sourness is depending on quite a lot of factors - amount of water in starter, how long you proof, temperature etc.
I also prefer less sour breads and since I started using a stiff starter it's much better than more liquid ones. I still haven't found the perfect recipe yet but it is possible.
Helio https://helio.exchange | Senior Go Engineer | Switzerland Zurich, On-Site Hybrid | Full Time (80-100%) | CHF 100-130k + equity and benefits
We are a Swiss startup based in Zurich and build the first carbon-aware cloud by increasing the utilization rates of data centers worldwide. We're focusing currently on the 3D render market (providing compute for rendering 3D animations) but will expand to further areas as we grow. We have a core product with scheduling and billing included where you'll mainly work on.
We're looking for a Senior Go Engineer and develop our core and render product further. We utilize various cloud providers and work with Kubernetes and Cluster API. You'll mainly develop Go code and deploy and monitor it on our production cluster (you build it you run it).
Tech Stack:
- Go
- gRPC
- NATS
- Kubernetes (including custom operators)
- Cluster-API, ArgoCD (GitOps), Argo Workflows
- Windows and Linux containers
- Prometheus (Cortex)
- PostgreSQL
- GitLab CI/CD, GitHub
To apply, please email to [email protected]. Traditional CVs or Cover letters are unnecessary.
Interview process: We review your profile and reply with a small questionnaire, have a short 30min interview with the Founders, Connect with our team (getting to know them plus technical fit interview) and then join us with a flexible starting date.
Helio https://helio.exchange | Senior Cloud Engineer | Switzerland Zurich, On-Site Hybrid | Full Time (80-100%) | CHF 100-130k + equity and benefits
We are a Swiss startup based in Zurich and build the first carbon-aware cloud by increasing the utilization rates of data centers worldwide. We're focusing currently on the 3D render market (providing compute for rendering 3D animations) but will expand to further areas as we grow. We have a core product with scheduling and billing included where you'll mainly work on.
Join us as a Senior Cloud Engineer and develop our core and render product further. We utilize various cloud providers and work with Kubernetes and Cluster API. You'll mainly develop Go code and deploy and monitor it on our production cluster. You'll work closely with our Growth team and contribute to the ongoing success of our projects.
We are a small team looking to expand to accelerate our growth.
Tech Stack:
- Go
- Kubernetes (including custom operators)
- Cluster-API, ArgoCD (GitOps), Argo Workflows
- Windows and Linux containers
- Prometheus (Cortex)
- PostgreSQL
To apply, please email to [email protected]. Traditional CVs or Cover letters are unnecessary.
Interview process: We review your profile, have a short 30min interview with the Founders, Connect with our team (getting to know them plus technical fit interview) and then join us with a flexible starting date.
We're looking also for:
- Senior Fullstack Software Engineer (Remote)
- Windows Software Engineer 3D Tools (Remote)
- and others, check out https://helio.exchange/jobs for more.
hi,
we have a couple of job offers which offer remote. The Senior Cloud Engineer role is on-site/hybrid at the moment though.
We're too small to sponsor visa or offer relocation, unfortunately.
I never really had issues with lack of sleep until I became father 1.5 years ago. Child has issues with sleep since the start and while it recently got a bit better, in those 1.5 years I can count the number of times I got 8 hours uninterrupted sleep on one, maybe two hands.
On the worst days I could eat double my normal food intake and was still hungry.
Working and concentration is quite hard, more coffee intake is the case. Complex thoughts are increasingly difficult (e.g. improving software architecture takes much more time than I was used to).
I do wonder what happens when sleep is back to normal. Are some effects staying or will eventually everything go back to how it used to be before?
>I do wonder what happens when sleep is back to normal. Are some effects staying or will eventually everything go back to how it used to be before?
We had twins and sleep was incredibly hard for more than 2years. It took me a few more years to realize that not only was my sleep disturbed, my whole sleep hygiene was messed up and I had picked up several detrimental habits (e.g Late night was the only time I had to myself with no disturbances. I started to stay awake increasingly late into the night). I almost had to relearn how to sleep all over again.
So, yes, It does get better. You may need to put some effort to reclaim it.
The city council unanimously voted on Wednesday to ban
the use of the technology and prohibit any city
official from obtaining facial surveillance
by asking for it through third parties.
My my, the city council of Boston has a brain. When San Francisco banned FR they left the door open for private contractors, which the city just hired straight away.
At least for Java, PHP has the massive advantage of "change the code, save it and hit cmd+r" while Java, JavaScript and .net require recompiling, repackaging and deployment.
At work I develop for both PHP and Java projects and... it's cumbersome to develop for Java projects, to say it nicely. Ever tried developing for Jira, Jenkins or enterprise CMSes?
> while Java, JavaScript and .net require recompiling, repackaging and deployment.
Not to be a pedantic curmudgeon... actually, precisely to be a pedantic curmudegon... javascript does not require any of that.
The byzantine and asinine ecosystem that has sprouted like a cancer around javascript when SV and Node noticed the language and its profit potential, fueled by hype and unnecessary complexity? Yes. But the ecosystem is not the language.
Javascript itself is exactly like PHP in this regard - you edit a file, upload to the server, refresh the browser.
Everything else is unnecessary. Useful? Maybe. Bullshit? Probably. But not necessary.
I was recently surprised with this. I liked ThoughtWorks' tech radar. It's all client side JS, but uses node for some reason. Took longer than I expected to figure out the ecosystem (hadn't used node before), and it didn't appear to add much value for this use case. It also downloaded a boatload of node modules, and something called Cypress that takes forever to run. In the end it produces a fairly pedestrian client only SPA.
It's like the tale of the boiling frog. I don't like how with old school Javascript you have to add script tags to your html for each library you want to use, at some point you start using a bundler, then a package manager so you don't need to download them manually, then a compiler so you can use newer Javascript syntax, and so on and so on. Each step is better than the last one, but when you look back to the start things do seem simpler back then.
sure, there are pros/cons in all languages.
My question was specificly to the sentence about "strongly typed mainstream high level language" - as there are many languages who fit that definition.
I also prefer less sour breads and since I started using a stiff starter it's much better than more liquid ones. I still haven't found the perfect recipe yet but it is possible.
A good intro into the difference of starters is at the bread code: https://www.the-sourdough-framework.com/Sourdoughstartertype...