Get Famous By Not Programming — cover art: a small Edwardian writing desk under a warm pool of lamplight, a quill and an open notebook front-and-centre, a closed thick programming volume pushed to one side, a small attentive owl reading the open notebook.

2006 · Stevey's Blog Rants · Meta

“Most of the famous-ish programmers I respect have actually made their impact on me through writing, and it's usually just prose, with maybe a little code interspersed.”
— From Get Famous By Not Programming, July 2006
Read the essay

© 2006 Steve Yegge. Originally published at Stevey's Blog Rants.

AI Notes

It begins as anecdote. A polite, slightly fractured email from a Polish blogger named Jarosław Rzeszótko ("Stiff") arrives in Steve's inbox with ten interview questions and the offer to translate the answers. Steve takes the bait. About six weeks later, word reaches him that he has been listed alongside seven actually-famous people as one of the "ten most famous programmers in the world"; his co-workers find this extremely funny. (That was the Polish write-up; the English round-up, Stiff Asks, Great Programmers Answer, wouldn't go up until October.) The rest of the essay is the explanation he works out for himself. The famous-ish programmers he respects, he says, have mostly made their impact through writing — language designers, operating-system builders, framework authors, and the people who wrote a really good book about programming. Almost none of his admiration is for code per se. A framework is a room you live inside, and the person who designed the room tends to become a name you remember; books are the cheapest way to let strangers spend a hundred hours with your mind. Hence the title: the path from "good programmer" to "programmer people have heard of" mostly runs through writing — and Steve has already started down it, mostly without meaning to, with this blog.

Reads alongside You Should Write Blogs and Blog Or Get Off The Pot as the post where the implications of Steve's own argument catch up with him.

Related listings

  • 2006

    Stiff Asks, Great Programmers Answer

    The interview that set this essay off. Jarosław “Stiff” Rzeszótko’s group Q&A with nine well-known programmers — Torvalds, Norvig, van Rossum, Gosling, Stroustrup, Bray, Thomas, DHH, and Steve. This post is Steve’s contemporaneous reaction to finding himself on that list, written months before the English round-up was even published.

  • 2005

    You Should Write Blogs

    The companion piece — Steve's earlier and bluntest pitch for engineers to write. You Should Write Blogs is the argument; Get Famous By Not Programming is what happens when someone (Steve) takes the argument seriously.

  • 2006

    Blog Or Get Off The Pot

    The other 2006 post on the same theme — start writing or stop talking about starting. Reads together with this one as Steve's bookending case for the writer-engineer.

  • 2008

    Blogging Theory 201: Size Does Matter

    Two years later, the meta gets even more meta — Steve's mechanics post on what makes a long blog actually read. The arc: write blogs → why writing makes you famous → here is how to write the long ones.