What I need to know before building my own app which uses the technology used in UBER? [closed]
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I have 0% idea on programming . I have a great idea for my startup .But building my app by someone else will put me and my family in sale. So ,I need to make it on my own .
android
closed as too broad by Héctor, Tieson T., Michael Dodd, Mike M., David Makogon Nov 10 at 23:30
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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up vote
-5
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I have 0% idea on programming . I have a great idea for my startup .But building my app by someone else will put me and my family in sale. So ,I need to make it on my own .
android
closed as too broad by Héctor, Tieson T., Michael Dodd, Mike M., David Makogon Nov 10 at 23:30
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58
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show 1 more comment
up vote
-5
down vote
favorite
up vote
-5
down vote
favorite
I have 0% idea on programming . I have a great idea for my startup .But building my app by someone else will put me and my family in sale. So ,I need to make it on my own .
android
I have 0% idea on programming . I have a great idea for my startup .But building my app by someone else will put me and my family in sale. So ,I need to make it on my own .
android
android
asked Nov 10 at 18:43
I M Hirobumi
11
11
closed as too broad by Héctor, Tieson T., Michael Dodd, Mike M., David Makogon Nov 10 at 23:30
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as too broad by Héctor, Tieson T., Michael Dodd, Mike M., David Makogon Nov 10 at 23:30
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58
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show 1 more comment
Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58
Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58
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Knowing where to ask would be a start; go back through the tour and pay a little more attention, this is not an appropriate question for SO.
– jonrsharpe
Nov 10 at 18:45
this link may useful stackshare.io/uber/uber
– nariman amani
Nov 10 at 18:46
@narimanamani - I don't really think that link is as useful as you might think. You just pointed someone with zero programming knowledge to a deck containing nothing but various libraries and tools used by a company's product Aside the fact that eveything in the Uber stack is going to be meaningless to the OP, you cannot simply build another Uber by adapting those libraries and tools.
– David Makogon
Nov 10 at 23:33
@DavidMakogon that's just a clue to see what others do and what should learn
– nariman amani
Nov 11 at 5:54
@narimanamani - on that chart are five programming languages and five databases - This isn't a clue for what others should learn; this is one company's product stack, for one specific cloud offering. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of alternative options across frameworks, languages, databases, clouds, devops tools. The OP just has an "idea" for a product, and hasn't revealed a single detail (other than a loose reference to uber).
– David Makogon
Nov 11 at 10:58