I am working on a SSL certificate monitor. It comes with its own probe that can scan your private infra and collect the certs for monitoring. It also has a web interface for monitoring SSL certificate of any public domain. There are a few chinks here and there. Hope I can get it over by this month.
Fingerprints are a very feeble form of biometrics. India's, Aadhar - A biometric-based ID system that primarily uses fingerprints is the best case study to understand this. Fingerprints, like every other human organ, are subject to wear and tear, this combined with probabilistic algorithms to find a match for a given set of fingerprints makes it a fragile system for "unique" identification.
I'm new to Golang and have been exploring it for a while. Go isn't simple to me when it comes to web dev. It starts with the scarcity of resources to learn from. I'm looking for how to structure the codebase(boilerplates, best practices etc), how to go about unit and integration testing, dependency and configuration management. Are there any resources somebody here can point to regarding these topics?.
I have 3+ years of relevant experience and have been part of the founding team in a now-defunct health tech startup. I can understand both business terms and legal terms pertaining to HIPAA and GDPR. My specialty lies in creating quick prototypes for you to validate your idea in the market.
Technologies: Ruby on Rails, PHP, Elixir and Ember.js, Google Cloud, Heroku, Redis, MySQL and PostgreSQL
Location: Chennai, India.
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: willing to consider for the right opportunity
I am a Ruby on Rails developer with 4.5 years of experience. I have worked on both full stack and API only rails apps. I also possess experience in building and maintaining continuous delivery pipelines and hands-on experience with AWS, Google Cloud and Heroku.
Have you had a chance to look at truecaller? It crowdsources data on who is spamming, advertising and marketing. In India where you get sales pitches even from a personal number, truecaller is a savior. Instead of having to answer questions, crowdsourcing would be a viable one