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CyberArk (Conjur team) | Mid-Snr Infrastructure Engineer | US REMOTE OR NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS | FULL-TIME The Conjur infrastructure team provides support and internal tooling to the product engineers working on Conjur and Conjur Enterprise as well as a suite of associated products and integrations. Our job is to make sure engineering has the tools and facilities available to do their jobs with minimal infra-related effort on their part. We’re hiring our fourth engineer to help with that effort. ABOUT US

We work on a wide variety of projects with a heavy emphasis on automation, and are striving to increase engineer self-service capabilities. Experience with any specific items in our stack are not required, we expect only that you're a generalist enthusiastic about learning (with our full support of course). There is no on-call aspect to this position, and we have a strong emphasis on sustainable working hours (9-5, five days a week, with meeting-free Focus Friday to work on pet projects).

A quick list of some of our stack: Containers, Ansible, Jenkins, Cloud IaaS (AWS, GCP, Azure etc), Slack, Node.js, github.com, Bash

TO APPLY

Attempt to solve our engineering puzzle (we promise it's fun, submissions go directly to engineering, and it's how all three of us came to work here) at https://www.conjur.org/careers/puzzle/.

A list of the keywords that an automated scanner would search your resume for: https://www.conjur.org/job-openings/infrastructure-engineer/

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LEARN MORE

- https://conjur.org (our secret service, LGPLv3)

- https://www.conjur.org/careers/ (about our team, open positions)

- https://www.conjur.org/blog/ (our blog, which talks more about who we are and what we do)


CyberArk (Conjur team) | Mid-Snr Infrastructure Engineer | US REMOTE OR NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS | FULL-TIME The Conjur infrastructure team provides support and internal tooling to the product engineers working on Conjur and Conjur Enterprise as well as a suite of associated products and integrations. Our job is to make sure engineering has the tools and facilities available to do their jobs with minimal infra-related effort on their part. We’re hiring our fourth engineer to help with that effort.

ABOUT US

We work on a wide variety of projects with a heavy emphasis on automation, and are striving to increase engineer self-service capabilities. Experience with any specific items in our stack are not required, we expect only that you're a generalist enthusiastic about learning (with our full support of course). There is no on-call aspect to this position, and we have a strong emphasis on sustainable working hours (9-5, five days a week, with meeting-free Focus Friday to work on pet projects).

A quick list of some of our stack: Containers, Ansible, Jenkins, Cloud IaaS (AWS, GCP, Azure etc), Slack, Node.js, github.com, Bash

TO APPLY

Attempt to solve our engineering puzzle (we promise it's fun, submissions go directly to engineering, and it's how all three of us came to work here) at https://www.conjur.org/careers/puzzle/.

A list of the keywords that an automated scanner would search your resume for: https://www.conjur.org/job-openings/infrastructure-engineer/

----

LEARN MORE

- https://conjur.org (our secret service, LGPLv3)

- https://www.conjur.org/careers/ (about our team, open positions)

- https://www.conjur.org/blog/ (our blog, which talks more about who we are and what we do)


CyberArk (Conjur team) | Front End / Backend / DevOps / Security | REMOTE (OR ONSITE NEWTON, MA) | FULL-TIME The CyberArk Conjur team helps people write super reliable software that's hard to hack. We're building tools that make the best security practices convenient for developers, ops, and security teams. We're hiring engineering managers, product owners, and of course, engineers.

ABOUT US

We're a busy team, thanks to the increasing success of our product: the Conjur appliance secures the entire software development and deployment lifecycle for companies who want to ship features as fast as possible without increasing their risk of security breaches.

We are looking for experienced software engineers to join our team. Conjur engineers work on a wide variety of projects, from integrations with some of today's most popular DevOps tools to moonshot projects that seek to revolutionize the way engineering teams factor in security when deploying applications.

We know that if you're a professional engineer, experience with specific tools or languages can usually be picked up quickly. That being said, Conjur engineers are using the following tools on a more-or-less daily basis:

* Ruby, Rails, Golang, Postgres, and JS

* Docker, Git, and Jenkins

* Kubernetes, OpenShift, Cloud Foundry

* Puppet, Chef, Ansible

FOR MORE INFORMATION

https://conjur.org (our secret service, AGPLv3) https://www.conjur.org/careers/engineering.html (about our team, and our DevOps puzzle!) https://conjur.org/blog (our blog, which talks more about who we are and what we do)


I was in the required but too poor group. I had to borrow others or do the work by hand. I eventually was able to get gifted one from one of those "help families in poverty with school supplies" donation drives. I had those books with tables of logarithms and one other one constantly checked out from the public library just so I could do my homework.


Slide rules Log tables and later on steam tables that takes me back I was probably in one of the last cohorts that used slide rules at school


A calculator that can handle logarithms and trigonometric functions can be had for a few dollars second-hand (on ebay I see some for $3.50 with free shipping). Slide rules can be found at yard sales and flea markets for next to nothing.


16 year old me had no clue, no help from parents or other adults and teachers that disallowed all calculators that weren't the required ones. I learned about they books of tables from an old man who helped me withmy homework I was doing at the public library, it's likely the only way he knew how. Not to mention, my main source of food during this time was the free school lunches and I was working 3rd shift to help pay rent and utilities, $5 was a lot of money (to us at least, this would have been mid 90s).


Yeah, fair enough. TI has a very effective racket going, and a lot of people and institutions have bought into it wholesale, and the main marks are uninformed and easily pressured students and parents who think it will help lead to success.

Sorry to hear about your tough financial situation in the past. It’s a tragedy that kids go hungry in such a rich country. If an expensive calculator is going to be mandated in school, there should be financial aid available for it.


I can confirm it's drilled into Army soldiers as well, so I'd bet on the air force and navy being the same way.


It's one thing to pledge to this, yet another to actually be in the silo with the alarms blaring and the the orders coming in with seconds to spare. It's impossible to predict in advance how someone would respond to this situation.


I sometimes lose words. Like chair disappears from my mind, I can describe one, I know what one is, but the label for it is gone and even if you say it I may or may not recognize it. I don't have dyslexia, but a mental health issue that causes it. The funny part is names do the same thing, they're labels for specific people.


I experience this, too!


I do this as well!


You are grossly misrepresenting the situation and what your own link says. If wages + tips don't equal the normal minimum wage of $7.25, the employer is required to make up the difference.

They get, at worst, normal minimum wage.


Ack, sorry, I totally missed that highly important bit! Unfortunately too late to delete.


My 2011 only has the gas gauge, without any gallon markers on it and numerous 2016/2017 cars I've been test driving haven't had it. It's certain classes of cars that have had it for quite a while, nowhere close to all.


Invodo | Test Automation Engineer | Austin, Tx | Onsite full-time, Remote for the right person.

Not going to post the whole job description here, it's available at http://www.invodo.com/careers/test-automation-engineer/. We're looking for a developer with a strong testing/QA background or a QA engineer with strong development background. If you have questions, or are interested but don't think you meet all the requirements, drop me a line as well.

Reachable at mbrace@invodo.com


You're showing your ignorance of what it's like to be poor. It takes time and money to get to those locations, two things the poor don't have. The bus trip, or train, or gas in a car that's used has to cost less than what the app would gain them and that money/time needs to not be slotted for anything else (such as making it to and from jobs until payday).

Someone elsewhere in the thread said that the poor aren't good with managing money. From my experience, it's the opposite. Imagine you're behind on every bill, with less money coming in than it costs to have electricity, get to and from work, eat and pay rent. You literally rotate which bills get paid based on what will be shut off next. If someone gives you $100, you could pay more of the bills, or put it in savings, or spend it on entertainment/something fun. In 3 months, no matter what happens, you'll be back in the same state you are now. Spending it on entertainment to feel like a person isn't a bad decision at that point. It's just not one that those who live privileged lives would make


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