VideoAmp builds technology for cross-screen marketing. We recently raised $21.4M Series B (http://variety.com/2017/digital/news/videoamp-funding-mediao...) and are looking for a solid full-stack engineer to join our team. You will work with our Node.js APIs and our front-end platforms being built in Angular.js/React. Full-stackers will also cross-function with other teams on internal projects, and develop API integrations with our partner companies.
VideoAmp | Full-Stack Engineer | Santa Monica, CA | ONSITE | FULLTIME | https://www.videoamp.com
VideoAmp builds technology for cross-screen marketing. We recently raised $21.4M Series B (http://variety.com/2017/digital/news/videoamp-funding-mediao...) and are looking for a solid full-stack engineer to join our team. You will work with our Node.js API and our front-end platforms being built in Angular.js/React. Full-stackers will also cross-function with other teams on internal projects, and develop API integrations with our partner companies.
VideoAmp | Full-Stack Engineer | Santa Monica, CA | ONSITE | FULLTIME | https://www.videoamp.com
VideoAmp builds technology for cross-screen marketing. We recently raised $21.4M Series B (http://variety.com/2017/digital/news/videoamp-funding-mediao...) and are looking for a solid full-stack engineer to join our team. You will work with our Node.js API and our new front-end platform being built in React. Full-stackers will also cross-function with other teams on internal projects, and develop API integrations with our partner companies.
Do you absolutely need a native-feeling mobile app? React Native (and ultimately React) are worth your time and investment.
In Gitlab's case, Vue.js works well for them because their product is web-first and allows them to iterate quickly.
For the most part, I consider React Native separate from React entirely. I consider most startups to either be completely web or completely mobile, and to let questions in the former case be answered by validating and iterating on the product quickly with a web app.
I've owned Paw for a while, and I find it much more user-friendly than Postman. It's not for everyone, sure, but the developer has put in good work and you won't regret a purchase.
Same, Github has way too much white on the page and it absolutely kills my eyes. I've been using this for a few months and there's no way I am going back.
Awesome find! I was not considering that a promise is executing as soon as it is created, and this is why the implementation still results in parallel execution.
I've gone back to the drawing board, and I've updated my post accordingly with a better solution using reduce. I've also used your demo above as an example and credited you in my article (please let me know if that is not OK, and I will take it down).
It seems like a good idea, but of course its not running the latest version of Android. Most of the problems with Android stem from security updates not reaching devices in a timely manner, and RemixOS is just another example of a skin that is behind. Most devices are only on RemixOS 1.5, which is Android 5.0.2.
It's definitely a tradeoff that has led to some problems. However, I think it's important to remember Bookshelf's flexibility, and that the tradeoffs are more language-level than library-level.
For the UI. Atom is a significant update in user interface, and while there are performance dips (mainly at startup or using complex packages), the overall experience of using Atom has improved my workflow.