[5:39 pm: Futz Hackfest.]
When logging into Bubble.io, I got the following on Chrome:
Your browser was unable to load some necessary resources, contact your IT network administrator and ask them to allow access to
dhtiece9044ep.cloudfront.net
dd7tel2830j4w.cloudfront.net/
d1muf25xaso8hp.cloudfront.net
Must be something with my browser. Lately, some pages haven't been loading completely. After refreshing the page, I was able to log in.
The game plan is to learn the basics before diving into building The Pathwooded Word Count Tracker. That's the standard approach.
Could there be a faster way? I could dive right in and poke around, hoping to decipher everything just in time.
That's what many capable programming founders seem to have done. They didn't go through formal software engineering classes. They launched right into building stuff and only looked things up when they hit a roadblock. This wastes less time because you don't learn unnecessary concepts, and don't learn things only to forget them when you finally need them.
“The only way to learn programming is to make every possible mistake. All I can do is show you how to make mistakes faster.”—Rudy Rucker
Speed, quick iterations, move fast and break things without creating technical debt that slows progress in the long term... that's the agile spirit, so let's go!
[5:39 pm: Futz Hackfest.]
When logging into Bubble.io, I got the following on Chrome:
Your browser was unable to load some necessary resources, contact your IT network administrator and ask them to allow access to
dhtiece9044ep.cloudfront.net
dd7tel2830j4w.cloudfront.net/
d1muf25xaso8hp.cloudfront.net
Must be something with my browser. Lately, some pages haven't been loading completely. After refreshing the page, I was able to log in.
The game plan is to learn the basics before diving into building The Pathwooded Word Count Tracker. That's the standard approach.
Could there be a faster way? I could dive right in and poke around, hoping to decipher everything just in time.
That's what many capable programming founders seem to have done. They didn't go through formal software engineering classes. They launched right into building stuff and only looked things up when they hit a roadblock. This wastes less time because you don't learn unnecessary concepts, and don't learn things only to forget them when you finally need them.
“The only way to learn programming is to make every possible mistake. All I can do is show you how to make mistakes faster.”—Rudy Rucker
Speed, quick iterations, move fast and break things without creating technical debt that slows progress in the long term... that's the agile spirit, so let's go!