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Yes, this. I'd add that you end up losing a probably (as he/she's been promoted) skilled engineer as well. Promotion via management is what forces people who might not have the "people-skills" to accept management jobs because they want to be valued.

This reminds me of an article from Rands in Repose:

  As I wrote about in Being Geek, the Curse of the Silicon Valley is that great engineers are often promoted to leadership for their hard work. While many succeed in this role, an equal part fails because the skills required to lead are vastly different than the ones required to be an engineer. The Curse is that we’re often placing our most valuable engineers in a role where they’re predisposed to fail.

  Think of it like this: there’s a large population of immensely talented engineers that should not be leaders. There is no amount of training that would make up for the talent we’d extinguish by teaching them how to write annual reviews.

  But everyone wants to grow.

  Unfortunately, in many companies the only perceived growth path is via management.
http://randsinrepose.com/archives/dna/

I also believe that management should be about facilitating your team's work, rather than endorsing your team's responsibility.


Same here.


Didn't bother at all here either. Great article.


Hi,

I tried : Lyon, France as Home (2017/05/02 as start date) Tokyo Narita, Japan (7 days) Osaka Kansai International, Japan (14 days) Noumea Tontouta, New Caledonia (14 days)

This told me that "Something went wrong! No valid route could be found for these destinations, please try another destination"

I added Paris, France with "0 days" as it's a typical stop when flying international from Lyon.

This gave me a result, but the first stop is Noumea and it says "$false - BOOK". The other destinations have a real price.

My route is weird though, does not seem very optimized (I fly around the world once, from France to New Caledonia and back, before going to Japan, which is on the way), but I guess that's another problem!


Also received a $false - BOOK.

Screenshot: http://imgur.com/a/SGSQu


Thank you for that! I'll debug it now to see what's gone wrong, very strange.


I had this as well. The home airport was London Gatwick, and the other entries were Bangkok, Khon Kaen, and Singapore.

It seemed to me that it couldn't find a route from London to Khon Kaen (Khon Kaen isn't an international airport), but interpreted that as a zero cost flight. The route it gave me was Gatwick -> Khon Kaen -> Bangkok -> Singapore and the cost for the whole thing was a fraction of what it should have been.

The way to make that route work, by the way, is to go Gatwick -> Bangkok -> Khon Kaen -> Bangkok -> Singapore (or throw Chiang Mai or Hat Yai into the mix). You can only reach Khon Kaen by air through internal flights in Thailand.


just another, not sure if it will help. san jose international - home start, date 2017/05/02

berlin,3 days

boston, 3 days

shanghai, 3 days

http://imgur.com/dcLXmlr

I've booked marked it. Cool site.


Same here: http://imgur.com/a/0o6XV

Interestingly enough I just booked this trip two days ago directly through the airlines (Air Canada and Delta).


While not directly related to your problem with the website, consider taking the train (shinkansen) between Tokyo and Osaka. It is fast, convenient, and leaves and arrives from city center and can easily count as a "thing I did on vacation".


Yes I totally agree! (check my reply to a similar comment by anorphirith above)


you should really take the train from tyo to osa, it's an experience and probably faster than flying (since you don't have to deal with an airport)


Actually my real intent was to fly to New Caledonia, and on the way there stop by Tokyo, and on the way back Osaka (I have family to visit in these three places).

But yes you are right about the train experience in Japan! I also tried a night bus from Tokyo to Osaka once when I was a student... leave it up to the Japanese to make that a great experience as well! Recommended if you're on a tight budget.


This is now fixed!


In France we have a €19.99/mo plan with unlimited talk for domestic (land and mobile) and a huge selection of international countries (land), unlimited SMS/MMS, and 20Go of Data (yes, twenty). That plan can go down to €15.99/mo if you also go with this carrier for your home's broadband access.

That same carrier (called "Free mobile") offers a €2.00/mo plan for 2h talk, unlimited SMS/MMS and 50Mo data, which is €0/mo (free) if you're subscribed to their broadband.


And if the contract did not change, tethering is included. In addition with their ADSL offering you're allowed to host a server at home on your ADSL connection (which others did explicitly forbid when I chose Free over them a few years ago.)

EDIT: typo


I'm guessing that by "freelancer" he didn't mean "entrepreneur", meaning he did work as an "independent contractor" for 4 years for other people but this is his first startup project.


Exactly ;)


Well... from the previous HN discussion I had Squirt in my favorites bar, until I did a work presentation and realized the name could be misinterpreted! I then quickly deleted it.


My thoughts exactly. I bookmarked this as 'Speed Reading', instead.


How could it be misinterpreted?



You could always rename it!



That's likely to be an example of DDOS, but isn't at all an explanation of DDOS. It's an explanation of the difference between "the CIA website" and anything actually sensitive.


We built a co-operative web agency in France (http://www.joro.fr).

I don't know how it works in other countries, but I can give some more detailed info about the requirements in France, if anyone's interested :

- A partner can own 50% max. of the company.

- Whether you own 1% or 50%, every partner has the same voting power.

- You can have a maximum of 1/3 non-employed partners, and the combined non-employed partners cannot own a majority of shares (49% max). This assures that the "power" stays within the people that actually work in the company.

- This also means that 2/3 of the partners must be employed with a contract and a salary. This can be quite difficult when you build the company as you must, technically, start paying yourself and your partner (since you must be 2 partners minimum) on day 1.

- You need a minimum of 2 partners, but can also have as many employees as you want. This means you can technically be a co-op even if your company has 2 partners and 1000 employees.

- There are rules as to how you distribute your benefits : a maximum of 33% can be distributed as dividends to the partners, a minimum of 16% must be kept in the company for investment (reserves), and a minimum of 33% has to be distributed amongst all employees (following a calculation the employees can decide upon, like according to time worked, salaries, how long one's been in the company, or a custom calculation...). This tends to lead to high employee motivation and better ensure long-term health.

- Co-operatives have a few tax deductions that other companies don't. If you don't distribute any dividends and distribute it all to your employees + keep some for investments, and follow a certain number of other rules, you can practically be exempted of taxes on the company's benefits.

- On the other hand, you must go through a bunch of red tape to prove every year that you follow the rules of a co-operative, which costs time and a bit of money.

We built the company 2 years ago, and right now we're only 3 partner/employees so our day-to-day life is basically the same as any other similar-sized company, but we liked the philosophy, and it has actually been an interesting marketing feature.


I recommend their youtube channel (in French): http://www.youtube.com/user/Startupfood

They have some very interesting talks, in particular the KOUDETAT videos - classes about startup-related subjects, from which I'm guessing they based KOUDETAT+ - and the "Les barbares attaquent" (the barbarians attack) where they explore the current disruption of a bunch of industries.


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