We want you to be a happy human, writing Rails code, and helping us build a great, inclusive culture.
We build financial tools that help people get more safety out of a thinning social safety net. We are proud to be doing that work because it matters a lot to a lot of people.
True Link Financial | San Francisco | Software Engineer | Onsite
We exist to provide quality financial services for all: from protecting granddad’s money from scammers to providing supplemental financial tools that support disabled Veterans.
About us:
- 90% of our work is in React and Rails, 5% is in Java, and about 5% is DevOps—AWS
- Our team works to meet high standards of usability, security, and availability - because our customers depend on our products for their immediate (today's groceries) and long-term (retirement investments) financial needs. So we move fast, but we can't be cavalier about breaking things.
- We also get to experiment and build cool things: We've used Twilio to craft a useful and constantly-improving IVR for customer service, and we help make our customers and operations folks happy by processing inquiries via SMS.
We'd love to chat if:
- You've got a minimum of two years of software engineering experience, preferably with Ruby on Rails .
- You’re a nice person who has worked on hairy, wacky full-stack code in production.
- You enjoy exploring implementation options and collaborating with product folks.
- You can improve the codebase without being rude, judgmental or arrogant about it.
- You would describe yourself less as more of a 'session musician' (i.e. Carol Kaye) than a 'rockstar'.
- You're looking for a full-time, on-site role in San Francisco.
Our engineering team is striving for true inclusion, since we know what it's like to be underrepresented in tech. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, or disability status.
Software Engineer | True Link Financial | San Francisco, CA (onsite)
A YC company in 2013, True Link Financial exists to provide quality financial services for all: from protecting grandma’s money from scammers to providing supplemental financial tools that support disabled Veterans.
About us:
* 90% of our work is in React and Rails, 5% is in Java, and about 5% is DevOps—AWS
* Our team works to meet high standards of usability, security, and availability - because our customers depend on our products for their immediate (today's groceries) and long-term (retirement investments) financial needs. So we move fast, but we can't be cavalier about breaking things.
* We also get to experiment and build cool things: We've used Twilio to craft a useful and constantly-improving IVR for customer service, and we help make our customers and operations folks happy by processing inquiries via SMS.
We'll probably get along wonderfully if:
* You've got a minimum of 10 months of software engineering experience, preferably with Ruby on Rails
* You’re a nice person who has worked on hairy, wacky full-stack code in production
* You enjoy exploring implementation options and collaborating with product folks
* You can improve the codebase without being rude, judgmental or arrogant about it
* You would describe yourself less as more of a 'session musician' (e.g. Carol Kaye) than a 'rockstar'
* You're looking for a full-time, on site role in San Francisco
Our engineering team is striving for true inclusion, since we know what it's like to be underrepresented in tech. Our engineers didn't go to 'top CS schools' and have fought to get into this industry, so we question all tech industry platitudes. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, or disability status.
Software Engineer | True Link Financial | San Francisco, CA (onsite)
Our software stands valiantly between scammers and grandma's money.
I found out about this big-hearted YC company from the June 1st Who's Hiring thread and started working full-time on June 15th. Here are some things I've done since then:
- Helped to train & mentor our talented first-job engineer (sourced through Hacker News!)
- Built internal features that made our Customer Support folks pretty much squeal with excitement
- Got to attend & report back on a brilliant event called 'Disrupt Bias' - featuring top researchers in that field
- Attended an INCREDIBLE annual offsite held at a beautiful North Bay ranch
- Watched 'lightning talks' by various team members about the Fermi Paradox, Frank Lloyd Wright, Coco Chanel & many more
- Was treated with compassion after a pretty ridiculous security misstep :/
- Got selected to speak at an upcoming conference that hasn't published its speaker list yet. :)
- Learned a ton about how payment processing works under the hood
- Used Twilio to add functionality to our phone system so our CS friends have a lower call volume
We're looking for nice people who have worked on hairy, wacky production full-stack code before - someone who can make things better without being rude, judgemental or arrogant about it. We'd prefer session musicians over rockstars.
Email [email protected] and we'll get back to you within 2 business days, pinky swear!
keywords for you CMD+F types (not requirements) - rails, RoR, Jumpman, Jumpman, Jumpman, ruby, fintech, full-stack, chinchillas
Software Engineer | True Link Financial | San Francisco, CA (onsite)
Our software stands valiantly between scammers and grandma's money.
I found out about this big-hearted YC company from the June 1st Who's Hiring thread and started working full-time on June 15th. Here are some things I've done since then:
- Learned a ton about how payment processing works under the hood
- Used Twilio to add functionality to our phone system so our CS friends have a lower call volume
- Gotten coffee/lunch with pretty much everyone on the team (we're still small)
- Increased gif / screencap usage in PRs & code reviews
- Automated transaction auditing, saving lots of person-hours && increased test coverage
- Helped translate fast-speaking Spanish on a few CS calls
- Observed how a nimble startup implements Grown-Up-Business-Level security
- Finally actually learned what ruby's #inject method is all about
- Had a real reason to consult POODR
We're looking for nice people who have worked on hairy, wacky production full-stack code before - someone who can make things better without being rude, judgemental or arrogant about it. We'd prefer session musicians over rockstars.
Email [email protected] and we'll get back to you within 2 business days, pinky swear!
keywords for you CMD+F types (not requirements) - rails, RoR, ruby, fintech, full-stack, chinchillas
Software Engineer | True Link Financial | San Francisco, CA (onsite)
Our software stands valiantly between scammers and grandma's money.
I found out about this big-hearted YC company from the June 1st Who's Hiring thread and started working full-time on June 15th. Here are some things I've done since then:
- Learned a ton about how payment processing works under the hood
- Used Twilio to add functionality to our phone system so our CS friends have a lower call volume
- Gotten coffee/lunch with pretty much everyone on the team (we're still small)
- Automated transaction auditing, saving lots of person-hours && increased test coverage
- Helped translate fast-speaking Spanish on a few CS calls
- Observed how a nimble startup implements Grown-Up-Business-Level security
- Finally actually learned what ruby's #inject method is all about
- Had a real reason to consult POODR
We're looking for nice people who have worked on hairy, wacky production full-stack code before - someone who can make things better without being rude, judgemental or arrogant about it. We'd prefer session musicians over rockstars.
Email [email protected] and we'll get back to you within 2 business days, pinky swear!
keywords for you CMD+F types (not requirements) - rails, RoR, ruby, fintech, full-stack, chinchillas
I'll do a proper testimonial later that's ready for the site, but I was a member of Sumeet's WDI (San Francisco) class and I can say that he's not only a talented instructor, but he's also hard-working and compassionate one as well. When you're spending that much time with someone, for 12 weeks, you find out a lot about them. The more I learn about Sumeet, the more I admire him.
This one is generally highly recommended. Didn't work for my laptop, but I think it was stolen by professionals that wiped it without ever powering it on.
You can't find developers because everyone in the Greater SF Bay Area is looking for the perfectly seasoned developer that has deep experience in their given stack.
It reminds me of a grownup having Play-Doh time with toddlers. The grownup takes the time to make some recognizable object (a dog, a human figure, an ice cream cone) and then the toddler starts grabbing for it. This is how many young companies act with talent. They don't want to invest in people, they don't want to bring on interns or junior folks. They want high-output plug-and-play rockstar senior devs. And they want them on their terms.
Some of you might see things differently, but that's the impression I'm getting from all of the listings I'm seeing in my job search (for a junior dev role.) There are some companies that are making the long-term investment in finding the less refined talent and developing it, but they are hard to find.
I hope other people see this trend and that I'm not just entirely saturated in the pungent juice of sour grapes.
I noticed that suspenders(thoughtbot) also had that option. They used hub, which I think is a bit more intrusive than just installing the octokit gem. I'm interested to see what you come up with! :)
So, I did something similar, and I found that one of my least favorite things was going into the browser to create and link the github repo. Using the octokit gem, I automated that part. Feel free to swipe some code from my gist:
If I could do one thing for you, I would make it possible for you to parent your first like your third.
But it's impossible.
I wish you could cowboy-code your way through infanthood, like a parent of two can:
"Chill out, baby! Your diaper isn't that wet." or
"You can't crawl yet, so just stay in the middle of the room while I run out to the car"
Please believe that we've gotten this far as a species because we're fairly fault-tolerant. We're built to survive. I know that preventable tragedies happen all the time, but don't let fear run your life.
If you help out your wife with as many things as you possibly can, you'll all survive with your sanity intact.
Gear: Boppy, mirror that enables you to see the baby in your rear view mirror, good low-light camera, good photo library/storage solution (Picasa, Flickr, whatever), cheap lightweight stroller for quick trips, Ergobaby
Does anyone else find this app sort of overwhelming? Not necessarily in a bad way either.
I remember when my boss showed me a flurry of vines from her trip to Washington DC, I found myself feeling a bit disoriented as I tried to catch up with the rapidly switching contexts of each video.
The same things happens to me when I'm scrolling through a feed. It's strange to me that it doesn't happen with pictures, but I can only describe it as being teleported through the globe in rapid-fire mode.
We want you to be a happy human, writing Rails code, and helping us build a great, inclusive culture.
We build financial tools that help people get more safety out of a thinning social safety net. We are proud to be doing that work because it matters a lot to a lot of people.