Agreed. I personally work well in an open office. Half way through the article, or really it was just citing other peoples research with no other analysis, I got mad.
It just comes back to -- if you want to prove a point there will be data out there to help you justify it. This article is trying to pretend to be objective, but really is just citing a slew of studies that, presumably, had really small sample sizes. /rant
There is no one answer. IMO an ideal office would have both options.
It's my first start up job. This is great advice. Gonna continue working hard, have a talk with them, and start shopping, but this time for not a supporting role.
I love to learn. Looking to join a company that moves quickly, and will challenge me every single day. I am in love with solving problems, so send them my way!
IMHO The interesting part of this story is NOT the 'level of wrongness' in police abuse. It's the policing of internet reviews!
On the surface this is a trivial story, but in reality, this is totally bananas! A local cop policing the internet through means of coercion? Sounds sufficiently interesting to me!
Seriously. I almost stopped reading after this bit...
'specially for infrastructure accounts (if your company uses SSH, chances are you have one Unix Login that all your admins/employees share). Which makes non-repudiation harder.'
Chances are???? What credible sys admin would ever do something like that...?
The only thing I really have to say is beware of carousels... I didn't even notice you had carousels until reaching the bottom of your 'how it works' page.
The first comment on that page sort of made me face palm... but then it got me thinking.
"Simplicity of usage should always win over simplicity of coding. The purpose of a product is to solve the end user's pain, no one should give a dime about the engineer's problem. IMHO that was the genius of Steve Jobs, he could take any pre-exiting product and increase its complexity by 50x while simplifying its usage by 10x."
I am relatively new to coding, and really, I want to know what do you guys think about this? Does this really scale? Does simplifying the front end often compromise the backend?