David and Jacob talk about why Bootstrap was created, building open-source software, the web development scene in the early 2000's and how to learn quickly.
Show Notes
Talking Points:
- Creating Open Source Software
- Why Bootstrap was created
- The development scene in the early 2000s
- What you should know to learn quickly
Quotable Quotes:
- (Why bootstrap was created) "I just wanted to create a toolkit internally to make it so that my peers on my team could create these tools in a beautiful way." - JT
- "I don't have a traditional computer science background. I studied literature in school. When I moved into the industry, I felt like I had a ton to learn, obviously not writing code, except for some basic HTML and CSS." - JT
- "Getting a job at a startup as a designer, then being frustrated no one could build my designs, learning CSS, JavaScript and really leaning on open source libraries like jQuery...I just got so much from that." - - JT
- "For every project like that (Bootstrap), I wrote a hundred thousand other things, or I had a hundred dumb conversations with friends where we paired on something over a beer and nothing really came of it." - JT
- "I don't even know what the quote is. It's something like hard work beats talent when talent is lazy or some #!&$, but basically just outwork everyone." - JT
- "A lot of the ways that I think bootstrap is so special is that it taught so many people how to code, more than a style guide that helps you with that." - JT
- "You have to work past the insecurity of failing to some extent because learning is hard and software is hard." - JT
Notes:
Jacob's Twitter
Jacob's Blog
What is Junior to Senior with David Guttman?
A weekly show for ambitious devs who want to take their career to the next level.