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Boxento (https://boxento.com/) | React Frontend Engineer | REMOTE

Boxento empowers users to create web pages in seconds using a 3x3 grid layout. We're focused on making web creation fast, easy, and beautiful.

We're hiring for:

React Frontend Engineer (React, Tailwind CSS, UI/UX optimization) You'll develop new interfaces and maintain our frontend, collaborate with design and backend teams, and optimize for performance and scalability.

Email your portfolio to jobs@boxento.com


DNS seems broken for your website.

https://boxento.com/ Works. I suspect you’re missing the www record.


Thank you! I just added CNAME record for www.


You are using development version of React for your production site!?


Congrats on shipping it! I'm already using this for my client projects at https://uxready.com and it helped me find some errors and design inconsistencies when I clicked quickly through the screenshots. Very useful! Really looking forward to your next releases.

Thanks for building this!


very happy to hear that! thank you.


The main purpose of Startup Chile was to put Chile on map as one of the tech hubs and it has been certainly successful in that.

The program in itself is not as involved in the success of the startup as other accelerators because it doesn't take any equity in your startup.

It certainly has managed to attract entrepreneurs but the success will be short-lived unless it can also attract investors which it hasn't been able to do so far.


I retweet mostly at https://twitter.com/Su


Sell that handle for $$$$ ;)


Sweet handle!


Export .ai files to PDF and then you can open it with Sketch.


I'd love to know what are stripe's plans to launch in countries where payment gateways are regulated and one company has constitutional monopoly (looking at you, Chile).


As a fellow Chilean citizen I can just say: what?!

Is it Transbank? Redcompra?


Transbank indeed. As it stands today. it takes 2-3 months to get Webpay Plus (Transbank's payment gateway) implemented on the website.


Thanks for the answer!

Also, I just looked your profile and I can just say good luck with what you're doing!


This is awesome. Quite possibly one of the best solutions I have seen so far to manage bookmarklets.


I know UI Design and a just a little bit of backend. My sideprojects are always more about design and less about technical part, however whatever little technical part it requires, it gives me enough to learn something new.

For http://typezebra.com/ I learnt a bit of Javascript while for https://bootmystrap.com/ I learnt to design websites properly using LESS CSS.

The way I keep myself motivated to finish sideprojects is that most of the part is right up my alley, design which gives me confidence I can finish it.


If your column comes before in HTML then it will come before when everything is stacked up in mobile resolutions.

The behavior to hide something is of course customizable. Bootstrap comes with certain classes [0] which can hide the content on mobile screens and show on desktop.

[0]: http://getbootstrap.com/css/#responsive-utilities


Are you saying (reminder, newbie here :-)) that it is possible to have a column come before in HTML and still appear right on the screen? Else, this means it is not possible to change the order in which the columns stack beyond what can be achieved using a nested grid.

The link above does suggest why the navigation bars collapse too soon sometimes (and sometimes too late). The collapse event is tied to the horizontal resolutions at 768, 992 and 1200 px, and does not depend on how much width the navigation bar actually needs (such that it is collapsed only when space available for it is too small).

I wonder why things are built this way though.


If the column comes before in HTML then it will appear before as well according to the Bootstrap conventions laid out. However you are more than welcome to throw that all out and have the column to appear left, right, top, bottom wherever you want with simple CSS.

In terms of navigation, it is tied to resolution because it's easier to change code than to change devices owned by your users :)


That has been my assessment as well. I once bought a theme there and ended up spending more time changing the code so the classes are similar to what Bootstrap uses.

That's why I am starting http://bootmystrap.com/ All changes in just one LESS file, using same classes as Bootstrap so if you do buy a theme it actually saves you time.


I've had that same experience. I bought a theme very niavely thinking that it would follow bootstrap conventions and would be easily modifiable. Instead, I've got a huge mess and I think I'm just going to throw it out. I've been looking for a site like yours, that actually respects LESS. I hope it takes off and will definitely be keeping an eye on it.


I agree. If you're building a site you're going to end up maintaining for a long time, you should be building it from the ground up yourself. These sites are great at inspiration though! Your site showcasing extremely barebones demos is great.


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