> On February 18, 2025, an investigative reporter at The Information contacted Rippling about a forthcoming article concerning Deel’s Russia-related sanctions activity, noting he had “been working on a story on Deel for the past few weeks” that “started as an exercise to look into the veracity of that lawsuit I previously reported on.” This reporter was referring to his January 9, 2025, article entitled “Deel Accused of Money Laundering, Sanctions Failures in Lawsuit,” which reported on Damian v. Deel Inc., No. 25-cv-20017 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 3, 2025). 84.
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> The reporter’s email listed eleven assertions regarding supposed issues at Rippling relating to payments into Russia and other sanctioned jurisdictions. Each individual assertion was followed by internal Rippling Slack messages—thirteen messages in total
With my first one, I tried and encouraged and bribed and nothing worked. I drove myself crazy. And then one day he said to me. "Dad, I don't want diapers." And that was it. Done!
What I learned from this... all kids figure it out. Quite frankly, using the toilet is just way more user-friendly than using diapers! At some point, they'll realize it. They just go at their own pace.
So you can drive yourself crazy trying to get them to realize it... or you can just gently suggest, be patient and have confidence that they will figure things out!
Note! Letting kids do things at their own pace (and not yours) is very helpful for many things besides potty training!
I have very similar experience. I'm 42, spent most of my career in startups / small companies in CTO-level positions, but last year took an engineering position in big tech (at one of the companies you mention).
My suggestion for someone with a lot of experience is to focus more on networking your way in to the company than on skills brush up. Find contacts at the company(s) you are interested in and try to set up direct meetings (in person, video conference) to find out more about positions, responsibilities, etc. at that particular company. Each company has their own unique philosophies and growth paths for individual contributors vs. eng. managers, so I don't know that there would be one generic piece of advice to follow.
Feel free to reach out to me at <username> @ gmail if you would like to talk more specifics.
As someone in a CTO position now but being a serious IC ~5 years ago, I'm curious. How was the transition back for you? I love my job, but I also miss it.
So far (been about 9 months), I like being an IC a lot. I still get to be a leader and mentor, but have a lot less paperwork to fill out come review time! I always enjoyed the coding part of the startup CTO job more than the manager part anyhow. I feel that if I ever want to get back in to management, either at my current employer or somewhere else, I'll be able to make that transition pretty easily.
But if I go full-time manager, I don't know how easy it would be to flip back to dev / IC.
eLocal USA | Full Stack Engineer | Conshohocken, PA (suburban Philadelphia) | Full-time | Onsite
eLocal is a profitable, 10 year old company whose mission is to connect consumers with local businesses, with a particular specialization in the home services and legal verticals. eLocal has been at the forefront of a changing advertising industry, being one of the only media companies in the country offering local businesses a performance-based pricing model. We use our software to route people to the appropriate service providers based on their needs.
* Tech stack includes Rails / AWS / React / Twilio
* Casual, professional environment with respect for work/life balance and significant autonomy
You will be responsible for collaborating with our product, sales, and operations team on feature definition and project planning, and then turning ideas into reality during development and deployment.
We are looking for people who have a proven ability to ship great software, regardless of the technology. We want someone who will take ownership of their project and transform ideas into reality.
Mostly, we work with Ruby and Rails, but there are many other tools in our toolbox, including PostgreSQL, ReactJS, Chef, Redis, AWS, and Twilio.
We give a great deal of autonomy to our developers in deciding on the appropriate technologies and development approach and expect them to take pride in getting great software released for our users.
To learn more check out our full job description at
My county recently changed to using a passive investment strategy for pensions and there is a push for the whole state of PA to change to a similar model.
Ostensibly, the job title is Ruby Developer, but really your job involves bringing to life the software that is used by our consumers, customers and internal users. You will be responsible, in concert with our product and operations teams, for feature definition, project planning and estimation, development, testing, deployment, and maintenance. Often, we work with Ruby and Rails, but there are many other tools in our toolbox, including PostgreSQL, Solr, Chef, Redis, AWS, PhoneGap, and more. Our developers are given the freedom to find the best solution, but must take on the responsibility for a successful implementation. We are looking for an individual who has a proven ability to ship great software regardless of the technology.
Must Haves:
- Eligible for work in the US
- At least 2‐5 years of relevant web development experience
- Experience with scripting languages such as PHP, Python, or Ruby, (Hardcore would be a +!) as well as the ability to
quickly learn and apply new technologies (we are willing to take someone without Ruby experience assuming you
have lots of web development experience and are willing to learn)
- Experience owning, delivering and maintaining production code or services
- Exposure developing on Linux/Unix. You don't need to be an admin, but you need to be comfortable with a terminal
shell
- Self motivated with a strong work ethic
Nice to Haves:
- Devops: Linux Administration / Nginx / Amazon Web Services / Chef
- Data: PostgreSQL / Redis / Solr
- Javascript: CoffeeScript / JQuery
- Mobile: Phone Gap / iOS development
Top 5 fiction
- A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
- Trust by Hernan Diaz
- City of Thieves by David Benioff
- Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders
- Widow Basquiat by by Jennifer Clement
Top 5 non-fiction
- Boom Town by Sam Anderson
- The Second Founding by Eric Foner
- The Club by Jonathan Clegg and Joshua Robinson
- The Mysterious Case of Rudolf Diesel by Douglas Brunt
- The Spy and the Traitor by Ben McIntyre