This seems great. In the past I had set up Flickr to at least email all my daughter's grandparents so they could see new photos of her. As Flickr is dying and this case doesn't seem well handled by Instagram/Google Photos this seems like a really nice way to share family photos with everyone.
I'd never heard of Donor Advised Funds before. I'd be curious if others have had a similar good (or bad) experience. I'm thinking I might do it for 2017 and wondering if there are any other things to be aware of.
For a side project I've deployed some simple endpoints to Heroku and used Spark (http://sparkjava.com/). Spark is a Java Sinatra clone rather than full Rails.
That said, not sure I'd pick it for simple side-projects. Part of the benefit here is how it works for a large dev team, with a large codebase, etc.
The post mentions a few: Dropwizard for RESTful APIs (http://www.dropwizard.io which includes a bunch of good libraries), Guava, Guice, Hysterix, etc. We use Kafka for stream processing, Hadoop for batch processing.
I work at HubSpot, and was among the initially skeptical from having had bad experiences in Java in the distant past and spent more time in Ruby in the years prior which I mostly enjoyed.
The Java ecosystem truly saved itself from its own enterprise madness. Libraries and frameworks today look nothing like they did in the past. I think that is somewhat due to language features (annotations, lambdas, etc) but also due to a cultural shift in what is valued.
One of the things I've appreciated more than I would have expected is by having a single back-end language we have very strong community of developers. There is no split among different factions. (I hear rumors of sharp divides between python and node camps at Uber, for example.) Even though technically we have a platform capable of running languages in many languages, the value of the community focused on a single back-end language toolchain is extremely valuable.
HubSpot | Cambridge/Boston/Dublin | full time, onsite
Looking for front-end (React/Flux, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (Java8, HBase, Kafka, Hadoop/Spark, ElasticSearch) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products. Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our products are helping transform how small businesses do marketing & sales so they grow while delighting their customers.
HubSpot | Cambridge/Boston/Dublin | full time, onsite
Looking for front-end (React/Flux, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (Java8, HBase, Kafka, Hadoop/Spark, ElasticSearch) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products. Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our products are helping transform how small businesses do marketing & sales so they grow while delighting their customers.
The products we build help small businesses grow. More on our product team and roles on our site: http://product.hubspot.com/ and our company culture: http://culturecode.com
Or ping me (champion at hubspot) with any questions.
HubSpot | Cambridge/Boston/Dublin | full time, onsite
Looking for front-end (React/Flux, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (Java8, HBase, Kafka, Hadoop/Spark, ElasticSearch) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products. Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our products are helping transform how small businesses do marketing & sales so they grow while delighting their customers.
HubSpot is hiring for software developers in Cambridge/Boston and Dublin ONSITE.
Looking for front-end (React/Flux, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (java, hbase, kafka, hadoop) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products.
Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our marketing & sales platform help small businesses grow.
HubSpot is hiring for software developers in Cambridge/Boston and Dublin.
Looking for front-end (React/Flux, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (java, hbase, kafka, hadoop) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products.
Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our marketing & sales platform help small businesses grow.
Looking for front-end developers (React, ES6, Backbone, CoffeeScript) or back-end developers (Java, Dropwizard, Kafka, Elastic Search). Position is onsite in our beautiful office.
We're building platforms for sales & marketing software. Each team owns a core vertical of the product, and are given real responsibility and ownership of their components.
HubSpot is hiring for software developers & designers in Cambridge/Boston and Dublin.
Looking for front-end (React, Backbone, ES6/CoffeeScript) and back-end (java, hbase, kafka, hadoop) developers who enjoy working in small teams that own significant parts of our products. Developer autonomy and responsibility are what fuels our product culture. Our marketing & sales platform help small businesses grow.
Personally I've been a fan as it aligns incentives for developers to care deeply about code quality/stability/etc. YMMV if not working on a SaaS product where build/deploy is measured in just a few minutes.
We've invested in a mix of both automated testing, of course, and a lot of monitoring/alerting/tracing to detect problems quickly. That can act as a safety net for deploying frequently that problems will be caught early and can be corrected (rollback or fix & roll-forward).
I'm a fan of saying we've chosen to optimize for MTTR instead of MTBF.
I'm not sure how to best characterize it in the very beginning (and I wasn't there) but in the 3.5 years I've been here it has largely been smaller services -- even down to things like the app's nav is its own service. More recently I think we've really embraced microservices (the number of deployables has grown ~2x in the last year).
Personally I think after 5 (and definitely 10) engineers working on a single app I would look at whether you can break it down into independent services.