Just like to check whether anyone has tried RentACoder. I intend to farm
out a small job that must use C#, WinForms, ADO.Net for around US$400, but
don't know whether RentACoder is reliable. Any views anyone?
BTW, I am not from United States but from a small country on the other side
of the globe.
--
<%= Clinton Gallagher
A/E/C Consulting, Web Design, e-Commerce Software Development
Wauwatosa, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin USA
NET csgallagher@ REMOVETHISTEXT metromilwaukee.com
URL http://www.metromilwaukee.com/clintongallagher/
"Skc" <anon...@yahoo.com.sg> wrote in message
news:#j6Gc8fQ...@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
I've participated there but never bought any work there. I think by and
large you are relatively safe but there are a lot of things that can go
wrong in this type of environment (anyone where you dont' know the people,
know people that have worked with them) even if eveyrone acts in good faith.
The biggest problem I've heard from this and all farming out of work
(whether domestic or abroad) is that you get exaclty what the specs
indicate, no more and no less. I know 3 people off of the top of my head
that farmed out work and then commented "The did exactly what the spec said
but nothing more , nothing less. You'd think they'd know that this doesn't
make sense and would have changed it..."
If the people do exactly what's in your spec, it's hard to blame them or
fault them. If they do what you tell them and you meant what you wrote,
they did a 'great' job. If they second guess you, even when it seems
'obvious' that its what you don't want or 'would never want', and they are
wrong, they stand to anger you, miss the deadline, have to do some rework
etc. If they are right, they get nothing extra so you can't blame the
contractor for this stuff. Now, if they didn't meet the spec it's another
story.
so the key is communication! And communicating throughout.. not just at the
end after its done.
Although I don't really want to discuss it here, I may well end up bidding
on your project and if you'd like, you can contact me at bill At Devbuzz.com
(@devbuzz.com) and I'd be glad to speak with you more about this. If you
click on this link http://www.devbuzz.com/content/development.aspx (even
though it's not PPC) just fill in the comments and I'll be glad to get back
with you.
HTH,
Bill
--
W.G. Ryan MVP Windows - Embedded
http://forums.devbuzz.com
http://www.knowdotnet.com/dataaccess.html
http://www.msmvps.com/williamryan/
"Skc" <anon...@yahoo.com.sg> wrote in message
news:%23j6Gc8f...@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
>Just like to check whether anyone has tried RentACoder. I intend to farm
>out a small job that must use C#, WinForms, ADO.Net for around US$400, but
>don't know whether RentACoder is reliable. Any views anyone?
I've never used that one, but I've used several others from
the developer's side of things. The #1 problem from both sides is
realizing that figuring out what you want is the hardest and most time
consuming part of the process. I've put many hours into talking with
customers trying to refine their spec to figure out exactly what they
want before I give them a quote, only to have them re-post their
request for a quote with all of my refinements added in. So I just
started ignoring any request which didn't have a well defined spec.
The #2 problem is programmers who realize it's more work than
what they thought and just give up and never respond to the client
again. I'd say about 20% of my projects were continuations where the
previous developer just disappeared. Of course, you don't have to pay
them, but you still lost a lot of time and effort.
Greg Miller <gmi...@gregmiller.net> wrote in message
news:0tuab0tv6v7itoef4...@4ax.com...