ParaFi Technologies LLC | U.S. remote possible, San Diego preferred | full-time | Infrastructure Engineer
ParaFi Technologies is a small team operating some of the highest-performing blockchain validators and node infrastructure. We are looking for a passionate, junior- or mid-level engineer to develop software and infrastructure (Python, Go, Terraform, Docker, etc.) and be an integral part of ParaFi Technologies' growth.
ParaFi Technologies LLC | U.S. remote possible, San Diego preferred | full-time | Infrastructure Engineer
ParaFi Technologies operates some of the highest-performing validators and node infrastructure for blockchain networks.
We are looking for a driven, junior- or mid-level engineer who can develop software and infrastructure (Python, Go, Terraform, Docker, etc.) and be an integral part of ParaFi Technologies' growth.
Finally I get to be that guy in the comments with a weird about of relevant experience. I built the world's largest hamster wheel in 2012[1], a large rotating circular platform ~6m in diameter.
It was a fun and unique experience to run on for a short amount of time, but most people would get dizzy after a few minutes of jogging on it. The curved platform also turned out to be a bit of a tripping hazard. It was more often used as a sort of swing (could this work on the moon?).
I'm skeptical that the experience on the moon will be much better, especially since the diameter they're proposing is even smaller.
Because you're looking forward at the platform that's moving down and toward you. Kind of like if you were to stare down at the belt of a treadmill while it's moving - it would be disorienting after a while.
Doesn't this boil down to a claim that blind people are incapable of running on a constant upwards slope due to motion sickness?
Because even if your claim is correct, and the conflicting visual input is disorienting, the Moon-dweller on a similar contraception could just close their eyes.
Staring down is not equivalent to being blind. Motion sickness occurs when signals from your eyes (like the motion of the world around you), body (like wind on your face) and auricular semicircular canals (organs in your ear that sense acceleration) conflict with one another. In theory, your brain reacts to this with nausea because historically that situation would mainly arise due to illness or poisoning, so it might be good to vomit. That's why you can sometimes alleviate car sickness by opening a window (convincing your brain that you're definitely moving) or, if you're driving at constant speed, refraining from looking out the window (convincing your brain that you're stationary).
Blind people only have 2 out of the three signals so they might be less prone to motion sickness.
ParaFi Technologies | Blockchain Infrastructure Engineer | US Remote (+San Diego based) | Full-time | https://parafi.tech/
We're a small team of engineers running some of the highest-performing blockchain validators and node infrastructure. Looking for a passionate engineer with ~2-6 YoE who wants to both develop software + infrastructure (Python, Go, Terraform, Docker...), and participate in other parts of the business, from financial modeling to talking with customers. Get the fun of a startup with the stability of an established investment firm!
For more info, email [my username with a dot before p]@parafi.tech
ParaFi Technologies LLC | U.S. | Remote (San Diego preferred) | Full-time | Infrastructure Engineer
ParaFi Tech runs some of the highest-performing validator infrastructure on Ethereum and other blockchains. We run a hybrid infrastructure between on-prem and cloud. We solve interesting challenges in crypto, cybersecurity, and more.
Looking for someone with software, infrastructure, and cyber experience to help build and scale our operations. We have a small and experienced team. Industry-leading pay.
Email me at [my username with a dot before p]@parafi.com
When you admit as many students as a UC, you can easily run regressions to determine whether a particular admissions officer is being discriminatory. They should also be able to anonymize applicants pretty well.
They should be able to--that doesn't mean they want to know the answer. It's very obvious they want to discriminate but not be detected doing so. They're not going to run those regressions and they aren't going to anonymize.
I took the article as pointing out that they specifically do not charge AWS for data transfer to CloudFlare and yet AWS charges full-price for bandwidth while other clouds do not. That's not a shoddy hit-piece, it's exposing some predatory business practices. Of course it'll benefit CloudFlare, but that doesn't mean it's a disingenuous article.
ParaFi Technologies is a small team operating some of the highest-performing blockchain validators and node infrastructure. We are looking for a passionate, junior- or mid-level engineer to develop software and infrastructure (Python, Go, Terraform, Docker, etc.) and be an integral part of ParaFi Technologies' growth.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQUBpZCVa8fmfJiO...
You can apply by sending a thoughtful email to careers@parafi.tech