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  3. A huge THANK YOU! [modified]

A huge THANK YOU! [modified]

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  • S Slacker007

    Daniel Turini wrote:

    I cried, I laughed with you guys and I felt that I should share this achievement with you all.

    Well, I have never and don't think that I will ever cry here at the CP but I know what you are saying. Congrats to you and your success. +5

    D Offline
    D Offline
    Daniel Turini
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Slacker007 wrote:

    Well, I have never and don't think that I will ever cry here at the CP but I know what you are saying.

    I'm too sensitive or emotional, I believe. I've read stories about people who lost their relatives, pets, and so on, and I can't control myself.

    I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • D Daniel Turini

      This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

      S Offline
      S Offline
      super
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      :thumbsup:

      cheers, Super ------------------------------------------ Too much of good is bad,mix some evil in it

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • D Daniel Turini

        This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

        D Offline
        D Offline
        DaveAuld
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Great demonstration of what can be achieved... I am still looking/searching/racking the brain whatever you may call it, for that big idea! Maybe one day I will get there. "This time next year............" - Del Boy Trotters become millionaires[^]

        Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn


        Latest Article: Arduino Platform - Working with Shift Registers

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • D Daniel Turini

          This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

          L Offline
          L Offline
          leppie
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Daniel Turini wrote:

          vote us here[^

          I would, if I knew what the company was called :) Congrats on your success!

          ((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x)))

          D 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • L leppie

            Daniel Turini wrote:

            vote us here[^

            I would, if I knew what the company was called :) Congrats on your success!

            ((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x)))

            D Offline
            D Offline
            Daniel Turini
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            :doh: Sorry, it's Crivo! (Crivo is a Portuguese word for a tool that Jewerly Makers uses to separate their best perls). Edited the post.

            I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

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            • D Daniel Turini

              :doh: Sorry, it's Crivo! (Crivo is a Portuguese word for a tool that Jewerly Makers uses to separate their best perls). Edited the post.

              I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

              D Offline
              D Offline
              Dalek Dave
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Daniel Turini wrote:

              (Crivo is a Portuguese word for a tool that Jewerly Makers uses to separate their best perls)

              That is a very specialised term then. I couldn't use one in the kitchen to seperate good beans from bad ones for example.

              ------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave CCC League Table Link CCC Link[^]

              D 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • D Daniel Turini

                :doh: Sorry, it's Crivo! (Crivo is a Portuguese word for a tool that Jewerly Makers uses to separate their best perls). Edited the post.

                I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

                L Offline
                L Offline
                leppie
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Daniel Turini wrote:

                Sorry, it's Crivo!

                I did find it eventually on the TC post (after several attempts, TC somehow wants me to login and gives me some silly Invalid key error 4 out of 5 times I visit the site).

                ((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x)))

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • D Daniel Turini

                  This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                  P Offline
                  P Offline
                  Pete OHanlon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  Way to go. Well done to you and the rest of Crivo. I hope that we soon hear how you've become the number 1 "Best international technology company".

                  I'm not a stalker, I just know things. Oh by the way, you're out of milk.

                  Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                  My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Onyx

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • D Daniel Turini

                    This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                    V Offline
                    V Offline
                    Vikram A Punathambekar
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    I'm happy to have heard this a few weeks back ;) still, feels good to read it again. Good for you, Daniel, congrats, and best wishes for the future!

                    Cheers, विक्रम (Have gone past my troika - 4 CCCs!) "We have already been through this, I am not going to repeat myself." - fat_boy, in a global warming thread :doh:

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                    • D Dalek Dave

                      Daniel Turini wrote:

                      (Crivo is a Portuguese word for a tool that Jewerly Makers uses to separate their best perls)

                      That is a very specialised term then. I couldn't use one in the kitchen to seperate good beans from bad ones for example.

                      ------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave CCC League Table Link CCC Link[^]

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      Daniel Turini
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Dalek Dave wrote:

                      That is a very specialised term then.

                      People often use it here in the context where you apply some rigid criteria or rule for approval. Even the "Sieve of Eratosthenes" algorithm is known as "Crivo de Eratóstenes". For a software that takes credit and risk decisions, we thought that the name could be good.

                      Dalek Dave wrote:

                      I couldn't use one in the kitchen to seperate good beans from bad ones for example.

                      Crivos comes in sets, each one with a different size. With a little time, probably you could find one that could be applied to that. Here's a picture of one: http://www.reacel.pt/catalogo/detalhes_produto.php?id=1654[^]

                      I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

                      D 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • D Daniel Turini

                        Dalek Dave wrote:

                        That is a very specialised term then.

                        People often use it here in the context where you apply some rigid criteria or rule for approval. Even the "Sieve of Eratosthenes" algorithm is known as "Crivo de Eratóstenes". For a software that takes credit and risk decisions, we thought that the name could be good.

                        Dalek Dave wrote:

                        I couldn't use one in the kitchen to seperate good beans from bad ones for example.

                        Crivos comes in sets, each one with a different size. With a little time, probably you could find one that could be applied to that. Here's a picture of one: http://www.reacel.pt/catalogo/detalhes_produto.php?id=1654[^]

                        I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!

                        D Offline
                        D Offline
                        Dalek Dave
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        Thanks for the pic. I understand now. I can see how it works too, it is a hi-tech colandar!

                        ------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave CCC League Table Link CCC Link[^]

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • D Daniel Turini

                          This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                          C Offline
                          C Offline
                          Chris Maunder
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          That's incredible, Daniel. You've been with us almost from the start and I remember you talking about your company and your work. I'm going to pass this along to the team. We're not the slickest, nor the loudest, nor the best looking, but we love what we do, and love that every day we help developers (like us, like you, like everyone here) in their every day work, and it's fantastic to think we've made a difference. Thanks for sharing that Daniel, and congratulations. You've made my day!

                          cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                          N realJSOPR D T 4 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • D Daniel Turini

                            This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                            T Offline
                            T Offline
                            thatraja
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            Congrats dude. Your 2 great articles in my bookmarks. :) :thumbsup:

                            thatraja


                            **My Tip/Tricks
                            My Dad had a Heart Attack on this day so don't...
                            **

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • D Daniel Turini

                              This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                              R Offline
                              R Offline
                              Rage
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              Hi Daniel, this is really great news. I can remember you mostly from 2003+, at which I were myself much more active on the programming forums. Congrats !

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • D Daniel Turini

                                This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                                A Offline
                                A Offline
                                Ankur m
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                Cheers to you, your idea and your effort in making that idea a success. I know it's an amazing feeling to be there. :thumbsup: I am part of this wonderful community since a few years now and feel blessed to have found it. Cheers again to the wonderful people here. And let me have a beer on your success today! :Beer: Cheers!

                                ..Go Green..

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • D Daniel Turini

                                  This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  Rage
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  By the way, no crivo web site in English ? Really ?

                                  G D 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • D Daniel Turini

                                    This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

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                                    Keith Barrow
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    Wow, good for you. It's heartening to know that there are such stories around. Here's to your continued success :beer: (No Champagne Icon :-))

                                    Sort of a cross between Lawrence of Arabia and Dilbert.[^]
                                    -Or-
                                    A Dead ringer for Kate Winslett[^]

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                                    0
                                    • D Daniel Turini

                                      This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

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                                      Nithin Sundar
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      Thank You for sharing your wonderful experience with us. I wish you Good Luck for the future. :)

                                      My Blog What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.

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                                      0
                                      • C Chris Maunder

                                        That's incredible, Daniel. You've been with us almost from the start and I remember you talking about your company and your work. I'm going to pass this along to the team. We're not the slickest, nor the loudest, nor the best looking, but we love what we do, and love that every day we help developers (like us, like you, like everyone here) in their every day work, and it's fantastic to think we've made a difference. Thanks for sharing that Daniel, and congratulations. You've made my day!

                                        cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

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                                        Nithin Sundar
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        Chris Maunder wrote:

                                        We're not the slickest, nor the loudest, nor the best looking, but we love what we do, and love that every day we help developers (like us, like you, like everyone here) in their every day work, and it's fantastic to think we've made a difference.

                                        :thumbsup:

                                        My Blog What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • D Daniel Turini

                                          This post is meant as a huge “Thank You” to all the CP community, and specially to Chris, which built it. I believe that many of you will find the story I'll tell here interesting, although a bit long. I’ve been away from posting on the Lounge for the past 5 years, so some of you may not know me at all, but I still read it almost daily. In the 2002 and 2003 the Lounge almost became an addiction to me, and then suddenly, I needed to dedicate more time to my company. The reason I don't have so much free time anymore is my company: as you may remember (or not), I started a company in 2000, and things were pretty slow until 2004. “Pretty Slow” means no VC believed in the company and the sales were very slow, and, in the process I lost my economies, my house, my car, everything I built during my whole life just because I and my 2 partners believed a lot in that idea. In 2004 I decided to stop programming (only do it now for fun), and became the salesman of my company. It was a hard change, I needed to change my life a lot, but I managed to make the company grow a lot (we double our sales each year on the past 6 years, a 2^6 growth!). As such, we are receiving a lot of attention recently and this year we were interviewed by Sarah Lacy on TechCrunch![^] We have now over 100 employees, and also the 120 biggest companies in Brazil are our customers. Our sales in 2010 were around US$20 million. In the past few years, we were considered the 5th fastest growing company in Brazil by a major Brazilian business magazine, Exame. Still, we intend to keep doubling the company in the next few years. And today, I just noticed that we are one of the 5 finalists on “The Crunchies” as one of the 5 “Best International” technology companies in 2010. We are competing with companies I admire as Soluto! You can see us here[^] and vote us here (Crivo)[^]; if you feel compelled to it (this is not a “vote me!” post, please). All of this could not be built if it weren’t for CP. In this Lounge and in the technical articles I learned a lot about programming, and this was fundamental when building the software that powers my company.

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                                          swjam
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          More stories like this please! =)

                                          ---------------------------------------------------------- Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

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