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Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed. |
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#51 | ||
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Asheville, NC
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ICQ: 258-202-811 | Email: eric{at}bestxxxporn.com |
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#52 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Posts: 13,827
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Let's reverse tracks... I just went to PayScale.com and put in PHP Developer, in my city, 10 years exp, no college as many aren't college educated and only dev in php - and are American. The salary range is $36k-$78k, with no education and with a Master in Science added, the average is $90k. I'm sure in areas such as LA/NYC, etc the range is higher but those for sure don't represent the rest of America.
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#53 | |
I AM WEB 2.0
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 28,682
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![]() WTF does a master in science have to do with programming? i cant believe you are arguing a quality php programmer is not worth 100k/year. it is insane. you are wrong. |
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#54 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Asheville, NC
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I agree that NATS is an excellent choice for a program launcher... I completely understand the cost savings up front (if doing a lease) and not having to staff a developer or two up front is definitely a huge savings... However, I'm talking about taking it to the next level. If you truly want to excel passed your competition you can't do that by offering the same tools to your affiliates... it would be like offering non unique content... Sure you can make good money off of non exclusive content and do pretty well but if you really want to set yourself apart, you're going to need to start shooting some custom stuff. Same thing goes with affiliate tools and the front end of your site... Obviously there are the basics everyone needs to support (and most of the 3rd party solutions cover close to or all of them) but there is a world of opportunity out there for those who provide more than the basics... There's a big keyword out there in the development crowd and that's "RESTful API". Enabling authorized affiliates or even users access to public information that can be manipulated by developers to fit whatever model they'd like is where it's at. The reason being; you can make custom tools all fucking day long but you are limited to what your company can produce. If you open up the raw data you have an entire world looking to develop new ways to display and use your data to promote you. You are no longer limited to what you can produce... Like borked stated; IF your custom solution is architect'ed and implemented correctly it's easy to maintain; especially if it's OO, follows the MVC design pattern, and generally follows best practices. Third party billing libs do NOT update often and even when they do they inevitably leave legacy versions still working.
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ICQ: 258-202-811 | Email: eric{at}bestxxxporn.com |
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#55 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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You're not just arguing with me, you're arguing with 100,000 business that returned the results.... why am I wrong?
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#56 |
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Asheville, NC
Posts: 2,277
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Who knows, it could have been abbreviated for... Computer Science
Either way I'd say it's a safe bet for someone with a degree in computer science to use better standards and command a better programming knowledge than a random PHP developer with no degree... I say a safe bet because it's odds I would bet on. That's not the end all be all though as I know a LOT of guys without degrees that know far more than those with degrees... The real testament is whether a developer pursues knowledge outside of what is required of him in his position. The experienced developers who never stop reading, learning, and experimenting with new languages and development patterns are the ones who should command six figure salaries; regardless of primary language. They are the ones that bring new ideas, the cleanest code, and the highest drive for success to the table ![]() I tend to categorize developers who just "perform" at work as "producers" and there is certainly a place for them. I know a couple of really good PHP devs that simply aren't motivated to extend their knowledge outside of what is presented to them at work and while I wouldn't pay those guys a six figure salary I WOULD hire them as they tend to be "project finishers" more than "project starters". They most likely won't bring innovative solutions to the table for challenging problems but they can weigh in, and they will be the ones most likely to implement the solution derived by the heavy hitters.
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#57 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Reduce that to nats at $150-$600 a month and it has no way of catching up. I have no idea what TMM charges today for NATS, but if it's $20k that's still cheaper than paying staff month after month to maintain affiliate software, correctly. You could go with nats, higher an advanced programmer and a full-time person to manage your nats and save $25,000 a month. You must have multi-coders on your own software, and all must know the backend equally.. if your main guy quits, you would be screwed otherwise. If he's sick or the wrong group sick, you're boned. When a normal project ends, nobody has to learn it over again. NATS has advantages... Processors change all the time, for sure when you have a group of them to deal with. They require someone to continually monitor them for post issues, failures, and other various problems and changes - most of which you are never notified about and must discover yourself.
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#58 |
Porn Meister
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 16,443
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Dont make me push you onto the stack. The consequences will never be the same.
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43-922-863 Shut up and play your guitar. ![]() |
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#59 | |
Totally Borked
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 6,284
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shame you can't rep!
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And how much time did it take to add that? bof, whole of 1 day... just add in a new presenter, whether it be rss/xml/json/php to output the data and voila. The developed member areas actually use the same services to populate the members area - how can it be any easier? No premade affiliate software, no premade member area software - all handled via the one main program with the different layers added on top for affiliates and member areas. ![]()
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![]() For coding work - hit me up on andy // borkedcoder // com (consider figuring out the email as test #1) All models are wrong, but some are useful. George E.P. Box. p202 |
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#60 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Thing is... you can find those amazing, bad ass, off the hook guys for far less than $100k a year, then reward them in many ways as they grow with you. Same work, same quality, same skills, same loyalty - half the money and twice the potential for income growth, thus more reward.
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#61 | |
I AM WEB 2.0
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 28,682
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I dont want to get off topic. But the salary of a programmer does indeed go with the general view of this thread is all i am saying. it is not credentials it is not long job titles. it is people who are willing to work, do not want handouts and dont expect to be paid for doing nothing. alot of people feel it is their given right to be paid to be alive. and that they should not be working. then you have people who think by just showing up to work they should be paid. i dont have time to deal with bullshit anymore. you put up or shut up these days. put up the cash and get someone solid longterm who can always be there. or shut up and keep building small sites and taking risks on programmers who think they know. when a company makes millions what is 100k? it is an investment in YOUR business to find REAL talent. "highest degree that was paid in the field". who cares what the "highest degree" is? That is the problem with corporations. they look at credentials that mean nothing when it comes down to the base of all business and that is making money. this world has become a bunch of phony job titles and opinions. if you think 100k a year invested in a longterm employee who you can trust, knows your system, is always around when you need them etc etc. you are so wrong. i stopped running lemonade stand businesses. it is time to get real this is a global economy. as you sit around and worry what other people are paying or doing some other guy who only cares about making cash is going to come in and take your market share as you sift through resumes and applications. i dont care what the market says. or what programmers say they can do. we found a guy who works hard. makes US MONEY. and thats all we care about. all you guys with your degrees and laughable. we got off our original topic but it ties in. |
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#62 | |
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Without naming names, I remember someone on here who built a very popular script they were selling and had no concept at the time of indexes for mysql as well as a lot of other inefficient code. Either way, the best asset a programmer can have is experience. I've personally programmed PHP since before it became PHP3 but I still find new ways/techniques to do things better every single day.
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#63 |
Now choke yourself!
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Join Date: Apr 2006
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It amazes me how many people want it done fast, and for no expense.. so they end up getting really shitty, inefficient code, and then balk when I quote what it will cost for both time and reimplementation.
My favorite recent sighting is an event handler - which isn't. It's a crontab that runs every minute, for a minute, SELECT *, and deciding whether or not to take action by comparing the timestamp.. with about 4 subselect queries. Dear God, talk about O(n) inefficiency.
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#64 | |
Porn Pusher
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#65 |
Do Fun Shit.
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: OC
Posts: 13,393
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![]() “I have the simplest tastes. I am always satisfied with the best.” -Oscar Wilde |
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#66 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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It's nice you found your guy...it's cool he gets paid as much as he does, good job for him. This is spot on with the topic though, php coders thinking they're real programmers, thus worth more... When the rest of the market is telling you otherwise. That doesn't mean he isn't worth it to you, whatever you feel he is worth it, makes him worth it. But to think you 'have' to pay that much to get the dedication, skilled, person.. is crazy talk.
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#67 | |
I AM WEB 2.0
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thats the point im saying is $100k isnt really "paying that much". i agree with some of your points, but the range is indeed hugely debatable. but the range itself ie money always tells the true story. through his development, through him basically being a fresh mind, through us telling him he will have long term job security, in us telling him he will be paid well if he puts forth effort, it builds a longterm employee. saving 20k-30k and taking risks is not worth it when you are trying to reach an enterprise scale. especially if you are like me and like to keep a tight knit crew of people. and expect people to be sleeping, breathing and eating the project. it is not debatable really. i know how to build and run sites. i know what hours have to be put in and the advancement of each and every section. and 100k is extremely low. |
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#68 |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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Oh for sure they are minimal... a few good coders working with you for a few years, can really add up. Then again, a dedicated team like that can produce the results to cover themselves time and time again as well. Not to discount the headaches they can create, but a solid team is just great to have either way.
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#69 | |
Too lazy to set a custom title
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If he's a head guy, programmer, ect - just because he's working with php doesn't mean anything. He would probably still find what most people create in php to be, funny - not code or actual programming, more like shit I create, kinda like riding on training wheels with no bike to support them. It really has little to do with pay... your guy isn't just some php coder pretending to be a programmer.
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#70 | |
I AM WEB 2.0
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