeting about all this?
>Well seeing as I will be amongst the great unwashed from next week,
>anytime soon would be good.

Me too!




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Natalie Ford

At 15:49 19/01/01, Dave Cross wrote:
>I'd love to come along, but probably wouldn't have time to get there
>and back during lunch. Can we do it one evening?

An evening would be better for me, too...

Natalie




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

Leon Brocard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Dave Hodgkinson sent the following bits through the ether:
> 
> > Sounds like a table at the New World one lunchtime...
> 
> OK. We might as well do this quickly, how about Monday 12.30 at the
> New World restaurant in Chinatown. Everyone who is vaguely
> interested in a Perl Consultancy of some sort is invited. People
> with business sense needed too, though: offices, computers and
> bandwidth don't come cheap.

Put me down for that. Might bring Gill as well. 

-- 
Piers




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Leon Brocard

Dave Cross sent the following bits through the ether:

> I'd love to come along, but probably wouldn't have time to get there
> and back during lunch. Can we do it one evening?

OK, Penderel's Oak 6.30pm for those who can't make it to lunch. I'll
go to both and take notes.

Leon
-- 
Leon Brocard.http://www.astray.com/
yapc::Europehttp://yapc.org/Europe/

... All new improved Brocard, now with Template Toolkit!



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Cross

At Fri, 19 Jan 2001 15:34:31 +, Leon Brocard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dave Hodgkinson sent the following bits through the ether:
> 
> > Sounds like a table at the New World one lunchtime...
> 
> OK. We might as well do this quickly, how about Monday 12.30 at the
> New World restaurant in Chinatown. Everyone who is vaguely interested
> in a Perl Consultancy of some sort is invited. People with business
> sense needed too, though: offices, computers and bandwidth don't come
> cheap.

I'd love to come along, but probably wouldn't have time to get there
and back during lunch. Can we do it one evening?

Dave...



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Leon Brocard

Dave Hodgkinson sent the following bits through the ether:

> Sounds like a table at the New World one lunchtime...

OK. We might as well do this quickly, how about Monday 12.30 at the
New World restaurant in Chinatown. Everyone who is vaguely interested
in a Perl Consultancy of some sort is invited. People with business
sense needed too, though: offices, computers and bandwidth don't come
cheap.

Leon
-- 
Leon Brocard.http://www.astray.com/
yapc::Europehttp://yapc.org/Europe/

... All new improved Brocard, now with Template Toolkit!



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

Neil Ford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> >Dave Hodgkinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> >>  Piers Cawley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >>
> >>  > Big monitors on workstations are *not* rewards. They are essential
> >>  > tools for the job. Anything smaller than 19" is rapidly approaching
> >>  > too cramped for serious work. TFT monitors on workstations are
> >>  > rewards...
> >>
> >>  19" on the first port of the G400, a TFT on the second?
> >
> >Mmmm... so, when are we going to have a meeting about all this?
> 
> Well seeing as I will be amongst the great unwashed from next week, 
> anytime soon would be good.

Sounds like a table at the New World one lunchtime...


-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

Dave Hodgkinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Piers Cawley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > Big monitors on workstations are *not* rewards. They are essential
> > tools for the job. Anything smaller than 19" is rapidly approaching
> > too cramped for serious work. TFT monitors on workstations are
> > rewards...
> 
> 19" on the first port of the G400, a TFT on the second?

Mmmm... so, when are we going to have a meeting about all this?




RE: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Andrew Bowman

> From: Greg McCarroll [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> write a suggestions document of where the project management and
> management functions are going wrong
>
> if they ignore it leave

Do you know anywhere this has happened Greg? ;-)




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Michael Stevens ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 10:32:16AM +, Michael Stevens wrote:
> > On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 09:42:11AM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > > > yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
> > > > client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
> > > > just charge em bigtime!
> > > nope this is where your pimp/MD should of tied up the contract watertight,
> > > so if they change their mind the deadline changes
> > What do you do where this is not the case, other than think about finding
> > a new job?
> 
> Although, thinking about it, I can also note that the "find a new job" approach
> seems to work...

write a suggestions document of where the project management and
management functions are going wrong

if they ignore it leave

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

Piers Cawley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Big monitors on workstations are *not* rewards. They are essential
> tools for the job. Anything smaller than 19" is rapidly approaching
> too cramped for serious work. TFT monitors on workstations are
> rewards...

19" on the first port of the G400, a TFT on the second?

Dave // on his latptop even though there's a 19" right next to it...

-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Michael Stevens

On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 10:32:16AM +, Michael Stevens wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 09:42:11AM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > > yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
> > > client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
> > > just charge em bigtime!
> > nope this is where your pimp/MD should of tied up the contract watertight,
> > so if they change their mind the deadline changes
> What do you do where this is not the case, other than think about finding
> a new job?

Although, thinking about it, I can also note that the "find a new job" approach
seems to work...

Michael



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

Dave Hodgkinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Greg Cope <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > IMHO developers should be given the environment that is what makes them
> > confotable, an IBM research center was on the telly the other day that
> > had a big open plan style area, as well as individaul offices, as well
> > as Lego.  The environment was totally focused to nuturing developers so
> > that they create (hopefully good, bug-free(TM) code).
> 
> Sounds like extreme programming to me...

I *so* want to try this. I'm getting fed up of being sole programmer
on projects.

-- 
Piers




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:51:18PM +, Greg Cope wrote:
> 
> > What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
> > mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ... 
> 
> Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
> idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
> code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
> it as you did writing it in the first place.  And in any case, if you
> *need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
> management.  Oh yeah, we'd need to have project management skillz in the
> group too.  No need for a whole project mangler though to start with.
> 
> As for toys - if they're not the *useful* sort of toy then they should be
> rewards*, as opposed to being there right from the start.  That way they
> become a motivational tool.  Although to be honest, I wouldn't be motivated
> by lots of the things numija companies think are motivating like PS2s.
> I'd be more for getting a bigger monitor on my workstation, or a punchbag
> for the office.  Or some clean jerrycans :-)

Big monitors on workstations are *not* rewards. They are essential
tools for the job. Anything smaller than 19" is rapidly approaching
too cramped for serious work. TFT monitors on workstations are
rewards...

> * - eg, when the first big fat cheque arrives from a happy client,
> get a PS 2. When we hit milestones *on time* in the next
> project, get another game for it.

Modulo the PS2 not necessarily being a motivator, that sounds like a
plan. 

-- 
Piers




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Piers Cawley

David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:42:55PM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > * Leo Lapworth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > > People (no particular order):
> > > 
> > >  = Pimp   =   =  Accountant  =
> > >  = BOFH   =   = Security Guru =
> > >  = Perl Gurus' =  = Perl Trainee Gurus  =
> > 
> > i'd add an MD/CEO who would initially do a lot of the
> > pimping, the accountant could initially also be outsourced.
> > the BOFH and Security Guru could be rolled into one.
> > i'd also hire non-Perl programmers so that you didn't
> > just have one leg to the stool
> 
> Seems reasonable. Also think about Oracle and Sybase wizards
> (combined with the BOFH and/or $language Guru roles initially) and
> an NT person. Actually, *all* the tech people should be sufficiently
> multi-skilled to be able to do two things reasonably well - that way
> it's easier to pimp them, they can command more dosh, and they (and
> the company) are protected if one of their skills goes badly out of
> fashion.

And one of the goals of gurus within the consultancy should be to help
train up other folks who want to pick up that skill. Preferably in an
environment where something real is being acheived.

> > > Money:
> > >   Base salary and split proffit according to which category your in.
> > 
> > founders split say 50% of the equity, 25% reserved for latecomers
> > and 25% pencilled for VC types
> 
> Just wait for the arguing about how that 50% gets split!

That 50% gets split equally among the founding partners.

> > > Open source / clients:
> > >   Create projects for open source community (sell to clients
> > >   with support). When not assigned to a specific money 
> > >   making project or client create next project to OS and 
> > >   make money from.
> > 
> > agreed!
> 
> Yup. Plan to make money from support contracts on this open source
> stuff, and also from being a 'preferred implementor' using it.

Indeed. Ooh, this sounds very tempting.

-- 
Piers




Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Michael Stevens

On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 09:42:11AM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
> > client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
> > just charge em bigtime!
> nope this is where your pimp/MD should of tied up the contract watertight,
> so if they change their mind the deadline changes

What do you do where this is not the case, other than think about finding
a new job?

Michael



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Greg Cope

Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
> 
> Greg Cope <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
> > >
> > > "Paul Makepeace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > >
> > > > The US has much more to worry about than the UK, like high water tables,
> > > > vicious weather and earthquakes. The smart money goes on hosting in Texas
> > > > (San Antonio) not California though -- relatively
> > > > earthquake/tornado/storm/etc-free!
> > >
> > > You're talking rackspace.com, I take it? ;-)
> >
> > Are they not in New York ?
> 
> No. San Antonio if traceroutes are to be believed.

I'll shut up then ;-0

> 
> >
> > Dellhost are in texas - which I destest due to its attitude to capital
> > P.
> 
> You not been following the Confederacy conspiracy?
> 

No - just dont like the gun ho lets fry anyone on deathrow - and now a a
great chestnut one of them got to be president ...

> > What like americans ?
> >
> > (present american company excluded)
> 
> No, cable installation "engineers". All cable company phone
> support/accounts.
> 

Luckily I've not suffered from those.

Greg

> --
> Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
> Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
>   Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
>   -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> And the UK doesn't have high water tables (in some places and not in others,
> just like anywhere else) or vicious weather (again, in some places not in
> others, just like anywhere else).  But it strikes me as being absurd that I
> hear EVERY YEAR of the power going out for large areas of major cities in
> .us, something which just doesn't happen in Europe.

It should be mandatory for all public servants to be adept at Sim
City.


-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

Greg Cope <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> IMHO developers should be given the environment that is what makes them
> confotable, an IBM research center was on the telly the other day that
> had a big open plan style area, as well as individaul offices, as well
> as Lego.  The environment was totally focused to nuturing developers so
> that they create (hopefully good, bug-free(TM) code).

Sounds like extreme programming to me...

-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

Greg Cope <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
> > 
> > "Paul Makepeace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > 
> > > The US has much more to worry about than the UK, like high water tables,
> > > vicious weather and earthquakes. The smart money goes on hosting in Texas
> > > (San Antonio) not California though -- relatively
> > > earthquake/tornado/storm/etc-free!
> > 
> > You're talking rackspace.com, I take it? ;-)
> 
> Are they not in New York ?

No. San Antonio if traceroutes are to be believed.

> 
> Dellhost are in texas - which I destest due to its attitude to capital
> P.

You not been following the Confederacy conspiracy?

> What like americans ?
> 
> (present american company excluded)

No, cable installation "engineers". All cable company phone
support/accounts.

-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Robin Szemeti ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Jan 2001, you wrote:
> 
> > Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
> > idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
> > code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
> > it as you did writing it in the first place.  
> 
> yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
> client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
> just charge em bigtime!
> 

nope this is where your pimp/MD should of tied up the contract watertight,
so if they change their mind the deadline changes

> and 2 because I was just so tied up in it and it was going so well that I
> didn;t want to stop .. so I didn't ... the code from the latter is
> untouched to date and some of the better code I've written.

thats fine, but if you have such commitment to work surely you could grab a hotel
that the business is friendly with and put it on expenses

> play.  One of the reason I hated a 9 to 5 job was people asking me to do
> hard things before lunchtime and having to quit doing hard things because
> it was 5:00. 

this is fine for internal work, but wrong for our earlier discussion
about consultancy

> > And in any case, if you
> > *need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
> > management.  

agreed

> no matter how well planned the project I have yet to find a client who
> hasn;t kept some small but deadly surprise as a secret to throw in just
> when they know its getting close. Some of these bombshells are smaller
> than others .. but they always seem to be there, waiting ... no problem
> .. just expect em an be prepared .. and charge em BigTime :)

how do you think IBM deal with this? if the client adds some crap, they
change the deadlines/cost

greg 
-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-19 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Greg Cope ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> 
> Thats were a few people have gone wrong lately then ;-)
> 

yup

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg Cope

Robin Szemeti wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 18 Jan 2001, you wrote:
> 
> > Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
> > idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
> > code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
> > it as you did writing it in the first place.
> 
> yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
> client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
> just charge em bigtime!
> 
> Personally I have done (thinks) about 4 this year ... two of them due to
> sudden arrival of previously unannounced deadline .. (result: badly
> implemented crap code, stress, huge costs and a re write a week later)
> and 2 because I was just so tied up in it and it was going so well that I
> didn;t want to stop .. so I didn't ... the code from the latter is
> untouched to date and some of the better code I've written.
> 
> There is nothing wrong per-se with working on into the night ... the lack
> of interruption and no pesky phones ringing can be the ideal time to
> engross yourself in the trickiest and most complex of problems ... but
> trying to hack something together whilst knackered is a recipie for
> disaster. My motto: if it feels good, do it.  Code when you feel at your
> most productive, if you don;t think your minds on the job bale out and
> play.  One of the reason I hated a 9 to 5 job was people asking me to do
> hard things before lunchtime and having to quit doing hard things because
> it was 5:00.
> 
> > And in any case, if you
> > *need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
> > management.
> 
> no matter how well planned the project I have yet to find a client who
> hasn;t kept some small but deadly surprise as a secret to throw in just
> when they know its getting close. Some of these bombshells are smaller
> than others .. but they always seem to be there, waiting ... no problem
> .. just expect em an be prepared .. and charge em BigTime :)

Have you done much stuff under a DSDM style - ie. qrite a quick protype
and then iterate on that ? (massive internal rewrites are allowed under
this as it tries to stress the interface / functionality not the
internal implentation)

Greg

> 
> I would be VERY interrested in working on a project managed by the XP
> method. It sounds to good to be true, (and I;ve done enough project
> managment to know that it probably is too good to be true) but I shure
> would like to give it a go.
> 
> --
> Robin Szemeti
> 
> The box said "requires windows 95 or better"
> So I installed Linux!



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Robin Szemeti

On Thu, 18 Jan 2001, you wrote:

> Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
> idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
> code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
> it as you did writing it in the first place.  

yes and no. If you need to do an allnighter and its unavoidable (due to a
client suddenly changing ther mind) then theres no problem doing it ..
just charge em bigtime!

Personally I have done (thinks) about 4 this year ... two of them due to
sudden arrival of previously unannounced deadline .. (result: badly
implemented crap code, stress, huge costs and a re write a week later) 
and 2 because I was just so tied up in it and it was going so well that I
didn;t want to stop .. so I didn't ... the code from the latter is
untouched to date and some of the better code I've written.

There is nothing wrong per-se with working on into the night ... the lack
of interruption and no pesky phones ringing can be the ideal time to
engross yourself in the trickiest and most complex of problems ... but
trying to hack something together whilst knackered is a recipie for
disaster. My motto: if it feels good, do it.  Code when you feel at your
most productive, if you don;t think your minds on the job bale out and
play.  One of the reason I hated a 9 to 5 job was people asking me to do
hard things before lunchtime and having to quit doing hard things because
it was 5:00. 

> And in any case, if you
> *need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
> management.  

no matter how well planned the project I have yet to find a client who
hasn;t kept some small but deadly surprise as a secret to throw in just
when they know its getting close. Some of these bombshells are smaller
than others .. but they always seem to be there, waiting ... no problem
.. just expect em an be prepared .. and charge em BigTime :)

I would be VERY interrested in working on a project managed by the XP
method. It sounds to good to be true, (and I;ve done enough project
managment to know that it probably is too good to be true) but I shure
would like to give it a go.

-- 
Robin Szemeti

The box said "requires windows 95 or better"
So I installed Linux!



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg Cope

Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
> 
> "Paul Makepeace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > The US has much more to worry about than the UK, like high water tables,
> > vicious weather and earthquakes. The smart money goes on hosting in Texas
> > (San Antonio) not California though -- relatively
> > earthquake/tornado/storm/etc-free!
> 
> You're talking rackspace.com, I take it? ;-)

Are they not in New York ?

Dellhost are in texas - which I destest due to its attitude to capital
P.

> 
> >
> > On the upside, the US doesn't have BT "engineers" to deal with...
> 
> Trust me, they have much, much worse...

What like americans ?

(present american company excluded)

Greg


> 
> --
> Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
> Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
>   Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
>   -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg Cope

David Cantrell wrote:
> 
> On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:51:18PM +, Greg Cope wrote:
> 
> > What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
> > mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ...
> 
> Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
> idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
> code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
> it as you did writing it in the first place.  And in any case, if you
> *need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
> management.  Oh yeah, we'd need to have project management skillz in the
> group too.  No need for a whole project mangler though to start with.

I was thinking of my mid afternoon kip, before going down stairs to the
pub!  I was only joking ;-)

Totaly agree with the all nighter bit above.

> 
> As for toys - if they're not the *useful* sort of toy then they should be
> rewards*, as opposed to being there right from the start.  That way they
> become a motivational tool.  Although to be honest, I wouldn't be motivated
> by lots of the things numija companies think are motivating like PS2s.
> I'd be more for getting a bigger monitor on my workstation, or a punchbag
> for the office.  Or some clean jerrycans :-)
> 
> * - eg, when the first big fat cheque arrives from a happy client, get
> a PS 2.  When we hit milestones *on time* in the next project, get another
> game for it.

Ah, now motivational thoery is totally different - a PS2 is not that
motivational for me, and I would imaging alot of people.  What _is_
probably motivational about a PS2 equiped office is the environment that
allows you to play with a PS2.

IMHO developers should be given the environment that is what makes them
confotable, an IBM research center was on the telly the other day that
had a big open plan style area, as well as individaul offices, as well
as Lego.  The environment was totally focused to nuturing developers so
that they create (hopefully good, bug-free(TM) code).

What people seem to be missing is that you need clients - once you've
got some doing the code is the easy bit.

Greg



> 
> --
> David Cantrell | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/
> 
>Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Dave Hodgkinson

"Paul Makepeace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> The US has much more to worry about than the UK, like high water tables,
> vicious weather and earthquakes. The smart money goes on hosting in Texas
> (San Antonio) not California though -- relatively
> earthquake/tornado/storm/etc-free!

You're talking rackspace.com, I take it? ;-)

> 
> On the upside, the US doesn't have BT "engineers" to deal with...

Trust me, they have much, much worse...

-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Apache, mod_perl, MySQL, Sybase hired gun for, well, hire
  -



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread David Cantrell

On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:51:18PM +, Greg Cope wrote:

> What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
> mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ... 

Having something to crash on when pulling an all-nighter is, IMO, a bad
idea as it encourages pulling all-nighters.  You just don't write good
code at 2 in the morning, and end up spending just as much time untangling
it as you did writing it in the first place.  And in any case, if you
*need* to work all night, there's something wrong with the project
management.  Oh yeah, we'd need to have project management skillz in the
group too.  No need for a whole project mangler though to start with.

As for toys - if they're not the *useful* sort of toy then they should be
rewards*, as opposed to being there right from the start.  That way they
become a motivational tool.  Although to be honest, I wouldn't be motivated
by lots of the things numija companies think are motivating like PS2s.
I'd be more for getting a bigger monitor on my workstation, or a punchbag
for the office.  Or some clean jerrycans :-)

* - eg, when the first big fat cheque arrives from a happy client, get
a PS 2.  When we hit milestones *on time* in the next project, get another
game for it.

-- 
David Cantrell | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/

   Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread David Cantrell

On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:42:55PM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> * Leo Lapworth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > People (no particular order):
> > 
> >  = Pimp   =   =  Accountant  =
> >  = BOFH   =   = Security Guru =
> >  = Perl Gurus' =  = Perl Trainee Gurus  =
> 
> i'd add an MD/CEO who would initially do a lot of the
> pimping, the accountant could initially also be outsourced.
> the BOFH and Security Guru could be rolled into one.
> i'd also hire non-Perl programmers so that you didn't
> just have one leg to the stool

Seems reasonable.  Also think about Oracle and Sybase wizards (combined
with the BOFH and/or $language Guru roles initially) and an NT person.
Actually, *all* the tech people should be sufficiently multi-skilled to
be able to do two things reasonably well - that way it's easier to pimp
them, they can command more dosh, and they (and the company) are protected
if one of their skills goes badly out of fashion.

> > Money:
> > Base salary and split proffit according to which category your in.
> 
> founders split say 50% of the equity, 25% reserved for latecomers
> and 25% pencilled for VC types

Just wait for the arguing about how that 50% gets split!

> > Open source / clients:
> > Create projects for open source community (sell to clients
> > with support). When not assigned to a specific money 
> > making project or client create next project to OS and 
> > make money from.
> 
> agreed!

Yup.  Plan to make money from support contracts on this open source stuff,
and also from being a 'preferred implementor' using it.

-- 
David Cantrell | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david/

   Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg Cope

Greg McCarroll wrote:
> 
> * Greg Cope ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > Leo Lapworth wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > Location
> > > A big pub in central London.
> > > Top floors: development
> > > Ground floor Pub: with comedy stand and terminal points for laptops
> > > Basement: disco / conference room, big flat screens etc..
> >
> > What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
> > mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ...
> >
> 
> nope, they are rewards, rewards are for sucess ;-)

Thats were a few people have gone wrong lately then ;-)

> 
> --
> Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



RE: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread James Royan

Neil> So who's any good at business plans... (I have a book but)

I know a few things about setting up and running SMEs.  Happy to sit down
for an hour or so one evening with someone if it would be of assistance.

Unfortunately, I'm far too tied up with current venture to get much more
involved than this.

Regs,

J.
.

Message Central plc Suite K307 Tower Bridge Business Complex 100 Clements
Road London SE16 4DG
Web: www.msgc.com Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: +44 20 7394 9511 Fax: +44 20
7231 8201
If you receive this email by mistake, please destroy your copy, having
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are strongly advised to check this email for viruses before downloading or
opening any attachments. Opinions expressed in this email are those of the
author and not of Message Central plc.


 -Original Message-
From:   Neil Ford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent:   18 January 2001 04:33
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:RE:Consultancy company was  [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red
Hat worm discovered

[snip the first bit... all great]
>
>Location
>   A big pub in central London.
>   Top floors: development
>   Ground floor Pub: with comedy stand and terminal points for laptops

Purleese wireless is the only way to go. :-)

>   Basement: disco / conference room, big flat screens etc..
>
>I've got a contact who says he can get hold of a million or
>so VC if this was an actually business plan, but then you
>have to pay them back with interest and stuff.
>
>Ok, it's all a pipedream.. but what a nice one.
>
So who's any good at business plans... (I have a book but)

Neil.
-- 
Neil C. Ford
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.binky.ourshack.org



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Greg Cope ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Leo Lapworth wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > Location
> > A big pub in central London.
> > Top floors: development
> > Ground floor Pub: with comedy stand and terminal points for laptops
> > Basement: disco / conference room, big flat screens etc..
> 
> What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
> mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ... 
> 

nope, they are rewards, rewards are for sucess ;-)

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Tony Bowden ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:42:55PM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > > have to pay them back with interest and stuff.
> > equity surely? ;-)
> 
> Yes. But if you're successful the "interest" rate is huge ;)
> 
> But if you're not, well, they lose the money and not you.
> 
> FWIW It's much easier to negotiate with VCs if you're already
> well established and actually have revenue and commitments and
> stuff
> 

well, this is all getting a bit close to the grain for me, if anyone
wants to discuss the possibilities of a non-perl specialised arena
consultancy feel free to to email me off list, however there may be
nasty NDA's involved


-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg Cope

Leo Lapworth wrote:
> 
> 
> Location
> A big pub in central London.
> Top floors: development
> Ground floor Pub: with comedy stand and terminal points for laptops
> Basement: disco / conference room, big flat screens etc..

What about a bed / kip room and of course a play room - and I do not
mean some 70's swingers thing - a P2, etc ... 

Greg



> I've got a contact who says he can get hold of a million or
> so VC if this was an actually business plan, but then you
> have to pay them back with interest and stuff.
> 
> Ok, it's all a pipedream.. but what a nice one.
> 
> Leo



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Tony Bowden

On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 04:42:55PM +, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> > have to pay them back with interest and stuff.
> equity surely? ;-)

Yes. But if you're successful the "interest" rate is huge ;)

But if you're not, well, they lose the money and not you.

FWIW It's much easier to negotiate with VCs if you're already
well established and actually have revenue and commitments and
stuff

Tony
-- 
-
 Tony Bowden | Belfast, NI | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | www.tmtm.com | www.blackstar.co.uk
 my Uncle Sol had a skunk farm but the skunks caught cold
-



Re: Consultancy company was [Job] BOFH wanted was: Re: Red Hat worm discovered

2001-01-18 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Leo Lapworth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> People (no particular order):
> 
>  ==   
>  = Pimp   =   =  Accountant  =
>  ==   
> 
>  ==   =
>  = BOFH   =   = Security Guru =
>  ==   =
> 
>  ===  ===
>  = Perl Gurus' =  = Perl Trainee Gurus  =
>  ===  ===

i'd add an MD/CEO who would initially do a lot of the
pimping, the accountant could initially also be outsourced.
the BOFH and Security Guru could be rolled into one.
i'd also hire non-Perl programmers so that you didn't
just have one leg to the stool

> Money:
>   Base salary and split proffit according to which category your in.

founders split say 50% of the equity, 25% reserved for latecomers
and 25% pencilled for VC types

contractors could expect to take a 50 to 75% drop in salary

> Open source / clients:
>   Create projects for open source community (sell to clients
>   with support). When not assigned to a specific money 
>   making project or client create next project to OS and 
>   make money from.

agreed!

>   Create client base with support contracts.

also create partner arrangements, i can think of at least 3
big companies i maybe could arrange partnerships with, that in some
cases would double the daily rate for consultancy

> Location
 ;-)

> have to pay them back with interest and stuff.
equity surely? ;-)


-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net