You’ll be helping our growing digital team build amazing experiences for lovers of coffee around the world. We craft easy-to-use tools that allow our guests to shop for coffee and merchandise online, learn about brewing coffee at home, and share their coffee-drinking experiences with friends and followers. We also build powerful automated tools that magically help our production teams deliver fresh-roasted coffee to the right person, at the right time.
We use the following technologies to make these experiences real:
● Ruby and Rails (latest versions)
● HTML, CSS, and Javascript
● Postgres
● Memcached, Redis, Resque
● Heroku, Cloudinary
Our digital product team is small and thirsty for meaningful collaboration. On a daily basis, you’ll get the chance to work with world-class engineers, designers, and product managers. We build and push new features with confidence using automated testing frameworks to verify our changes and release to production daily.
You’ll have a chance to encounter some or all of the following fun things: online consumer eCommerce experiences, automated tools for manufacturing / production / roasting, recurring billing systems, email marketing, analytics, tools for our quality control team, retail point of sale systems, and mobile applications for iOS and Android.
The (annoying, but working) workaround is the following:
I imported my Vagrant-managed Ubuntu 10.04.4 LTS VM into a trial copy of Parallels Desktop 8. I then logged into the VM manually using the Parallels VM window using the default Vagrant user / password (vagrant/vagrant) and changed the password for my custom Vagrantfile dev login. Then in Parallels I switched the networking on the VM to Bridge Mode (so I can access it via IP address on my local network).
Remarkably everything in the VM worked and I'm back to coding. Would like to see a quick fix for VirtualBox so I can get back to my Vagrant awesomeness.
And this is exactly why there will be several hundred thousand downloads of the premier within the next few days from torrent sites and the like.
I wish I could give AMC money directly to watch this show tonight (or tomorrow) legally but it is not possible. It frustrates me so much that the technology is all there and has been for many years yet it is still not available.
Right now we're hosting it because it makes setup / integration time very quick. We're considering going open source for those who want to setup a box to do this yourself.
Here's an example of how we use it: We push original high resolution versions of photos/graphics to S3. Then to make a page with smaller, cropped thumbnails, it's as easy as calling for the image through Cloudfront with a special cdnimag.es url. (example integation: http://www.seewhatiwore.com/browse)
With cdnimag.es you can generate variations of the original image (sizes, crops, grayscale, reflection) on the fly without doing anything to the original. All this while still enjoying the caching and performance benefits of a CDN like Cloudfront.
I've worked under too many decision makers who think that placing a Like button on something is a pivotal business model move, or adding a share button will magically make content go 'viral' -- these concepts are best understood by those who practice them, not by those who create a blog or Facebook account as a point of presence.
I always think back to Jeff Bezos's philosophy, which he calls the "Regret Minimization Framework" (see http://bijansabet.com/post/147533511/jeff-bezos-regret-minim...). He basically advises projecting forward to when you're 80 years old. Ask yourself if at that time, would you regret X? This helps you frame your decisions with more of a long term view of your world. Helps you forget about some of the smaller stuff (like financial security).
Also in most cases, you can always go back to your cushy job if needed.
You’ll be helping our growing digital team build amazing experiences for lovers of coffee around the world. We craft easy-to-use tools that allow our guests to shop for coffee and merchandise online, learn about brewing coffee at home, and share their coffee-drinking experiences with friends and followers. We also build powerful automated tools that magically help our production teams deliver fresh-roasted coffee to the right person, at the right time. We use the following technologies to make these experiences real:
● Ruby and Rails (latest versions)
● HTML, CSS, and Javascript
● Postgres
● Memcached, Redis, Resque
● Heroku, Cloudinary
Our digital product team is small and thirsty for meaningful collaboration. On a daily basis, you’ll get the chance to work with world-class engineers, designers, and product managers. We build and push new features with confidence using automated testing frameworks to verify our changes and release to production daily.
You’ll have a chance to encounter some or all of the following fun things: online consumer eCommerce experiences, automated tools for manufacturing / production / roasting, recurring billing systems, email marketing, analytics, tools for our quality control team, retail point of sale systems, and mobile applications for iOS and Android.
More details / apply here:
http://www.proven.com/jobs/view/13979