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"Getting Real" is a book by 37Signals, describing their ideas on how to develop successful web applications. If you've tried applying these to your own work, how was your experience?

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You should elaborate your question. What are the key ideas from this "Getting Real" you are talking about? Perhaps a link to additional information, if such exists. You will probably get many downvotes with this formulation of the question, I'm afraid – Henrik Paul May 6 at 6:13
I assume that you are referring to gettingreal.37signals.com/toc.php – Liran Orevi May 6 at 6:20
Please ask this in the form of a question that can have an answer. – bignose May 6 at 6:52
@bignose: Do you really want to get into whether or not this question can have an answer? Of course it can have an answer. Possible answers include "yes," "no," and "Yes, here's how..." – JoshJordan May 6 at 7:31

3 Answers

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The Don't do Dead Documents section will be not be feasible in any company required to follow Sarbanes-Oxley requirements, so you will probably not find Getting Real done 100% in public companies in the US whose business is not selling software.

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Never mind sabox ... Anything that requires auditing (that includes beanbag recipts) – Aiden Bell Jun 7 at 2:45
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I had a flick through. 90% of it seems like common sense, the other 10 is just hippy waffle.

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I agree with Aiden. But I did stop reading when I saw this:

* Less features
* Less options/preferences
* Less people and corporate structure
* Less meetings and abstractions
* Less promises

I know we nerdy types are supposed to be less eloquent than some, but reading this is excruciating. (fewer vs less)

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