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by joshfenmore
4465 days ago
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Thanks for the reply. Luckily I am not gonna start from scratch scratch since I have a little experience with front-end and I am "familiar" so to speak, with the programming "environment" but I never really dived into it (a very stupid decision). So for: 1. Some people told me I should start with C and go on from there, while others told me to start with C# or Python. Am I wasting time with C? I've seen some articles here where some guys went straight RoR and managed to get an app running in months. I feel like I would skip important stuff if I do that. How important is the order in which you learn these? I think this is the hardest thing for me. To choose which one goes first on the backend side I mean. 2. So it shouldn't be a problem to go for an old mac right? I don't have 2K right now for a maxed MBP. 3. Well I figured I can do it on a 10-15h a day marathon for 4-6 months. So I can't do a YC demo for example?Something to show to investors or enough to express an idea? 4. I believe I got this covered although everyone is pretty busy these days:) |
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And you can get a macbook air for around $900-$1300. That's all you really need, nothing fancy.
And if your app is meant to be mobile, you can get deep into mobile web development and even create a very native experience. That's what forecast.io did.
Also as you probably know, in startups it's more about proving a model than having a fancy piece of software. Think about what features are going to attract customers asap. Iteration is easier when you have customers giving you feedback.
IMO RoR is the fastest way to make those vital iterations. Once you're sitting on your $5 million in venture cash you can worry about architecture and scalability.