Then I started doing dynamic web-programming stuff on my own. Maybe at that point I had found a web server for Windows that supported CGI. I finally convinced my ISP—I’d made friends with them enough, or sent enough intelligent things that they trusted me—so they said, “OK, we’ll run your CGIs but we’re going to audit them all first.” They’d skim them and toss them in their directory. So I started running this Voting Booth script where you created a topic like, “What’s your favorite movie?” and you could add things to it and vote them up. That got more and more popular. That was going on in the background for a couple of years.
Seibeclass="underline" That was FreeVote?
Fitzpatrick: Yeah, that turned into FreeVote after it flooded my host. Banner ads were really popular then, or they were just getting really popular, and I kept getting more and more money from that, better contracts, more cost per click. At the height I was getting 27 cents per click of banner ads, which I think is pretty ridiculous even by today’s standards. So at the height, I was making like $25, $27 grand per month on fucking clicks on banner ads.
This was all through high school—I did this in the background all of high school. And I worked at Intel two summers, and then started doing LiveJournal my last summer, right before college. So then my first year of college, I was just selling FreeVote, which I basically sold for nothing to a friend, for like $11 grand just because I wanted to get rid of it and get rid of legal responsibility for it.
Seibeclass="underline" When you got on your ISP and got to use Unix, did that change your programming much?
Fitzpatrick: Yeah. It didn’t drive me crazy. I couldn’t understand what was going on with Windows. You’ve probably seen the Windows API—there are like twenty parameters to every function and they’re all flags and half of them are zero. No clue what’s going on. And you can’t go peek underneath the covers when something’s magically not working.
Seibeclass="underline" Are there big differences you can identify between your early approach to programming or programming style to the way you think about programming now?
Fitzpatrick: I went through lots of styles, object-oriented stuff, and then functional stuff, and then this weird, hybrid mix of object-oriented and functional programming. This is why I really love Perl. As ugly as the syntax is and as much historical baggage and warts as it has, it never fucks with me and tells me what style to write in. Any style you want is fine. You can make your code pretty and consistent, but there’s no language-specified style. It’s only since I’ve been at Google that I’ve stopped writing much Perl.
I’ve also done a lot of testing since LiveJournal. Once I started working with other people especially. And once I realized that code I write never fucking goes away and I’m going to be a maintainer for life. I get comments about blog posts that are almost 10 years old. “Hey, I found this code. I found a bug,” and I’m suddenly maintaining code.
I now maintain so much code, and there’s other people working with it, if there’s anything halfway clever at all, I just assume that somebody else is going to not understand some invariants I have. So basically anytime I do something clever, I make sure I have a test in there to break really loudly and to tell them that they messed up. I had to force a lot of people to write tests, mostly people who were working for me. I would write tests to guard against my own code breaking, and then once they wrote code, I was like, “Are you even sure that works? Write a test. Prove it to me.” At a certain point, people realize, “Holy crap, it does pay off,” especially maintenance costs later.
Seibeclass="underline" When did you start working with other people?
Fitzpatrick: It was pretty much towards the end of college when I started hiring other people, and especially once I moved back to Portland after college.
Then the early employees were customer support, so they didn’t write any code. Then slowly I started hiring programmers. The first person I hired was a friend of mine from online. His name is Brad Whitaker and we both had websites called BradleyLand or BradleyWorld, so we found each other’s websites. I was a couple of years ahead of him web programming–wise, or maybe a year, and he was asking me, “Hey, how do you that,” whether it was HTML, or frames, or CGI, or Perl stuff. So then I started getting a bunch of contract projects and I would give the ones I didn’t want to him. And then we had a project that was too big for either of us so we told the guy, “It’s going to take two people to do this project.” And he flew us out to Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh? I don’t know the East coast at all; I’m a Westcoast guy. Philadelphia? The cheesesteak place.
Seibeclass="underline" Philadelphia.
Fitzpatrick: Yeah, and we met for the first time at some cheapo hotel and it felt like I knew him already. He was like, “Hey, what up?” He came in and took a piss in my hotel bathroom without even closing the door as I’m standing right there. I’m like, “Alright. You’re comfortable.” It was like we knew each other for four or five years, even though we had never met. We started working on this stuff together.
He moved up into my spare bedroom and we basically moved all the stuff out of my kitchen, set up a bunch of tables, and worked on computers. We would wake up around 10 or 11 and work until noon, and watch some TV—sit around in our boxers and watch TV, and hack, and stay up until 3 or 4 in the morning just working nonstop. Then another friend of mine moved down for the summer from UW. This was after my freshman year in college and then there were three of us working there. The third friend was living downtown. He would come on the light rail in the morning and skateboard over to my house. He would sit outside on Wi-Fi, just hacking until we woke up, opened the door, and let him in.
Once there were three of us, it was a little crowded in my house, so I was like, “Oh, OK, let’s get an office.” So we got an office and we were like, “Oh, we have all this space! Let’s hire more people.” We slowly got up to 12 over the next couple of years, and LiveJournal got more and more popular, and then more stressful too, because I was dealing with HR. Or my mom was dealing with HR and my mom was fighting with me because she worked for me. I had to make rules for my mom, like, “If you call me, it has to be personal or business; whatever one you start with, that’s how you end it. You can’t switch from work to personal or personal to work.” I just started hanging up on her if she switched. Then she’d call back and I’m like, “Nope, you lost.” So that was really stressful. She was really happy when I sold it, and she could stop working for me and we could stop fighting.
Seibeclass="underline" Was your company still doing contract work or was it all LiveJournal at that point?
Fitzpatrick: It was pretty much all LiveJournal. We were also trying to start a photo hosting-service, which Flickr beat us to. Ours was probably overdesigned: beautifully abstract and plugged into everything. But each new infrastructure thing we did for LiveJournal, we were like, “How is this going to work on FotoBilder?” so we started building everything abstract. Memcached was abstract because there was no reason to tie it into LiveJournal. Then we built a file system like GFS, and we built a job queue. So we kept building all these infrastructure components for scaling that would work for either of our products, but also because the less intertwined spaghetti dependency-wise, the easier it is to maintain something. Even if it’s a little bit more work, if you can cut some dependencies, it was great, so we started building all that generic infrastructure.