readwriteweb.com— Paul Buchheit built the first version of Gmail in one day. Then he built the first prototype of Google's contextual advertising service Adsense, in one day as well. ...
May 1, 2009View in Crawl 4
real life coding:code in 1 day.Weeks of testing.weeks of approval.weeks of rollout.i lied, sometimes you cant code in one day because the 'customer' changes their mind. oh, and the meetingsanyway, my point is coding something in one day is not a big deal
It's also incredibly easy to see that every single one of this person's submissions have an average of between 50-60 diggs, with some occasional outliers of stories that got dugg into the triple digits. <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/users/FI5HERMAN/history/submissions">http://digg.com/users/FI5HERMAN/history/submission ...</a>This leads me to believe that it's just the good ol boys network and this story got enough diggs from other people to make popular. This is why top submitters (aka folks who are in the good ol boys network and who digg each others stories) control the content seen on digg. It's not as democratic as you might think, though I know the digg team's working on making it more fair.
smazmsMay 2, 2009
"Things I post on Facebook are not allowed to leave Facebook"well thats going to change, according to: <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/tech_news/Facebook_To_Let_Others_Play_In_Its_Stream">http://digg.com/tech_news/Facebook_To_Let_Others_P ...</a>
fucterMay 2, 2009
real life coding:code in 1 day.Weeks of testing.weeks of approval.weeks of rollout.i lied, sometimes you cant code in one day because the 'customer' changes their mind. oh, and the meetingsanyway, my point is coding something in one day is not a big deal
geeknurseMay 2, 2009
Teleconference FTW! (Tele-Arena also)
mizzikeMay 4, 2009
It's also incredibly easy to see that every single one of this person's submissions have an average of between 50-60 diggs, with some occasional outliers of stories that got dugg into the triple digits. <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/users/FI5HERMAN/history/submissions">http://digg.com/users/FI5HERMAN/history/submission ...</a>This leads me to believe that it's just the good ol boys network and this story got enough diggs from other people to make popular. This is why top submitters (aka folks who are in the good ol boys network and who digg each others stories) control the content seen on digg. It's not as democratic as you might think, though I know the digg team's working on making it more fair.
echowavesMay 20, 2009
check out <a class="user" href="http://echowaves.com">http://echowaves.com</a> ? a crossover of forum, group chat and social network
legariaMay 30, 2009
well, they just did (may 28) <a class="user" href="http://wave.google.com">http://wave.google.com</a>yippie!