Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | codesurgeon's commentslogin

The repercussions of the occasional community shitstorm don't seem to warrant any investment into the scalability of support and remediation mechanisms. If this type of stuff would either drive traffic, interaction or another means of revenue generation, we'd probably see more creativity and better results.


Kerngedanke | SEEKING FREELANCER |ReactJS Frontend-Developer | remote and onsite (Munich, Germany) | freelance and internship | part-time or full-time We help journalists bring their content to where it matters in ways that matter.

At Kerngedanke, we’re building a SaaS web app for content creators (journalists in particular) to enable them to invest more of their time into researching and creating great content by saving time and effort with adapting their stories to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn et al.

We’re looking for fellow hackers to help us with getting our MVP and the next couple of iterations of our product into the hands of our early adopters (as of now: five media institutions with origins in private and public media, TV, radio and print).

You’re ideally a passionate dev, motivated and passionate about creating great software and have experience with ReactJS development. Experiences with talking to GraphQL backends and TypeScript development are a plus.

If you’re interested: I’d be happy to hear from you. Drop me a note at mustafa.isik@kerngedanke.com or via Twitter @isik_mk

(Btw, this is me https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIwkWBxBXWc&list=PLegPRS5X7Y.... Our crew and I we're nice people )


Kerngedanke | ReactJS Frontend-Developer | remote and onsite (Munich, Germany) | freelance or as employee | part-time or full-time

We help journalists bring their content to where it matters in ways that matter.

At Kerngedanke, we’re building a SaaS web app for content creators (journalists in particular) to enable them to invest more of their time into researching and creating great content by saving time and effort with adapting their stories to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn et al.

We’re looking for fellow hackers to help us with getting our MVP and the next couple of iterations of our product into the hands of our early adopters (as of now: five media institutions with origins in private and public media, TV, radio and print).

You’re ideally a passionate dev, motivated and passionate about creating great software and have experience with ReactJS development. Experiences with talking to GraphQL backends and TypeScript development are a plus.

If you’re interested: I’d be happy to hear from you. Drop me a note at mustafa.isik@kerngedanke.com or via Twitter @isik_mk

(Btw, this is me https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIwkWBxBXWc&list=PLegPRS5X7Y... Our crew and I we're nice people )


Hello Mustafa, I am technically sound & have working knowledge of JAVA & AngularJS / Angular 2+. I have developed data-driven applications using advanced back end with Node.js, PHP, MySQL, MVC, MongoDB, Angular and rich front-end Javascript. I possess strong command over web-service technology. eg. SOAP, CURL, REST. I'm interested in this remote position. Look forward to speak with you. Thanks, Saurabh


Thank you, Saurabh. For the position that we're looking for right now, it's really important that you've had some prior React experience.


Hi,

My name is Calin Ciupei and I am a active front end developer with 5 years of experience in React and Angular.

Here https://calinciupei-stg.herokuapp.com/ - https://gitlab.com/calinciupei/cc-starter is starting project with webpack 4 and React with redux that has an automated deployment.

Thanks, Calin


Thanks, Calin. Will look into it.


Hello, my name is Yevgen Reminetsky, and i sent you an email. Best Regards


Thank you. I've received your email. Thankfully there were many highly interested applicants - it'll take me a couple of more days to come back to you.


I don't see how there'd be anything to be criticized about this. IMHO, both of you are being too judgmental.


Or just trying to figure out what the utility is.

Critiquing the "movement" to come to a conclusion is helpful. Adding cruft to your web presence with no end result is also pointless. Except if that's your cup of tea.


We're in the process of adding more context by adding search, maps, and categories. In regards to 'utility' - it will enable you to connect with others that are focused and creating something similar to what you are doing.

This has the potential to help both individuals move forward.


Like so many other tasks, coding requires a certain amount of knowledge, experience and craftsmanship. Over the years I have come across many developers who don't even know the common best practices of their respective bread & butter language. Even worse, when they don't even suspect that there could be concepts beyond what language syntax and semantics provide for.

As a first step C/C++ developers should have read Scott Meyers' books and Java developers should know Josh Bloch's Effective Java by heart.

WRT to the (ultra-short) post this item links to, IMHO designing everything up front is neither feasible nor possible at all for any but the most trivial projects. That is something that at least the advent of agile methods even within the most conservative corporations should have taught us.

What is lacking in software development are neither the tools nor an atmosphere of less pressure. Much rather it is the sensibility for decent craftsmanship and engineering - and the knowledge of the means on how to acquire such.


Three weeks ago I gave a talk at Google on my real-time shared editing project, which in its first incarnation materializes as a set of eclipse plug-ins.

A couple of posts on Google's Open Source blog and my blog respectively provide a little more insight concerning the event at which I presented the algorithmic details for the first time. http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2008/06/eclipseday-at-... http://codesurgeonblog.com/2008/05/eclipseday-hosted-by-goog...

If you don't care too much for the inner workings but would rather like to see the shared editing in action, I have put together a screencast, available via http://www.vimeo.com/1195398


There is nothing wrong with re-purposing either Twitter or any other service for that matter - as long as it does not involve crazy marketing #$%@#&.


I do like what he says about static vs. dynamic typing.

He sounds very convinced that Scala won't be going anywhere, which to me sounds like an IDE developer not wanting to invest development time for supporting a language he considers tedious to support.

Guess that is just one of the many reasons I am in the "other" camp (read eclipse).


What is it with some people whining about the (supposed) "damage that Twitter has done to the community". Not really bright, IMHO. Nobody is being forced to use twitter and so far no one has apparently come up with an alternative that is viable enough for droves of people to switch. I don't want to play the uncritical Twitter advocate, but I like the concept, the service and this answer to TechCrunch in particular.


I have been using ff ever since the closed beta last fall/winter. Even though I have been careful to not follow too many people (currently 42) in order to not drown in a flurry of feed items, I have missed a feature such as rooms all along.

Being able to organize discussions on a certain topic in a separate feed should help reduce clutter and provide for "time-efficient" reading.

Right now, you end up doing doing a whole lot of browsing and context switching when filtering news, technical posts, tech talks from among "funny" YouTube videos shared or "liked" by your contacts.

Btw, my ff account http://friendfeed.com/codesurgeon and a room I just set up http://friendfeed.com/rooms/electronic-gaming - feel free to join in.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: