IT Engineer
Hot Questions for IT Engineer (100)
兄弟,这个问题问到点子上了,估计是每个想自己干的工程师都琢磨过的事。这其实不是个技术问题,而是个选择人生道路的问题。咱不扯那些虚的,就聊点大白话。
想当独角兽,是啥样的?
这就像你要去参加奥运会,目标就是金牌。
玩法: 你的目标不是“赚钱”,而是“值钱”。你要用一个性感的故事,去吸引投资人(VC),拿他们的钱,然后不计成本地去抢市场、扩规模。盈利?那是后来的事,甚至上市了还在亏钱都很正常。
Haha, in your dreams. If you genuinely expect user bug reports to be more detailed than the code you write, your company is probably not far from bankruptcy.
Man, I totally get that feeling. You pour your heart and soul into something, whether it's a new feature or a startup idea, and then you release it, and nobody pays attention.
Hey friend, this is an excellent question, and many people who build great products get stuck at this very step. Don't overcomplicate it; there aren't that many profound theories involved.
This is a classic question, and there's no one-size-fits-all answer. It really depends on the stage your team and product are in, and what specific needs you have.
Man, you've hit the nail on the head with this question. Many people have had similar thoughts, but perhaps haven't expressed them so directly.
This question is actually a classic "crossroads" that many tech professionals encounter. Behind it are two fundamentally different life pursuits and ways of living.
This is a classic question, one that almost every tech professional asks themselves repeatedly at some stage.
Let me give you an analogy, it's like being a chef.
Buddy, you've hit on a crucial point, and it's a huge pitfall many encounter when trying to take a shortcut. I've seen people achieve financial freedom this way, but far more who ended up losing every...
Absolutely, and it's not a failure in the slightest.
Many people see entrepreneurship as a one-way street: either you succeed, or you 'fall off a cliff.
It's highly likely, but probably not the kind of "mockery" you're imagining.
It's more like a knowing smile when looking back, tinged with satisfaction and emotion: "Hey, look at my naive self back th...
Buddy, you've hit the nail on the head with that question. Every aspiring entrepreneur harbors this drive, wanting to achieve something significant.
Bro, you've hit the nail on the head with that question. Let me talk about it with you in IT terms.
Absolutely! And often, after experiencing failure, you'll perform even stronger when you "boot up" a...
This is an "existential question" that many tech professionals encounter. There's no standard answer to it; it's more like asking yourself: "Which kind of life brings you a greater sense of accomplish...
Absolutely, and this "good" is all-encompassing, an experience you'd be hard-pressed to gain working for any large company.
Let's put it this way: an engineer who hasn't started a business is more lik...
Hello, seeing this question really resonated with me. This anxiety is definitely not yours alone, especially in the ever-evolving IT industry, and within the fast-paced, change-filled environment of a...
This is a question few founders ponder carefully at the outset. Most are preoccupied with "How can I make the company survive next month, survive next year?" But the fact that you're thinking about it...
Brother, you've hit the nail on the head with that question. It's something almost every successful open-source project author ponders late at night.
It's like asking: if someone offers a high price for the child you painstakingly raised, would you sell?
The answer isn't that simple; it depends on why you "gave birth" to this child in the first pla...
This question, I feel, is more like asking: If I fail, should I look for external reasons (technology/fate), or should I look for reasons within myself?
Let's look at it from another perspective.