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maxrobeyns

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maxrobeyns
·8개월 전·discuss
iGent AI | London, UK (Hybrid, 3 days/week) | Multiple Roles | Full-time | https://igent.ai

We're building coding agent systems for large-scale industrial projects, and an agentic cloud.

Why join:

- Small, senior team: ex-DeepMind, OpenAI, Microsoft Research, Amazon, and Cambridge University, multiple PhDs

- Hard problems across distributed systems, OS/sandboxing, ML and LLM inference/post‑training. Real users; ship to prod.

- Big Tech salary + options.

Open roles (all Senior/Staff; hands-on):

- Full-Stack - design and build new coding agent experiences, working with a top designer

- Agent Infrastructure - branching sandboxes, filesystems, orchestration, observability

- Backend / Eng Lead - build cloud from first principles; distribution, sync, load-balancing, events

- LLM inference & post-training - long context tech, RLVR, vLLM, performance

- Devrel & GTM – live-developing, tutorials, OSS/community, hackathons - drive adoption

You might be a fit if:

- 5+ years building and operating production systems (or exceptional evidence).

- Own 0→1 projects; comfortable reading & generating lots of code.

- Public work (OSS/papers/blogs/products) or strong portfolio.

Do apply! https://www.igent.ai/join-us
maxrobeyns
·2년 전·discuss
My initial reaction to the ad, upon watching it in the launch event was "huh, that's a fun reference to the Hydraulic Press Channel". The slapstick elements (trumpet noise, squishy balls) made it come across as light-hearted, rather than an ominous display of force by a large company crushing artists' tools.

This idea of 'squashing all these tools down to a thin slab of glass' made sense given their somewhat unusual focus on the thinness of the device. It was a bit of a throwback to the early 2010s smartphone innovation, where the size of the devices was the yardstick by which manufacturers would outdo each other. I would charitably interpret it as an uninspired marketing team trying to spin some version of Jobs' classic "the iPhone is simultaneously an iPod, phone and internet device" - however the party trick is old, and nobody's impressed anymore.

Perhaps the blowback is a sign of a wider weariness that people have accumulated towards big tech companies over the past few years, mixed with a nebulous malaise about 'AI' and what it means for the status quo and people's livelihoods.