TLDR: remote workers, full-stack, JS, Node, Angular, Express, Mongo, Holacracy, Golang, Redis, Grunt, Bower, LESS, web + mobile
Moveline is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine. We ship every day and play Settlers on Fridays.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack engineer who loves Settlers of Catan and remote development.
About Us
- Driven to build software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it
- Well-funded by a group of world-class investors and advisors: (angel.co/moveline)
- Our organization is flexible and embraces the Holacracy model of governance. Self-determination is encouraged and self-motivation is essential.
- Have only begun to tackle the problem space. Serious fun and challenges still lie ahead.
- Our stack is primarily MEAN — Mongo/Express/Angular/Node — with some Golang on the backend. We regularly evaluate new tools and technologies for development advantages and not just because they are new and cool.
About You
- Fluent in Javascript and comfortable jumping between client and server side development
- Passionate about code, development practices, and maintainable solutions and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing something is not DRY and unit-tested
- Architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications in a production environment
- Energized when working closely with others on a small team
- Want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- Can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- Don’t care if the moving industry isn’t sexy
- Would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
Compensation
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome. Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
I'm a developer at Moveline who was hired through an HN post. Feel free to send a message to andrew.harrison+hn@moveline.com if you want to know more.
(N.B. — I may internally share the messages that I receive in order to refine our hiring process, but you won't be signed up for mailing lists or anything gross like that.)
TLDR: remote workers, full-stack, JS, Node, Angular, Express, Mongo, Holacracy, Golang, Redis, Grunt, Bower, LESS, web + mobile
Moveline is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine. We ship every day and play Settlers on Fridays.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack engineer who loves Settlers of Catan, remote development, and can tell the difference between an IPA and a Lager.
About Us
- Driven to build software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it
- Well-funded by a group of world-class investors and advisors: (angel.co/moveline)
- Our organization is flexible and embraces the Holacracy model of governance. Self-determination is encouraged and self-motivation is essential.
- Have only begun to tackle the problem space. Serious fun and challenges still lie ahead.
- Our stack is primarily MEAN — Mongo/Express/Angular/Node — with some Golang on the backend. We regularly evaluate new tools and technologies for development advantages and not just because they are new and cool.
About You
- Fluent in Javascript and comfortable jumping between client and server side development
- Passionate about code, development practices, and maintainable solutions and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing something is not DRY and unit-tested
- Architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications in a production environment
- Energized when working closely with others on a small team
- Want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- Can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- Don’t care if the moving industry isn’t sexy
- Would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
Compensation
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome. Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
Moveline (TechStars NYC '12) is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack javascript engineer who loves Settlers of Catan, remote development, and can tell the difference between an IPA and a Lager.
ABOUT US
We’re passionate about building software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it.
We are also working with a world-class set of investors and advisors, who you’ll have the opportunity to meet and interact with on a regular basis.
ABOUT YOU
- You are fluent in Javascript – our stack is MEAN: Mongo/Express/Angular/Node (and Backbone) – and you are interested in Golang, which we're using to build out some sweet services
- You are passionate about code and elegant solutions as well as user experience, and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing you left something not DRY’d and tested
- You have architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications on a production environment
- You have an obsessive attention to detail
- You thrive when you are working closely with others on a small team
- You want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- You can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- You have a panic attack if you don’t push code before noon
- You don’t care that the moving industry isn’t sexy
- You would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
COMPENSATION
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome.
Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
Are you concerned at all that your job posting may be unnecessarily gendered? I understand that lots of people enjoy board games and beer, but in America they have a lot of strong associations with male-only culture.
I did click through before I wrote it. It looked like the 'programmer' side of the business was entirely male. That doesn't really mean anything- there's not enough female programmers to go around- but it didn't assuage any of my worries about the post.
I might be a little sensitive though. Before I read that, I had just sent the thread to a woman I know who is looking for a new job, and her immediate reaction was "I don't want to work with brogrammers."
Moveline is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine. We ship every day and play Settlers on Fridays.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack javascript engineer who loves Settlers of Catan, remote development, and can tell the difference between an IPA and a Lager.
About Us
- We’re passionate about building software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it.
- We are also working with a world-class set of investors and advisors, who you’ll have the opportunity to meet and interact with on a regular basis. (http://www.angel.co/moveline)
About You
- You are fluent in Javascript – our stack is MEAN: Mongo/Express/Angular/Node (and some Golang)
- You are passionate about code and elegant solutions, and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing you left something not DRY’d
- You have architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications on a production environment
- You have an obsessive attention to detail
- You thrive when you are working closely with others on a small team
- You want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- You can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- You have a panic attack if you don’t push code before noon
- You don’t care that the moving industry isn’t sexy
- You would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
Compensation
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome. Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
Moveline is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine. We ship every day and play Settlers on Fridays.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack javascript engineer who loves Settlers of Catan, remote development, and can tell the difference between an IPA and a Lager.
About Us
- We’re passionate about building software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it.
- We are also working with a world-class set of investors and advisors, who you’ll have the opportunity to meet and interact with on a regular basis.
About You
- You are fluent in Javascript – our stack is MEAN:
Mongo/Express/Angular/Node (and Backbone)
- You are passionate about code and elegant solutions, and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing you left something not DRY’d
- You have architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications on a production environment
- You have an obsessive attention to detail
- You thrive when you are working closely with others on a small team
- You want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- You can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- You have a panic attack if you don’t push code before noon
- You don’t care that the moving industry isn’t sexy
- You would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
Compensation
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome.
Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
+1 for sprintly, been using it for almost a year at Moveline. business people know exactly what to do when a bug comes in, and can accept/reject, comment, screenshot, etc. when a Dev marks it as complete
The moving industry has always built software to make it's job easier. Moveline believes in building software to make our customers lives easier.
We practice continuous deployment, which means we write tests for everything. Our designers and developers work directly with each other, letting us quickly implement and test new designs and features.
Feel free to contact our team directly chris@moveline.com, adam@moveline.com, kelly@moveline.com, or fred@moveline.com if you are interested.
Facebook, Foursquare, Twitter, basically any app that allows you to "search my address book for friends" will do this.
All these services require either a email or phone number to sign up, so to search for friends who have also signed up for the service, you need to compare two data sets: emails or phone numbers of users you already have, and those in the person's address book.
You obviously wouldn't download your entire database of users contact information to the phone to compare the data sets, so you send the data set up to the server.
The addresses from the user's address book should be hashed before sending to the server and compared to hashed addresses on the server. Then only positive matches are registered, and the server doesn't see more private information than it needs.
Hashing data from address book doesn't work because people write the same addresses and even phone numbers in many different ways. Normalizing it on the client is not really an option either because it requires a lot of data to do decent normalization - not practical to send it all to each client.
Phone numbers are easy to canonicalize: convert to international form.
Email addresses can be effectively canonicalized by lower casing. Not many mail servers are case sensitive these days. Additionally, for the local part, you can generally strip off anything after a "+", and with gmail, you can drop any period in the local part. (Granted, it's not perfect-- so make sure that's not a security concern.)
These techniques have been working fine so far in my app for my "Find My Friends" feature.
If so many apps do this, why all of the sudden uproar with Path doing the same? I'm not condoning it, just curious why it still happens and so frequently. It seems to me that the "industry best practices" actually need to be best practice.
When I first read the title, I assumed this was about Twitter's new country-based censorship[1], which IMHO is a much more egregious attack on a freedom that the internet has made possible (speech) than the availability of for-profit media the OP highlights.
TLDR: remote workers, full-stack, JS, Node, Angular, Express, Mongo, Holacracy, Golang, Redis, Grunt, Bower, LESS, web + mobile
Moveline is transforming an industry older than the internal combustion engine. We ship every day and play Settlers on Fridays.
We’re looking for a solid full-stack engineer who loves Settlers of Catan and remote development.
About Us
- Driven to build software that dramatically improves the customer experience, end-to-end, around moving. Our web product is at the heart of it
- Well-funded by a group of world-class investors and advisors: (angel.co/moveline)
- Our organization is flexible and embraces the Holacracy model of governance. Self-determination is encouraged and self-motivation is essential.
- Have only begun to tackle the problem space. Serious fun and challenges still lie ahead.
- Our stack is primarily MEAN — Mongo/Express/Angular/Node — with some Golang on the backend. We regularly evaluate new tools and technologies for development advantages and not just because they are new and cool.
About You
- Fluent in Javascript and comfortable jumping between client and server side development
- Passionate about code, development practices, and maintainable solutions and want to work with others who are similarly so. You can’t sleep at night knowing something is not DRY and unit-tested
- Architected and developed end-to-end products that are currently running business applications in a production environment
- Energized when working closely with others on a small team
- Want to build stuff that solves real human problems
- Can explain the differences, chemical and philosophical, between a lager and an IPA
- Don’t care if the moving industry isn’t sexy
- Would rather make money than make the front page of TechCrunch (though we do that too)
Compensation
Market salary and meaningful equity is available. We’re primarily a remote engineering team, with the company (ops, marketing, customer service) based in Las Vegas in the heart of Tony Hsieh’s Downtown Project. Hackers in Vegas or remote in the US welcome. Full Time or Contract-to-Hire only please. No freelancers or recruiters need apply.
MENTION HACKER NEWS WHEN APPLYING
https://www.moveline.com/careers