Who’s protolicious! What we did know was that she’s been building working business prototypes on her Livecoding.tv channel. What we now know is:
Real name: Paule
Alter ego: protolicious
Location: Montreal, Canada
Powers/abilities: Java, JavaScript, PHP
Username: https://www.livecoding.tv/protolicious/
Questions:
Q: How long have you been coding and what made you decide to learn to code?
A: I have been coding for as long as I can remember! My first encounter happened while I was about 5 years old on a Mac SE using HyperTalk. It opened a world of possibilities and I was instantaneously hooked. I left early on during College to pursue programming on my own terms and have been doing so successfully for the last 15 years.
Q: Tell us about Protolicious.
A: There are a lot of potentially beneficial ideas out there. I want to give them a fighting chance during the early stages by creating minimum viable products using rapid prototyping techniques.
Q: Are you currently working on any projects? Tell us about them.
A: Yes. Since most client projects are in their early stages, I can’t really speak for them. However, keeping Protolicio.us itself as a MVP and helping out DecodeMTL with their goal of bringing coding literacy to a wide range of people.
Q: When did you first hear about Livecoding.tv? What was your first reaction?
A: A couple of months ago. I got really curious about how it worked and decided to just sign up.
Q: If you were one of the co-founders what different would you like Livecoding.tv to do?
A: Live hackathons! It would be awesome to see how people solve different problems in real-time using different tools and then be voted as best projects.
Q: What’s the best thing about Livecoding.tv? What’s the worst/most annoying?
A: Best : Open knowledge between people in different countries.
Worst : Flow of UI, but this is really just personal preference.
Q: Do you have any suggestions/message for the team?
A: Awesome idea. Keep up the good work! 🙂
Q: What role do you think programmers have played in last 50 years or so in the evolution of technology?
A: Innovation.
Q: What it takes to be a good programmer?
A: Patience, open-mindedness, creativity and more patience.
Q: If you were not a coder, what would you rather be? Why?
A: I’m highly interested by renewable energy, probably building eco-friendly homes just because it feels right.
Q: What message do you have for students opting programming/coding as a profession?
A: Get your feet wet as soon as possible! Start from scratch, on your own terms, with a project that truly motivates you. From there on, you will be able to determine whether this is the right profession for you or not- the most important thing in life is being happy and you will probably spend a significant amount of time coding!
Check out one of protolicious’ recent streams: Development Session