Pie Mapping | http://piemapping.com (website will be upgraded this month) | London, UK | Full Time | Onsite | Dev/Ops engineer
At Pie, we are building the next generation fleet management platform, enhancing it with our routing and mapping expertise.
To reach those goals, we have created a micro-services platform designed for the cloud age using exciting technologies such as Docker, Cassandra, Terraform, etc.
Join us!
Pie is currently seeking a Dev/Ops engineer to:
* manage our orchestration scripts via Terraform
* manage our monitoring pipeline
* manage our deployment tools
* help optimise our Docker build process and setup
* work with Data and Back-End engineers on ad-hoc or planned tasks
* introduce solutions or new technologies that can solve our needs
You will have a broad scope here but will always be assisted by a very supportive and dynamic team.
Benefits:
We pay a very competitive salary, but on top of that we offer options for:
* Flexible hours;
* Expenses for hardware and software
This is a great course from Paul Kelly at Imperial College - I took it when studying there and found it fascinating, although I should have worked much harder on it.
You should have a look at the lecture notes. If the course is too advanced, you can look for its predecessor, which introduces RISC architecture very well and constitutes a strong starting point for anyone interested in this field.
They don't seem to be making a lot, considering all the hype surrounding Ghost for the last year or more.
I am using Ghost (self hosted) for my blog and find it brilliant but I think the ecosystem needs more time to develop and sustain itself. So the jury is still out I guess...
I've always wanted to read Treasure Island but just never quite got the time to do it.
Approaching my 30s and working on side projects, I spend most of my reading time on startup books and articles now. It's highly informative and sometimes entertaining, but it feels I am missing out on other things.
Maybe I need a little fiction to broaden my horizons...
It's still very readable to me. I'd definitely proofread more if I were him but no need to be so harsh (I don't know if English is his first language).
It was overall a long and well written post, with a clear structure and insightful content.
Also, the article could have been spotless grammatically speaking but utterly uninteresting - I would certainly enjoy the opposite more.
The message is more important than the technique at the end of the day.
It's really cool to see more projects tackling location problems. The API is very simple which is another great plus.
Had Redis Geo been around at the time we replatformed at Hailo we would have given it some serious consideration. But instead we have developed our own solution and open sourced a library in Go called "geoindex" to store and retrieve geo information: https://github.com/hailocab/go-geoindex .
I am currently learning Japanese. My level would be "lower intermediate": I can write hiragana/katakana and know about 100+ kanjis. But I am not satisfied with my oral fluency.
Moreover, since my commute to work is short, I have also started watching a short 5min anime to pick up basic everyday Japanese conversational skills.
Additionally, I plan to spend at least 10 minutes chatting in Japanese everyday to one of my colleagues who understands the language.
I'll do this for a month or two and check where I am after this period. I do believe the key to learning any language (especially if you are not in the country) is to practise every day and use the expressions learned on the day in different contexts to cement them in your memory. This also means you most likely have to find someone who speaks the language fluently or at least understands it to an acceptable level.
Obviously, I'll have to come up with another technique if I see no progress.
I read a similar article on the BBC which stated that Abenomics rejuvenated the Japanese stock market and improved the country's exports, so the government was expecting that companies which generated additional income thanks to their import would increase their employees' salaries, which seems not to have been the case.
Is there any way the government could have predicted that the windfall from stock market rise and exports would not trickle down to the general public?
Awesome article! The diagrams made it extremely easy for me to recall how A* worked. I now vividly remember graph traversal theory classes an exercises from University time!
I guess the implementation effort greatly varies depending on the programming language and the libraries at one's disposal. However, I believe that even for someone not too versed into data structures, the priority queue should be relatively easy to implement.
Before making this study, what were your predictions? Would have have expected Wu-Tang and GZA to be near the top?
What did you expect the average to be?
It would be very interesting to do something similar for rockers too.
"If I was "Matt" in the article, and if the author was my best friend, and a very important one at that, I would rather divorce my wife than move, if the move would endanger the friendship I had with the author".
Wow that's taking it to one extreme. What if this job was extremely rewarding financially for your wive or turned out to be what she really wanted to do for years? Would you not support her in this endeavour?
I think true, lasting male friendship should not necessarily imply frequent meetings among friends, but it should definitely entail something along the lines of "I've got your back, and I know you've got mine buddy". Also a lot of things in male friendship do not need to be explicitly communicated unlike female friendship (No need for endless text/messages saying "I love you man!").
It's very important to have friends with whom you share common interests and activities, but they are not necessarily your best friends. Your best friends are generally the ones you've known for decade(s) and regardless of where they are , will be ready to jump in a field of fire with you and come to your aid when times are tough. There's an unwritten contract among best friends; there's an unpronounced oath among men who hold each other in high esteem.
Can anyone put in numbers what the benefit is for FBK in paying so much for whatsapp? I just don't understand how a messaging company can be "worth" so much, even after extrapolating the expansion in user base.
Don't get me wrong - WhatsApp is a great product and very easy to use on top of that (using phone number as id is a great idea to onboard users in a very intuitive way). But I fail to see where this valuation is coming from.
At Pie, we are building the next generation fleet management platform, enhancing it with our routing and mapping expertise. To reach those goals, we have created a micro-services platform designed for the cloud age using exciting technologies such as Docker, Cassandra, Terraform, etc.
Join us!
Pie is currently seeking a Dev/Ops engineer to: * manage our orchestration scripts via Terraform * manage our monitoring pipeline * manage our deployment tools * help optimise our Docker build process and setup * work with Data and Back-End engineers on ad-hoc or planned tasks * introduce solutions or new technologies that can solve our needs
You will have a broad scope here but will always be assisted by a very supportive and dynamic team.
Benefits:
We pay a very competitive salary, but on top of that we offer options for: * Flexible hours; * Expenses for hardware and software
Please apply here: http://pie-mapping.breezy.hr/p/61f7a831a7c3-dev-ops-engineer...