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manuelflara

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manuelflara
·4 lata temu·discuss
Joyride | Senior Backend Engineer | Full-time | Remote (EU timezones) | €80k - €100k | joyride.breezy.hr We're a bootstrapped, profitable, fully-remote company (30+ people from 14 different countries, over 50% engineers) with some popular products in the dating space, and with a very exciting new social app launching soon.

  We are looking for:
  - Senior Backend Engineers with strong experience with PHP7+ (we run 8). Bonus points for having asynchronous programming experience (amphp or reactphp, node.js is fine as well).

  We offer:
  - €80k - €100k
  - 30 days paid vacation + your local holidays
  - Great work-life balance - work whenever you want from wherever you are. Results - not hours. We care about what you achieve
  - No bullshit - we are a fact- and engineering-driven company (including the founders)

  Apply at https://joyride.breezy.hr/ - You'll also find a summary of the process there.

  If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to [email protected]
manuelflara
·5 lat temu·discuss
This is all wild speculation on our part, as AFAIK, there hasn't been any direct attacks between two nations that have nuclear bombs except some skirmishes here or there (and being able to do that doesn't warrant an extra $24B spending). At most, war by satellite (USA supports country A, Russia supports country B, and A and B bomb each other). Maybe I'm being unimaginative, but I can't see how direct attacks between China and US wouldn't escalate to a nuclear war, even just due to egos.
manuelflara
·5 lat temu·discuss
Would the US be willing to launch a bunch of non-nuclear missiles to China, though? Because I'd also bet they wouldn't. And if they would be, the missiles they already have would already work
manuelflara
·6 lat temu·discuss
Well, it makes a lot of sense that companies that make money in hospitality and transport would be taking a big hit. Other unicorns like Dropbox, Stripe etc that work pretty much exclusively online, however, are doing fine.
manuelflara
·13 lat temu·discuss
I don't think so. He just got a bunch of customers to pay for advertisement on his site. Like any business supported on ads, basically.