Epsilon-delta proofs are beyond me, but we still teach calculus in high school. Just because some parts of a field are esoteric without study doesn't mean the field is doomed to obscurity.
A friend and I recently upped sticks and moved from Chicago to Seattle to put our tech chops to use. We've been consulting together for a little over a year, and I personally have been doing it for one more than that.
Between us, we have experience with a lot of different areas from distributed systems and networking protocols, to, of course, full stack web development. Our main common ground is that we both feel equally at home with C and JavaScript—weird, huh?
Lately, we've been focused on frontend web development and have a lot of experience with Angular in particular. We're quick learners and eager to experiment, but we're also pragmatic and will always choose the right tool for the job. That said, we would especially love to get onboard with a Clojure/ClojureScript project... just saying.
Anyway, if you have a project in need of some love from one or two clever developers, or if you need a solid MVP, shoot me an email: [email protected]
A friend and I just graduated from the University of Chicago, and decided to put our technical chops to use in Seattle.
Between us, we have experience with a lot of different areas from database implementation, to distributed systems, networking protocols, and of course web development. Our main common ground is that we both feel at home with either C or JavaScript—weird, huh?
Lately, we've been focused on frontend web development and have a lot of experience with Angular in particular. We're quick learners and eager to experiment, but we're also pragmatic and will always choose the right tool for the job.
If you have a project in need of some love from one or two clever developers, or if you need a solid MVP, shoot me an email: [email protected]
- Distributed systems theorists
- Database implementors
- Web designers
- JS coders (Angular anyone?)
- Clojurians
- Assembl... on second thought, we'd rather not
- Jacks of useful trades
If your project needs some love, we can probably help. Get in touch: [email protected]
True. However, as a graduating CS major, almost every non-CS major I know here and at other schools has taken some programming-focused class or done Codecademy or something. Few if any are looking for what we might think of as "tech" jobs, or are motivated primarily by any promise of money. I can anecdotally attest to the fact that all the reasons listed by the author are playing a significant role.
(As a side note, a fair number of the people I know who are doing straight up startup-style "tech" jobs after graduation aren't even CS majors.)
Exciting prospect. How about DataScript for your app state + tx-listen/om-sync mirroring transactions? Might require wrapping the datascript/transact! call, and I haven't thought about reading from the cliente. Maybe as simple as lazily mirroring datascript/q calls and filling those back into the DataScript map.
Funny; the article has me thinking about being more open with our humanity on the web, then you reference an apparent brush with death as a sort of backstory—something many, myself included, would be uncomfortable sharing. Thanks for being candid!