Posts Tagged ‘Nearsourcing’
Our Sweet Spot – The sorts of things we look for in a project.
At Agave Lab, we help companies and individuals affordably convert their ideas into products. This might mean transforming a napkin sketch into a fundable, high-quality beta release, or building out the feature set for the next release of an existing application.
Common themes include:
Working with clients to evolve a seed of an idea into a compelling product plan
Keeping our fees low so that our clients can afford to try take risks and try new things
A dedication to user interfaces that are clean and crisp
A belief that form should follow function
A focus on viral growth strategies
Industrial-strength code and architecture
Development processes based on Agile and Scrum
Projects That We Look for
iOS and Android
Mobile social
Feedback and reviews
Photo sharing
Estamos en busca de programadores de Drupal

Mexico Remittances Rise the Most in 5 Years
Posted by: admin in Nearsourcing on November 3rd, 2011
Interesting story on how, due to the economic crisis, mexicans living abroad in the US are “moving up the value chain” into higher paid service sector jobs. Also, the weakening of the peso against the dollar represents a great opportunities for companies interested in outsourcing. Read on.
Just what we need.

So it appears that the US is sending “C.I.A. operatives and retired military personnel” to Mexico to help fight the drug cartels. From a recent NYTimes article:
“The pressure is going to be especially strong in Mexico, where I expect there will be a lot more raids, a lot more arrests and a lot more parading drug traffickers in front of cameras.”
Speaking as a gringo who lives here, thanks, but no thanks. How much evidence do we need to conclude that the “war on drugs” is a misguided notion? Also from the article:
“the number of deaths in Mexico is proof positive that the strategy is working and that the cartels are being weakened,”
How’s that? More violence is a good thing? If this is progress, I can do without it. Since Mexico began “cracking down” on the cartels, drug sales have gone through the roof. And now we’re adding drones, Blackhawk helicopters, and private contractors to the mix? If memory serves, that didn’t work so well in Iraq or Afganistan. I have a better idea: if the US wants mexico to stop selling it drugs, perhaps the US should stop buying them.
Holiday Cocktail iPhone Application
Posted by: andy in iPhone and iPad on December 9th, 2010
Hot of the presses and in the store for the holidays! We teamed up withBambou Design to create a nifty drink app for a client in San Francisco. Those of you who are of the boozy persuasion, check it out and let us know if you like it.
Happy (tipsy) Holidays,
The Agave Lab Team.
US Shoots Itself in the Foot, Again.
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on September 15th, 2010
Check out this post by Kirk Laughlin concerning recent US legislation that increases the processing fees for H1B visa to $2,000. I suppose the bill’s sponsor, Senator Charles Schumer, has the intention of protecting US jobs but does he actually think that preventing highly-skilled technology workers from coming to the US is a good thing? In any event, it’s a boon for the Mexico tech market as the TN visa (the one that allows Mexicans to do the same thing) has been exempted. Bad for India, bad for the US, GOOD for Mexico!!!
Mexico has somewhere between 500,000 and 600,000 IT professionals, and the country graduates approximately 65,000 IT students a year. Both Guadalajara and Monterrey landed on Nearshore Americas ranking of the Six Leading IT Cities in the Nearshore Region.
New iPhone App – Tastebud for Open Source Food
Posted by: andy in iPhone and iPad on July 6th, 2010
So we’ve released another iPhone application called Tastebud for Open Source Food. Like the vanilla version of Tastebud, the app allows you to select ingredients from your fridge/pantry, add them to your virtual basket, and recipes that you can make with the selected ingredients are shown in a list. So what’s new with this version?
We’ve partnered with Open Source Food so you can now find all of their tasty recipes on your iPhone. In addition, you can link directly from a recipe on your iPhone to see always-current reviews that are hosted on the OSF site. Also, we’ve added a way to be more specific about your ingredient selection – you can “drill down” from a general category to a specific ingredient (say from “Fruits” –> “Citrus” –> “Limes”) or you can just add the entire category. We’ve also redesigned the UI to make it easier to navigate and, well, a lot prettier. Check it out. It’s only 99 cents!
NYTimes: Mexico poised to outstrip US in economic growth
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on July 1st, 2010
Now this is something you don’t see every day. Latin America’s economy is on a tear and, surprise, it’s not all fueled by drugs and bootleg DVDs! I’m sure that much of the success was due to the region’s luck in dodging the pyramid scheme that was the mortgage market in the US (not due to any wisdom or foreword thinking – mortgages of any stripe – much less sub-prime ones – are just not common here). In any event, let’s celebrate before wheels fall off (again)!
After a sharp contraction last year, Mexico’s economy grew 4.3 percent in the first quarter and may reach 5 percent this year, the Mexican government has said, possibly outpacing the economy in the United States.
An App Is Born
Posted by: andy in Agave Lab, Nearsourcing, iPhone and iPad on June 25th, 2010

Is that thing on vibrate?
We’re in a celebratory mood over here at Agave Lab this morning. . .
Last night, after working a scant 10 days and (mostly sleepless) nights, we delivered a very cool iPhone application into the gaping maw of the iTunes App Store Approval Process. We were working with one of the most highly-regarded design firms in the world (they’ve won countless awards and are consistently on the list of “Top 50 Design Firms”). The end client was a major luxury, auto manufacture. Unfortunately, we can’t disclose the identity of either but, the grace-under-pressure that was required and the compressed time frame made this a learning, as well as marginally traumatic, experience – kind if like giving birth but with fewer fluids involved. Here’s what we learned:
-Pick your partners carefully. The design firm is based in NY and in Stockholm. They were our primary point of contact – and they were fantastic. There were plenty of tense moments but even as tensions rose, they had our back. They were more than willing to offer advice, forgo sleep (the project manager in NY stayed up late with us for every session – fantastic guy), and keep a great sense of humor.
-Don’t bog down on a single issue. This project made extensive use of the multi-tasking capabilities of the new iPhone 4.0 OS. The problem was that it wasn’t released until the project was nearly due. No one had any idea of how it was going to work and we wasted a few precious days in the process trying to map out how it might work. In the end, we just shelved it and, as most things do, the solution popped up in due time and was easily implemented. Key message: if you get stuck, step back, do something else, and come back to it later.
-Be proactive about stuff that doesn’t look right. As a developer, working for a client, there is a temptation to do just what you’re told and nothing else. Often times we’d see something in the wireframes or the art that just didn’t look right. By pointing out the things that seemed odd or that we didn’t understand, we avoided building in functionality that, while technically in the spec, would have to be changed later.
-Balance architecture and UI. This one is always a bitch. We focused for the first few days on getting the architecture right – we’re a bit maniacal about code hygiene. That made the rest of the project go more smoothly but, 5 days into it, the client lead at the design firm (not an engineer) began to freak a bit. For him the product IS the UI. On the other hand, it’s easy to pound out the UI components first and then back into the architecture. But with this approach, the the same client lead is going to wonder what the hell you’ve been up to – “The app looked complete at day 3 and we’re now at day 7″! The solution to this seems to be to develop slices of the application from UI to architecture so that you’ve got steady progress on both fronts. Easy to say, tough to do but we’re going to work on it for the next project.
-Hire people that you like. We have a killer team. This project involved a lot of late nights, crappy food, and tension. Our team was stress-tested and passed with flying colors. I used to work for a Kleiner Perkins company and Ray Lane was on the board. I once asked him how he hired people and his response at first surprised me but throughout my career has become increasingly right on. He said, “The most important thing for me is that I like the person right away”. Simple, no? And it works. It’s really rare that someone works out that I generally didn’t get a good feel about in the first 30 seconds. I’ve been trying to work out why this is true. Maybe it’s this: I consider myself hard-working, smart, honest, etc. so I tend to like people who share those traits. There are a million subtle factors that, I suspect, get boiled down to an instant “vibe” – you either like someone, or you don’t – but that vibe signifies a lot more than a hunch. Pay attention to your hunches, they’re smarter than you are.





