Designers who are not front-end programmers in 2016 are not good product managers

I am a science and engineering product manager with a big brain, a low laugh, and intermittent "faulty". Because of my wide range of interests, in 2016, I took on some of the work that UI designers and front-end programmers should do.

Programmer Encouragement Teacher - The Story of Product Managers Some product managers think
they can change the world, but they don't know what they want In fact, in the eyes of programmers, the man who takes the blame is completely a man of blame , while I am a programmer encourager in the eyes of programmers. I have my own way of encouraging programmers - cooking supper for programmers by myself:







Hackers and Painters - The Story of a UI Designer

When my technical otaku who didn't know I had learned to paint was celebrating his birthday this year, I took a picture of the two of us and gave it to him. He was obviously hand-painted by a tech girl. Levels freak out. On my birthday, he gave me a copy of "Hackers and Painters" with a wicked smile, and said, "I'm a hacker who watches snow, you're a painter who's cool."
The UI girl from the company went back to her hometown for a blind date and changed her career to marry. People seem to be the fate of an IT woman, but I, who saved the galaxy in my previous life, was able to live in (dan) in (ren) and will be in (dan) in (ren) for a long time in the primary stage of the product manager. I also paid a programmer male ticket . However, the good times don't last long. The new UI is a boy who just graduated from a certain university. He always produces renderings before I have figured out what I want to do. It seems that the prototypes I made are not so high-definition. It really mocked me for "doing not understand design" and "laying a layman to guide an expert". However, after I made a rendering image, he was willing to give up. Not only did he promise to design according to the prototype map in the future, but he also took me as a teacher to learn Photoshop, which he should be better at than me. (Other people's UI designers) tearing is over as soon as it starts.

The first line of code - the story of a front-end programmer

Yes, you read that right, this subtitle is a capital "one". Once asked the front-end big brother to add a special effect, he refused to realize it and quibbled "We built Gundam in the front-end, and your product wants to wear a skirt for Gundam" I silently went back and used the "learning now selling" magic that I learned from the programmer male ticket. I checked the CSS code on W3C, and when he got up to drink water, I went to his seat to realize the special effect... Later I nicknamed him "Gundam", since the Android (small robot) field is the best The book is "The First Line of Code", then the story of Gundam (big robot) should be called "The First Line of Code"

About where did my time come from.

Careful readers may find that I have three horses and three chariots. The job that is often complained about 996 (working 12 hours a day) is not that I have 36 hours a day, but that I am good at squeezing out time for the elderly:
1. Refuse to socialize ineffectively, and irrigate less in the group. Refuse to add irrelevant and unknown people on WeChat, and refuse to answer low-level questions from people you don't know.
2. Go to bed early. Go to bed half an hour earlier in the evening and get up an hour earlier in the morning.
3. Taking a nap for half an hour can improve the efficiency of an hour in the afternoon and evening.
4. Try to scan Weibo as little as possible, and watch Zhihu in moderation.
5. Don’t watch the so-called “news” pushed by your mobile phone (no nutritious headline party)
6. Don’t watch nutritious videos such as station A and station B, let alone live video that will disrupt your schedule. I will

write it at the end
. I know what everyone wants to ask, so I answered directly:
I didn't get three wages

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