I've used a lot of Redmine, Phabricator and Jira. Redmine feels really old and dealing with upgrades that will necessarily break one of the plugin needed to make it decent is painful. If you don't touch it, it works just fine though. Phabricator is really cool, requires some good tech knowledge to administrate, biggest pain point was the ci cd apps that were more complex than the rest. Jira is what I'm currently using, works great for all but your Jira admin will decide of your happiness, a bad setup with bad workflow will kill productivity.
There is an interview of Snowden by John Oliver where he comes to that conclusion as well, asking people about the usual things that surfaced and people just meh, then translates it into: gov got your d*ck pick and people get upset a whole lot more
Biased as well, but for that other side of the world: Atlassian Engineering culture is amazing, and repeatedly ranked best place to work in Australia. Atlassian is also very actively hiring in Sydney with great relocation experience (feel free to poke me on that).
I've seen on multiple win10 laptops where it just get all download bandwidth (no noticeable upload) to a point where websites won't open and skype looses connection. That's on a 5Mb line. I do see many connections opened by a single process on Microsoft IPs mentioned.
I believe it was really only update related but I saw it happen when actually no updates were available.
I just ended up limiting the corresponding process bandwidth whenever it gets annoying.
One into the other, I'm mainly just very surprised this kind of thing can happen. Except that I'm fairly happy with win10 though as opposed to the usual MS bashing we can hear.
One thing into
webridge.asia is an IT service and product company,
and we are looking for some more pationate people to join
one of the best working environment in Cambodia.
I'm happy to see Angular2 getting closer to a release, and as many other companies we are in the case of what decision after Angular1.
One thing I think will be a great push for Angular2 is Ionic2 which alone is reason enough but to be honest I prefer the `Aurelia way` when it comes to writing web apps which sounds more natural, Sad to see Aurelia hype haven't took much so far (understandable that it's getting harder to get people on board a new `revolutionary` JS framework).
Well, 'Rent a White guy' was definitely a thing in Asian country (especially China) at least a few years back. And a little more back again (5-10 years) it was even common for companies business meeting to show a white guy at a meeting as a token of prosperity.
Same here, really great as it packs a lot. The new Gitlab 8 with the CI integrated is great as well but we preferred Phabricator for the extended feature.
Ultimately we decided not to embrace fully yet the Phabricator CI (harbormaster/drydock) as it's been changing a lot (it's a prototype after all) and breaking frequently so we have a mix of Harbormaster and Jenkins which works very well.
Phabricator can probably do all that through its event system (herald), but a few part of the CI (harbormaster) is partly a prototype application which makes the support/doc limited.
Launch a launching site with a countdown or a date at least, definitely easier to do mentally, and it will force you when the time is up.
As other said, don't launch both at the same time, don't focus too much on "will it work", for "completely finished" product it's no longer the right time.
I'd try to review your expectation:
-- One of them will take off like a rocket and I'm convinced of it
That's giving you too much pressure, just wait, see and iterate accordingly.
Doing a closed launch before the actual release date is another thing that can help feel "everything is really ready to go".
W.E Bridge Technologies is a Product and Service company operating in Phnom Penh city center (Cambodia). We develop custom solutions for major international clients using our strong partner network to reach US, Chinese and SEA market.
We are looking for a Technical lead of the Web development (title will depend on skill and experience). Our stacks consist mainly of PHP/Symfony2 and AngularJS depending on the projects but other tech need may arise. In top of that we use Vagrant, Ansible, docker, bower, grunt and composer regularly (Not all together obviously).
It's definitely an interesting way to look at how VR and robotics could affect us depending on the direction we take with it. I'm sensing a whole lot of Wall-E in that.
Being in an SME, we don't have dedicated HR and the screening/interviewing is distributed between a part of the executives (all with technical background). We always look (and even ask for in the job ads) for active github / blog...
What we will look for in those depends on the job obviously, but we will look. It's the same for my close network of people holding those responsibilities in similar companies (Europe, Asia, UAE).
Also in my experience IT staffing agencies most likely won't look/care.
On a side note, you say:
>> I'd very much prefer to only get judged by things I produce. Is that even possible?
isn't it exactly that:
>> (or have to do code interview)
Most of our desktop applications are made using C#/WPF/VS but I've been strongly considering Electron (http://electron.atom.io/) since Visual Studio Code was released which is made with it, and really doesn't have the feel of "yet another web app trying to look desktop-y". I'll most definitely try it out for our next desktop app project.