Experience with RentACoder.com ???
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Shhhh! You'll wake Christian! :~
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
From a developer standpoint, I placed many bids on the site, and never received one job from it. Most of the bids seem to be from college kids that will do the work for (next to) nothing. From a client standpoint, I guess it's a good idea if you want cheap help. But, I don't have any experience in this side, so I can't give you any insight on the quality.
-
[hides in corner and waits for the 'All Clear' siren.]
____________________________________________________ If at first you don't succeed, skydiving might not be for you.
leckey wrote:
[hides in corner and waits for the 'All Clear' siren.]
:laugh::laugh::laugh: [Paul ducks behind Christmas tree]
Some people have a memory and an attention span, you should try them out one day. - Jeremy Falcon
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
;P
Cheers, Vikram.
"Life isn't fair, and the world is full of unscrupulous characters. There are things worth fighting for, killing for and dying for, but it's a really small list. Chalk it up to experience, let it go, and move on to the next positive experience in your life." - Christopher Duncan.
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Hahahahahahahahaha :doh:
Anna :rose: Linting the day away :cool: Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "If mushy peas are the food of the devil, the stotty cake is the frisbee of God"
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Ed Dixon wrote:
either positive or negative
let's see... the milder response before Christian finds this.... what positive or negative can be said about "lowest bid" work? We're not talking about lowest bid for quality, we're talking lowest bid, period. If you have dent in your car there are two ways to fix it, the slow meticulous and delicate way of trying to pop it out with either suction cups or removing the panel and pushing it in place, or drilling a hole popping a hook in, pulling it out, filling the hole and handing it back to you. The latter one is real cheap, can be done for about $25, and definately "repairs the dent" just adds extra issues. So too rentacoder, cheap quality lacking code offers keeps the costs to the "requestor" down, but so too the quality of the result. Also, similar to our contract here, there is no standard for grading the result, so even if you do quality work, you may get downgraded for any reason. We stopped doing work with one customer on our contract because he didn't believe anyone deserved more than a 75% grade. Now if you do absolutely perfect work, and can at most receive 75%, why bother? So outside of being good for the college student with no experience, and nothing to loose, it is near useless for both customers and experienced programmers.
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
-
;P
Cheers, Vikram.
"Life isn't fair, and the world is full of unscrupulous characters. There are things worth fighting for, killing for and dying for, but it's a really small list. Chalk it up to experience, let it go, and move on to the next positive experience in your life." - Christopher Duncan.
Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:
I hear Christian Graus is a big fanboy
the question is... which will get his response first? your joke or the main topic? any bets? :laugh:
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Run away. Now.
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Rentacoder has it's issues as a site, for sure. I started using it 7 months ago as my employer quit paying me, and made $1000 in 1 week coding like a madman. The way I did it was to constantly monitor the site and be one of the first bidders on any project I could do. That gave me tons of bids won (even over bottom dollar bidders from other countries and colleges). It was a nice little bit of income when I needed it.....but here is the catch, you had better plan on working your @ss off for next to nothing if you calculate it hourly because almost every project on that site is misrepresented and you will have to underbid to get it. That means a crapload of work in order to get paid. Why am I such a fan if I got burned so bad on time? Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate. THAT is the real key to rentacoder, DO NOT try to make money on the site as it's a waste of time, try to find a decent company posting up for a bid and make a very good impression and you will almost certainly get future work. For me, I don't do anything on there anymore because I am so busy with this other client that I have to continually turn down work requests from them as there is just not enough time in the day to do what they need. Sorry for the long post, but this question deserved some insight and clarification on rentacoder.
if (!interested){return false;} amclint
-
Ed Dixon wrote:
either positive or negative
let's see... the milder response before Christian finds this.... what positive or negative can be said about "lowest bid" work? We're not talking about lowest bid for quality, we're talking lowest bid, period. If you have dent in your car there are two ways to fix it, the slow meticulous and delicate way of trying to pop it out with either suction cups or removing the panel and pushing it in place, or drilling a hole popping a hook in, pulling it out, filling the hole and handing it back to you. The latter one is real cheap, can be done for about $25, and definately "repairs the dent" just adds extra issues. So too rentacoder, cheap quality lacking code offers keeps the costs to the "requestor" down, but so too the quality of the result. Also, similar to our contract here, there is no standard for grading the result, so even if you do quality work, you may get downgraded for any reason. We stopped doing work with one customer on our contract because he didn't believe anyone deserved more than a 75% grade. Now if you do absolutely perfect work, and can at most receive 75%, why bother? So outside of being good for the college student with no experience, and nothing to loose, it is near useless for both customers and experienced programmers.
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:
We're not talking about lowest bid for quality, we're talking lowest bid, period.
Hey, if it works for our government, it should work for coding too, right? ;P Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Rentacoder has it's issues as a site, for sure. I started using it 7 months ago as my employer quit paying me, and made $1000 in 1 week coding like a madman. The way I did it was to constantly monitor the site and be one of the first bidders on any project I could do. That gave me tons of bids won (even over bottom dollar bidders from other countries and colleges). It was a nice little bit of income when I needed it.....but here is the catch, you had better plan on working your @ss off for next to nothing if you calculate it hourly because almost every project on that site is misrepresented and you will have to underbid to get it. That means a crapload of work in order to get paid. Why am I such a fan if I got burned so bad on time? Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate. THAT is the real key to rentacoder, DO NOT try to make money on the site as it's a waste of time, try to find a decent company posting up for a bid and make a very good impression and you will almost certainly get future work. For me, I don't do anything on there anymore because I am so busy with this other client that I have to continually turn down work requests from them as there is just not enough time in the day to do what they need. Sorry for the long post, but this question deserved some insight and clarification on rentacoder.
if (!interested){return false;} amclint
amclint wrote:
Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate.
Which is why write articles instead of prostituting myself on RAC. ;P Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
amclint wrote:
Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate.
Which is why write articles instead of prostituting myself on RAC. ;P Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh SmithAt the time it was out of necessity...my wife would divorce me if I worked all that time for the lame prices most of those projects go for. So you write articles and get people requesting you do work, just from them seeing the articles? Very interesting if that is the case...maybe I'll start something similar ;)
if (!interested){return false;} amclint
-
Rentacoder has it's issues as a site, for sure. I started using it 7 months ago as my employer quit paying me, and made $1000 in 1 week coding like a madman. The way I did it was to constantly monitor the site and be one of the first bidders on any project I could do. That gave me tons of bids won (even over bottom dollar bidders from other countries and colleges). It was a nice little bit of income when I needed it.....but here is the catch, you had better plan on working your @ss off for next to nothing if you calculate it hourly because almost every project on that site is misrepresented and you will have to underbid to get it. That means a crapload of work in order to get paid. Why am I such a fan if I got burned so bad on time? Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate. THAT is the real key to rentacoder, DO NOT try to make money on the site as it's a waste of time, try to find a decent company posting up for a bid and make a very good impression and you will almost certainly get future work. For me, I don't do anything on there anymore because I am so busy with this other client that I have to continually turn down work requests from them as there is just not enough time in the day to do what they need. Sorry for the long post, but this question deserved some insight and clarification on rentacoder.
if (!interested){return false;} amclint
amclint wrote:
Sorry for the long post, but this question deserved some insight and clarification on rentacode
Thanks for your post, I enjoyed reading it. My own experience... I've done a few jobs through RentACoder, receiving a perfect 10 rating each time. That's put me in the top 5000 programmers and given me a "Top Coder" status. Some of the jobs I've taken have been interesting. One was writing audio processing code that enables a robot to determine which direction the sound it's "hearing" is coming from. Another was for a small synthesizer in C#, a sort of proof of concept (which the buyer has graciously given me permission to share the code here. I hope to finish a synth toolkit based on this project in C# and write some Code Project articles...) Those jobs have kind of been the exception to the rule. Several of the other jobs I've done paid very little. I took them on because I thought it would be nice to get some good ratings under my belt and then move on. I've got the good ratings now but have not been able to parlay those into higher paying RentACoder jobs. I think it's because those jobs don't exist. Each time I drop by and look at the latest jobs, I see tons of junk. Then there is that occasional job that looks interesting but there is one requirement that takes it to a whole other level of difficulty, and the max bid limit doesn't reflect that, or they literally want it for next to nothing. One thing I noticed is that a lot of these jobs do not come to fruition. In other words, either the buyer cancels because they don't get the bids they want, or the job gets cancelled automatically because the buyer has apparently forgotten they put up the job in the first place. Your advice for using RentACoder as a means of developing a client base is good. Hasn't happened to me yet, but I will try to take that approach.
-
Any have experiences with www.rentacoder.com either positive or negative? Ed
Ed, You didn't say what types of experiences you were looking for...as a buyer or as a coder, and from what country. Here is my feedback (from the point of view of Rent a Coder itself): 1) As a buyer: 13,000+ projects were started and completed last month: http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/About/ThePulseOfRentACoder.asp There's also a 93% return rate for buyers. None of this would be happening if it didn't work well for buyers. 2) For a coder: 2a) From a non U.S. country: A $100 job is a month's salary in many places of the world. Two of the top 3 countries for coders on the site (India and Romania) fall into this category. (see the above link). I have numerous emails from people in this category who not only have quit their jobs becuase of the steady work they receive from RAC, but also started their own companies. An easy way to find them is to browse the top coder list, and you can see this from their profiles. 2b) From the U.S (which is where some the people on this thread seem to be coming from): The competition from people in 2a) can be difficult. However, the U.S. is always in the top 3 countries on the site. As an example, the #1 coder on the site right now is from the U.S.: http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/AllCoderCompleteList.asp[^] Click on his profile and look at him (Tometa Software). This isn't a "college student" as someone else on this board stated he would be. And this isn't a person just looking to do a one time job on Rent a Coder and take him offsite...as someone else said is "typical" (look at his repeat business and again..remember the 93% repeat business rate). Instead, this is a developer who is also a business man...which is the "new breed" of American coder we are seeing on the site. He uses outsourcing to his advantage. He takes in projects from clients, does some of the work himself, and outsources the excess that he doesn't have the time to complete, or that he can do cheaper elsewhere. Then he pockets the difference. This way he can do more projects than he ever could do on his own, and make more money. Can a U.S. coder still find success on RAC being just a "head's down coder"? As others posted, it can be difficu
-
amclint wrote:
Because I got 2 recurring clients that continued to use me outside of the site, and at a industry standard rate.
Which is why write articles instead of prostituting myself on RAC. ;P Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh SmithMarc Clifton wrote:
Which is why write articles instead of prostituting myself on RAC.
I've not shared this experience. I have 16 articles here with an overall rating of 4.5. I've only gotten one small job out of it a couple of years ago. If writing Code Project articles can be a means of attracting clients, then I think my problem is that I've let my own personal pet interests dictate what I write about. And those interests just don't have a client base out there to attract. Maybe time to start expanding my skillset. Of course, I didn't start writing articles for this reason to begin with. I wanted to share my knowledge, and there was the coolness factor of having a good article up on Code Project. Having said that it would be nice to get an occasional email from someone saying, "Hey, saw your work on Code Project. I've got a job for you if you're interested." Instead, what I usually get are emails saying, "I'm writing a commercial application and would like to use your project as part of it. Do I have to pay you royalties??"
-
amclint wrote:
Sorry for the long post, but this question deserved some insight and clarification on rentacode
Thanks for your post, I enjoyed reading it. My own experience... I've done a few jobs through RentACoder, receiving a perfect 10 rating each time. That's put me in the top 5000 programmers and given me a "Top Coder" status. Some of the jobs I've taken have been interesting. One was writing audio processing code that enables a robot to determine which direction the sound it's "hearing" is coming from. Another was for a small synthesizer in C#, a sort of proof of concept (which the buyer has graciously given me permission to share the code here. I hope to finish a synth toolkit based on this project in C# and write some Code Project articles...) Those jobs have kind of been the exception to the rule. Several of the other jobs I've done paid very little. I took them on because I thought it would be nice to get some good ratings under my belt and then move on. I've got the good ratings now but have not been able to parlay those into higher paying RentACoder jobs. I think it's because those jobs don't exist. Each time I drop by and look at the latest jobs, I see tons of junk. Then there is that occasional job that looks interesting but there is one requirement that takes it to a whole other level of difficulty, and the max bid limit doesn't reflect that, or they literally want it for next to nothing. One thing I noticed is that a lot of these jobs do not come to fruition. In other words, either the buyer cancels because they don't get the bids they want, or the job gets cancelled automatically because the buyer has apparently forgotten they put up the job in the first place. Your advice for using RentACoder as a means of developing a client base is good. Hasn't happened to me yet, but I will try to take that approach.
Leslie Sanford wrote:
Each time I drop by and look at the latest jobs, I see tons of junk.
Just for the hell of it, I popped in there the other day and found two homework assignements among the list of projects to be bid on. :~
Jon Sagara When I grow up, I'm changing my name to Joe Kickass! My Blog | My Site | My Articles
-
At the time it was out of necessity...my wife would divorce me if I worked all that time for the lame prices most of those projects go for. So you write articles and get people requesting you do work, just from them seeing the articles? Very interesting if that is the case...maybe I'll start something similar ;)
if (!interested){return false;} amclint
amclint wrote:
So you write articles and get people requesting you do work, just from them seeing the articles?
Yes. I've had several small contracts and two large ones, one that lasted a year, the other that has lasted 2 years so far, though my involvement in the work has petered down to 0 now. I also have a collection of contacts in case I need to look for work, which I much prefer as a first approach. Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Ed, You didn't say what types of experiences you were looking for...as a buyer or as a coder, and from what country. Here is my feedback (from the point of view of Rent a Coder itself): 1) As a buyer: 13,000+ projects were started and completed last month: http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/About/ThePulseOfRentACoder.asp There's also a 93% return rate for buyers. None of this would be happening if it didn't work well for buyers. 2) For a coder: 2a) From a non U.S. country: A $100 job is a month's salary in many places of the world. Two of the top 3 countries for coders on the site (India and Romania) fall into this category. (see the above link). I have numerous emails from people in this category who not only have quit their jobs becuase of the steady work they receive from RAC, but also started their own companies. An easy way to find them is to browse the top coder list, and you can see this from their profiles. 2b) From the U.S (which is where some the people on this thread seem to be coming from): The competition from people in 2a) can be difficult. However, the U.S. is always in the top 3 countries on the site. As an example, the #1 coder on the site right now is from the U.S.: http://www.rentacoder.com/RentACoder/misc/AllCoderCompleteList.asp[^] Click on his profile and look at him (Tometa Software). This isn't a "college student" as someone else on this board stated he would be. And this isn't a person just looking to do a one time job on Rent a Coder and take him offsite...as someone else said is "typical" (look at his repeat business and again..remember the 93% repeat business rate). Instead, this is a developer who is also a business man...which is the "new breed" of American coder we are seeing on the site. He uses outsourcing to his advantage. He takes in projects from clients, does some of the work himself, and outsources the excess that he doesn't have the time to complete, or that he can do cheaper elsewhere. Then he pockets the difference. This way he can do more projects than he ever could do on his own, and make more money. Can a U.S. coder still find success on RAC being just a "head's down coder"? As others posted, it can be difficu
My interest in RAC is from a coders viewpoint. Having spent a few days poking around in RAC, it seems like a few things are basically true: 1. Many jobs are not real. Buyers post for different reasons other than actually buying coder service. 2. Most jobs are targeted towards very low bids, that do not encourage quality. 3. Many jobs are very small and really do amount to homework for actually buyers. 4. Competition with non-US folks makes it hard for experienced US folks to really profit from RAC results. 5. Many buyers post jobs having no clue as to whether they are hard or even possible. It’s clear there is real work on RAC, but separating the wheat from the chaff seems to be a tricky task. Ed