- header image way too big (subjective)
- features page doesn't seem to list prices
- If you aren’t their [should be there] you won’t get what you deserve
- "Few of who applies to a job have a personal website, it’s your chance to impress the employers, GET Noticed"
- https://per.ws/about-us/ Start the sentence with an uppercase letter
- https://imgur.com/KLdw2dp Header cut off on smaller screens
- https://imgur.com/NSoxx2f Spelling of availability
Am very very thankful to your remarks, and we will consider it all.
we hope to hear from you if you have any other comments.
we will send you a 100% discountto your mail.
The company I'm currently working with purchased 30+ mobile devices.
I'm getting more and more convinced that this is the only way to guarantee that your site/app will work perfectly on all of these phones and tablets.
Some emulators can be a pita to install (iOS emulator only works on OS X, windows phone emulator needs Visual Studio on Windows 8 on hardware that supports HyperV) and they're still not 100% consistent with what will happen on the real device.
I've done lots of projects as a freelance consultant in Zend Framework, CodeIgniter, CakePhp and tend to be up to speed in a new project in almost no time at all. Am finishing my first Yii project right now.
Early in my career I also ran my own psd to html conversion service, so I know a thing or two about front-end as well.
The Fourth Dimension generated $17,600 during 2012, the year I launched it. The majority of that was driven by reviews the app got.
In 2013 it made $3900, or $325/month, and seems to be holding at that rate of income. The only work I did on the app in 2013 was about two days making it work correctly on iOS 7.
It's not huge money, but it's far more than my expectations, which were on the order of $500 total over the lifetime of the app.
Thanks for the insight Omar. I moved to Hungary, so not really a third world country. I've only been living here for ~3 months so my estimate might be of by a bit.
1) I don't really need a car since public transport here is ok. However I do own one. I cut my car costs to a minimum by changing from a sports car to a 10 year old Ford Focus.
2) I have an accountant that costs about 300 euros per month right now, is one of the bigger costs that I have right now. Am gonna try do take on most marketing tasks myself.
3) I never accounted for inflation so far. This might be something that I have to look into a bit more.
Thanks for the feedback. Hungary might not be a top developed country, but there is a huge divide between a developed and a chaotic country.
1- Public transport is really huge. A car is a very expensive thing (especially a new one).
2- Car prices are two times higher than in developed countries. This is due to importing restrictions. Old cars are crazy expensive. My car appreciate just one week after I bought it by 8%.
3- This one is huge. In an unstable economy, it's not abnormal to see a sudden raise of 300% in some consumption good.
I do also assume/think that Hungary has an acceptable health care, too. Public health care here is another NO.NO. here. (ps the country is Tunisia).
otherwise, what are rents there like? It'd cost around $1,000/month to rent something respectable here.
Yes, I would never describe Hungary as a chaotic country.
I see how all of those things would drastically alter your needed income, especially the cost of a car and inflation.
I'm certainly not well informed on the cost of rent here, but I guess that 300-400€ per month should get you a more than decent place to live and work.
I checked the blog on your profile and seems like you're working on some cool things and doing well for yourself, congrats on overcoming the odds like that.
I live in Uruguay (South America) and I agree with you.
A U$ 20 rate would enable me to live decently, but U$ 60/hr would enable me to live extremely well (living in the best neighbourhood, private school for children, etc..)
I currently make U$ 8 an hour (because I work 240 hours a month as a salaried employee) and I find it tough to make ends meet (even though my girlfriend works as well, she makes more than I do but only works 100 hours a month)
Just a note to HN'ers: GFischer is a good guy. He's been tremendously helpful with introductions and information about the business climate in South America in the past. +1 for him, hope to meet him in person and repay his kindness someday.
Thank you, it was nothing, I'm glad you found it useful. I've been helped a lot by people on HN as well, I'm happy to return the favor whenever I can :) .
If you ever visit Uruguay, message me and I'll be glad to meet you :)