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Re:[ic] interchange question
[take my answer with a smile, will you ?]
Wade Schilling said :
> Hello all-
> I have read much of this list, and for somebody
> quite new to programming, it's like a foreign
> language. Can anybody recommend a good place to start
> (i.e. book, website) so that I can understand from a
> basic perspective how the interchange program is
> written? The tutorial seems to be written more for a
> programmer trying to learn interchange than for a web
> seller trying to learn programming. I am not a
> programmer, but out of force of necessity I do want to
> learn interchange front to back. My previous
> developers' incompitence has led me to further believe
> that if you want something done right, do it yourself.
> Can anybody out there have a kind heart and help me to
> get this thing started? I'm not quite ready to pay
> $180 per hour for tech support when I have all this
> time to do it myself!
> Thanks for looking and your resposes are welcomed!
> -Wade
It all depends on where you are, where you want to go and
why you feel compelled to go the way at all. 8-)
Here is aunt Ruth's five pennies worth of psychologic analysis:
1. a. If you own a business, know how to use the browser and google, and
want to sell goods online (having a nice brick and mortar business
running already), think the web is neat and want to get a
catalog/shop running
and
b. You don't know - anything about Unix System Admin
anything about Perl, C or shell programming
anything about SQL and databases
and
c. You ar not sure how much time and money you should invest
in your endeavour
and
d. You really didn't want to become a programmer, but would just like
to have your own brick and mortar business running a nice online
site or fell in love with the idea of selling a bit of web space
then
this is "Aunt Ruth Quick Fix" advice:
Warning: Don't mix up your desire to become a programmer with the
desire to jump on the bandwagon, learn a bit of this and that and
hope to become a "web seller". You are either someone, who wants to
become a professional programmer/web-site architect, who wants to
earn the money those other guys are asking you to pay. Or you want
simply your own business on the net and are thinking about doing it
yourself, because you don't have enough money, but enough time to
try it out on your own. Which one is it ?
If it's more the latter, then all depends on how much you already
know. Expect to teach yourself pretty much what Mike Heins
mentioned (but use updated books) and expect to get to pull
your hair once in a while and start to inhale the docs instead
of reading them ten times. If you think that the tutorial is
geared towards programmer you definitely should expect a long
journey to be ahead of you, because even I think they are not.
Now, if it's the first and you want to become a real programmer,
DON'T start to look at IC until you have mastered
a. Linux/Unix System Admin (if you want to run your own machines
and not pay a consultant to take over the responsibility that you
have a secure, mission-critical-proof system running on a level of
98.5 % up-time level and be able to recover your system after a
hacking attack).
b. Shell programming
c. Basics of C programming
d. Perl
e. CGI, Apache, SQL
f. html, Javascript, CSS, XHTML, XML
Good Luck ! There are some people on the list, who went from zero to
home-grown happy IC (MiniVend) users to run their own sites, but who
are not up to the task to be let loose as consultants. There are a lot
of people who had the necessary system admin and programming skills
before they started looking at IC and I think, they keep looking quite
intensely at the source code and the docs. Expect to do the same.
Now, of course, you should never take Aunt Ruth's advice seriously.
She is female and has, therefore, typical characteristics which don't
match with the brave, male techo-macho, risk-taking attitudes. She
hates "trial and error" and looks for some logic approaches (gosh
how come the males have so much time ), she hates "constant
changes" (can't you guys stay put for a while and enjoy a working thingy
even if it isn't the latest, greatest, coolest whatever), she hates
"taking risks" (aren't we the ones who always clean up the mess ?)
Well, I should stop my Sunday morning rants
IC is a great program, I know it, I just don't know why. 8-)
Birgitt
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