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Hire a Developer, Watch Them Work In Real-Time

New submitter alphamore writes: Live Coding, which is like Twitch for developers, has added a service that allows viewers to actually hire someone they've been watching. The aptly named 'Hire a streamer' service works exactly as it sounds. Via the profile of a developer you've seen coding on the site, a 'hire me' button lets you request their time. The service is completely opt-in for developers, so not everyone will be for-hire. When you click on the 'hire me' button, you'll be met with a list of disciplines that developer is familiar with, and their hourly rate. Once you've booked a session, the money is held in escrow (transactions happen via the site) until the developer has completed the work.

4 of 100 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds stupid by Psychotria · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I'm coding I might spend 30 minutes thinking about something or scribbling on paper and then spend maybe 2 minutes actually typing the code. Those are just fictitious numbers of course, but really both of those numbers could be much higher or much lower depending on the problem.

    How does this service account for thinking time?

    1. Re:Sounds stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Those aren't developer jobs, they're programmer jobs. You know, the kind of jobs that are often hidden behind "implementation left as an exercise to the reader". The kind of problem that you have to think about does not concern programmers. Their job is to apply the tools to translate a specification into a program.

      And fuck these people for giving employers the idea that "computer people" should be watched and paid piece-rate like a factory worker. To the employers: If you pay be LOC and hours worked on a problem, then that's what you get: Lots of code that takes a long time to write.

    2. Re:Sounds stupid by Fnord666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I could spend 8 hours writing crappy code, iterating over it, changing it, tweaking it, etc, etc, throughout a typical work day. But, and I'm pretty confident in this, I can (and do) instead spend maybe 25-75% of my day (or more) thinking about things -- designing things -- before implementing them and end up with a better result.

      But in the former case at least you would be "Agile".

      --
      'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
  2. Coder all day long? I wish. by vmfedor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Okay, sure, you can watch a coder in real time, but most of the time people don't need a coder, they need a developer. A developer has project management and other "soft" skills. Coding is the hammer and the nails... you have to know what you're creating before you start to build it. Most of the time you would see the developer typing up emails, creating diagrams and flow charts, writing executive summaries, managing their agile tracker, consulting on a conference call, researching documentation, etc.

    I'm so tired of people thinking that software engineering is about coding. It isn't about coding, it's about developing real-world technical solutions of which coding is a relatively small part.

    --

    I like my women how I like my sugar.. granulated.