This job post is closed and the position is probably filled. Please do not apply. Work for PSA Publishers and want to re-open this job? Use the edit link in the email when you posted the job!
Launched in 1994 by PSA Publishers Ltd in Switzerland, World-Architects pioneered the online publishing of architecture. Today, over 20 online national and regional platforms represent architects, landscape architects, interior designers, engineers, lighting designers, manufacturers, and architectural photographers from over 50 countries. Counting already 6 national and international Magazines, World-Architects writes high-quality content for Architects, covering social aspects, politics and industry topics like urban planning, engineering or design.
Our platforms are internationally recognized for their commitment to quality. You'll being joining the team to support and expand our continued growth.
Required
Minimum 5 years experience with PHP, including knowledge up to 8.2
Minimum 3 years experience with CSS, including knowledge of Tailwind
Minimum 3 years experience with JavaScript, including ES6 syntax
Working experience with the Laravel framework
Working experience with version control using git (GitHub)
High proficiency in written and spoken English, allowing fluid technical discussion
Desired
Experience working with Livewire
Experience working with Alpine.js
Experience working with SQL (MySQL/MariaDB) without an ORM
Experience working with ElasticSearch and/or Redis
Experience working with containers, including Docker
Experience creating CI/CD pipelines and deployments
Experience managing linux server environments
Experience designing and building HTTP APIs
Profile
You care about product and user/developer experience, and take pride in the quality of your work
You enjoy the constant challenges and learning that comes with software design and development
You can communicate effectively, whether on video or audio calls, or in a chat environment
You are not afraid to raise concerns, suggest improvements, or question the status quo
You can act on feedback from others and provide both helpful and respectful feedback yourself
You know how to contribute to and work effectively on a distributed, remote team
You know how to research, explore and successfully introduce new technologies
You seek to learn from others as well as share your knowledge and experience
Position
Independent contractor agreement
Full-time contract
100% remote position
Flexible working hours
You can act on feedback from others and provide both helpful and respectful feedback yourself
Paid vacations and sick days
Paid subscriptions (PhpStorm, Laracasts, etc)
Please mention the word UNREAL when applying to show you read the job post completely (#RMjE2LjczLjIxNi4yMzY=). This is a feature to avoid fake spam applicants. Companies can search these words to find applicants that read this and instantly see they're human.
Salary and compensation
$50,000 — $60,000/year
Benefits
๐ Distributed team
โฐ Async
๐ Paid time off
๐ Company retreats
๐ Learning budget
๐ No monitoring system
๐ We hire old (and young)
How do you apply?
This job post has been closed by the poster, which means they probably have enough applicants now. Please do not apply.
This job post is closed and the position is probably filled. Please do not apply. Work for SalesChamp B.V. and want to re-open this job? Use the edit link in the email when you posted the job!
**About us**\n\nWe are a small international company based in Heemstede, Netherlands who created an affordable multi-channel communication software taking the results of sales teams to the next level. Our vision at SalesChamp is to create the simplest, most effective and easy-to-use omnichannel communication platform in the world.\n\nSalesChamp has also an office in Brno, Czech Republic, and on top of that works with full remote team members. Our team has grown from 9 to 15 members in 2021 and there are amazing people working from Netherlands, Czechia, Slovakia, Albania and Russia.\n\n**Whom are we looking for?**\n\nWe're looking for a strong candidate experienced in Node.js and PHP to help us build cool new features within our current web application and to help us create a whole new product of our company. Weโre looking for a person whoโs simply going to get things done and enjoy the spirit of our international team.\n\n**What will be the scope of your work?**\n* Backend programming (70%)\n* Meetings (10%)\n* Bug fixing (10%)\n* Code reviews (10%)\n\n**On the server side you will need:**\n* PHP, ES6, Node.js and Typescript\n* Nette (PHP framework)\n* Express.js (Nest.js is an advantage)\n* RabbitMQ, MongoDB and MySQL\n* Docker\n\n**What we can offer:**\n* Contractor based cooperation\n* Competitive location based salary and flexible working schedule\n* You can work from one of our offices or remotely\n* Friendly team full of amazing and kind people\n* Workstation budget\n* Christmas and birthday bonuses\n* Team buildings, Happy hours (remote work support) \n\nPlease mention the word **PARADISE** when applying to show you read the job post completely (#RMjE2LjczLjIxNi4yMzY=). This is a feature to avoid spam applicants. Companies can search these words to find applicants that read this and see they're human.\n\n \n\n#Salary and compensation\n
$40,000 — $90,000/year\n
\n\n#Location\nEurope
# How do you apply?\n\nThis job post has been closed by the poster, which means they probably have enough applicants now. Please do not apply.
#### Who we are?\nWe are small international company **based in the Netherlands** who created an affordable **multi-channel communication software** taking the results of sales teams to the next level. Our app helps in the field of direct sales, where we focus on the Dutch market. Our vision at SalesChamp is to create the simplest, most effective and easy-to-use omnichannel communication platform in the world.\n\nAs SalesChamp has also an **office in Brno, Czech Republic**, and on top of that works with **full remote team members**, the structure can be defined as a hybrid remote set up.\n\n#### Whom are we looking for?\n\nWe're looking for a **strong candidate experienced in Node.js and PHP** to help us build cool new features within our current web application and to help us create a whole new product of our company. You'll be working "side by side" with our international development team bringing up ideas and solutions for some of the current challenges we're facing.\n\n#### What will be the scope of your work?\n\n* Backend programming\n* Proposal of solution of necessary changes in the application\n* Bug fixing\n* Code reviews\n\n#### On the server side you will need:\n\n* PHP, ES6, Node.js and Typescript\n* Nette (PHP framework)\n* RabbitMQ, MongoDB and MySQL\n\n#### What we can offer:\n\n* Contractor based cooperation\n* Competitive salary and flexible working schedule\n* Trips to our head office in Netherlands once a year\n* Friendly team of beautiful young people\n* Team buildings, Happy hours (remote work support) \n\nPlease mention the words **DELAY BONE HARVEST** when applying to show you read the job post completely (#RMjE2LjczLjIxNi4yMzY=). This is a feature to avoid spam applicants. Companies can search these words to find applicants that read this and see they're human.\n\n \n\n#Salary and compensation\n
$50,000 — $70,000/year\n
\n\n#Location\nEurope
# How do you apply?\n\nIf you're interested in the position we'd like to kindly ask you to send your CV to Roman, our HR Lead.\nHe'll get back to you shortly. Thanks a lot!
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This job post is closed and the position is probably filled. Please do not apply. Work for Splitgraph and want to re-open this job? Use the edit link in the email when you posted the job!
# We're building the Data Platform of the Future\nJoin us if you want to rethink the way organizations interact with data. We are a **developer-first company**, committed to building around open protocols and delivering the best experience possible for data consumers and publishers.\n\nSplitgraph is a **seed-stage, venture-funded startup hiring its initial team**. The two co-founders are looking to grow the team to five or six people. This is an opportunity to make a big impact on an agile team while working closely with the\nfounders.\n\nSplitgraph is a **remote-first organization**. The founders are based in the UK, and the company is incorporated in both USA and UK. Candidates are welcome to apply from any geography. We want to work with the most talented, thoughtful and productive engineers in the world.\n# Open Positions\n**Data Engineers welcome!** The job titles have "Software Engineer" in them, but at Splitgraph there's a lot of overlap \nbetween data and software engineering. We welcome candidates from all engineering backgrounds.\n\n[Senior Software Engineer - Backend (mainly Python)](https://www.notion.so/splitgraph/Senior-Software-Engineer-Backend-2a2f9e278ba347069bf2566950857250)\n\n[Senior Software Engineer - Frontend (mainly TypeScript)](https://www.notion.so/splitgraph/Senior-Software-Engineer-Frontend-6342cd76b0df483a9fd2ab6818070456)\n\nโ [**Apply to Job**](https://4o99daw6ffu.typeform.com/to/ePkNQiDp) โ (same form for both positions)\n\n# What is Splitgraph?\n## **Open Source Toolkit**\n\n[Our open-source product, sgr,](https://www.github.com/splitgraph/splitgraph) is a tool for building, versioning and querying reproducible datasets. It's inspired by Docker and Git, so it feels familiar. And it's powered by PostgreSQL, so it works seamlessly with existing tools in the Postgres ecosystem. Use Splitgraph to package your data into self-contained\ndata images that you can share with other Splitgraph instances.\n\n## **Splitgraph Cloud**\n\nSplitgraph Cloud is a platform for data cataloging, integration and governance. The user can upload data, connect live databases, or "push" versioned snapshots to it. We give them a unified SQL interface to query that data, a catalog to discover and share it, and tools to build/push/pull it.\n\n# Learn More About Us\n\n- Listen to our interview on the [Software Engineering Daily podcast](https://softwareengineeringdaily.com/2020/11/06/splitgraph-data-catalog-and-proxy-with-miles-richardson/)\n\n- Watch our co-founder Artjoms present [Splitgraph at the Bay Area ClickHouse meetup](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44CDs7hJTho)\n\n- Read our HN/Reddit posts ([one](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24233948) [two](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23769420) [three](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23627066) [four](https://old.reddit.com/r/datasets/comments/icty0r/we_made_40k_open_government_datasets_queryable/))\n\n- [Read our blog](https://www.splitgraph.com/blog)\n\n- Read the slides from our early (2018) presentations: ["Docker for Data"](https://www.slideshare.net/splitgraph/splitgraph-docker-for-data-119112722), [AHL Meetup](https://www.slideshare.net/splitgraph/splitgraph-ahl-talk)\n\n- [Follow us on Twitter](https://ww.twitter.com/splitgraph)\n\n- [Find us on GitHub](https://www.github.com/splitgraph)\n\n- [Chat with us in our community Discord](https://discord.gg/eFEFRKm)\n\n- Explore the [public data catalog](https://www.splitgraph.com/explore) where we index 40k+ datasets\n\n# How We Work: What's our stack look like?\n\nWe prioritize developer experience and productivity. We resent repetition and inefficiency, and we never hesitate to automate the things that cause us friction. Here's a sampling of the languages and tools we work with:\n\n- **[Python](https://www.python.org/) for the backend.** Our [core open source](https://www.github.com/splitgraph/splitgraph) tech is written in Python (with [a bit of C](https://github.com/splitgraph/Multicorn) to make it more interesting), as well as most of our backend code. The Python code powers everything from authentication routines to database migrations. We use the latest version and tools like [pytest](https://docs.pytest.org/en/stable/), [mypy](https://github.com/python/mypy) and [Poetry](https://python-poetry.org/) to help us write quality software.\n\n- **[TypeScript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/) for the web stack.** We use TypeScript throughout our web stack. On the frontend we use [React](https://reactjs.org/) with [next.js](https://nextjs.org/). For data fetching we use [apollo-client](https://www.apollographql.com/docs/react/) with fully-typed GraphQL queries auto-generated by [graphql-codegen](https://graphql-code-generator.com/) based on the schema that [Postgraphile](https://www.graphile.org/postgraphile) creates by introspecting the database.\n\n- [**PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org/) for the database, because of course.** Splitgraph is a company built around Postgres, so of course we are going to use it for our own database. In fact, we actually have three databases. We have `auth-db` for storing sensitive data, `registry-db` which acts as a [Splitgraph peer](https://www.splitgraph.com/docs/publishing-data/push-data) so users can push Splitgraph images to it using [sgr](https://www.github.com/splitgraph/splitgraph), and `cloud-db` where we store the schemata that Postgraphile uses to autogenerate the GraphQL server.\n\n- [**PL/pgSQL](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/plpgsql.html) and [PL/Python](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/plpython.html) for stored procedures.** We define a lot of core business logic directly in the database as stored procedures, which are ultimately [exposed by Postgraphile as GraphQL endpoints](https://www.graphile.org/postgraphile/functions/). We find this to be a surprisingly productive way of developing, as it eliminates the need for manually maintaining an API layer between data and code. It presents challenges for testing and maintainability, but we've built tools to help with database migrations and rollbacks, and an end-to-end testing framework that exercises the database routines.\n\n- [**PostgREST](https://postgrest.org/en/v7.0.0/) for auto-generating a REST API for every repository.** We use this excellent library (written in [Haskell](https://www.haskell.org/)) to expose an [OpenAPI](https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification)-compatible REST API for every repository on Splitgraph ([example](http://splitgraph.com/mildbyte/complex_dataset/latest/-/api-schema)).\n\n- **Lua ([luajit](https://luajit.org/luajit.html) 5.x), C, and [embedded Python](https://docs.python.org/3/extending/embedding.html) for scripting [PgBouncer](https://www.pgbouncer.org/).** Our main product, the "data delivery network", is a single SQL endpoint where users can query any data on Splitgraph. Really it's a layer of PgBouncer instances orchestrating temporary Postgres databases and proxying queries to them, where we load and cache the data necessary to respond to a query. We've added scripting capabilities to enable things like query rewriting, column masking, authentication, ACL, orchestration, firewalling, etc.\n\n- **[Docker](https://www.docker.com/) for packaging services.** Our CI pipeline builds every commit into about a dozen different Docker images, one for each of our services. A production instance of Splitgraph can be running over 60 different containers (including replicas).\n\n- **[Makefile](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html) and** [docker-compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/) **for development.** We use [a highly optimized Makefile](https://www.splitgraph.com/blog/makefile) and `docker-compose` so that developers can easily spin-up a stack that mimics production in every way, while keeping it easy to hot reload, run tests, or add new services or configuration.\n\n- **[Nomad](https://www.nomadproject.io/) for deployment and [Terraform](https://www.terraform.io/) for provisioning.** We use Nomad to manage deployments and background tasks. Along with Terraform, we're able to spin up a Splitgraph cluster on AWS, GCP, Scaleway or Azure in just a few minutes.\n\n- **[Airflow](https://airflow.apache.org/) for job orchestration.** We use it to run and monitor jobs that maintain our catalog of [40,000 public datasets](https://www.splitgraph.com/blog/40k-sql-datasets), or ingest other public data into Splitgraph.\n\n- **[Grafana](https://grafana.com/), [Prometheus](https://prometheus.io/), [ElasticSearch](https://www.elastic.co/), and [Kibana](https://www.elastic.co/kibana) for monitoring and metrics.** We believe it's important to self-host fundamental infrastructure like our monitoring stack. We use this to keep tabs on important metrics and the health of all Splitgraph deployments.\n\n- **[Mattermost](https://mattermost.com/) for company chat.** We think it's absolutely bonkers to pay a company like Slack to hold your company communication hostage. That's why we self-host an instance of Mattermost for our internal chat. And of course, we can deploy it and update it with Terraform.\n\n- **[Matomo](https://matomo.org/) for web analytics.** We take privacy seriously, and we try to avoid including any third party scripts on our web pages (currently we include zero). We self-host our analytics because we don't want to share our user data with third parties.\n\n- **[Metabase](https://www.metabase.com/) and [Splitgraph](https://www.splitgraph.com) for BI and [dogfooding](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_your_own_dog_food)**. We use Metabase as a frontend to a Splitgraph instance that connects to Postgres (our internal databases), MySQL (Matomo's database), and ElasticSearch (where we store logs and DDN analytics). We use this as a chance to dogfood our software and produce fancy charts.\n\n- **The occasional best-of-breed SaaS services** **for organization.** As a privacy-conscious, independent-minded company, we try to avoid SaaS services as much as we can. But we still find ourselves unable to resist some of the better products out there. For organization we use tools like [Zoom](https://www.zoom.us) for video calls, [Miro](https://miro.com/) for brainstorming, [Notion](https://www.notion.so) for documentation (you're on it!), [Airtable for workflow management](https://airtable.com/), [PivotalTracker](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/) for ticketing, and [GitLab for dev-ops and CI](https://about.gitlab.com/).\n\n- **Other fun technologies** including [HAProxy](http://www.haproxy.org/), [OpenResty](https://openresty.org/en/), [Varnish](https://varnish-cache.org/), and bash. We don't touch them much because they do their job well and rarely break.\n\n# Life at Splitgraph\n**We are a young company building the initial team.** As an early contributor, you'll have a chance to shape our initial mission, growth and company values.\n\n**We think that remote work is the future**, and that's why we're building a remote-first organization. We chat on [Mattermost](https://mattermost.com/) and have video calls on Zoom. We brainstorm with [Miro](https://miro.com/) and organize with [Notion](https://www.notion.so).\n\n**We try not to take ourselves too seriously**, but we are goal-oriented with an ambitious mission.\n\n**We believe that as a small company, we can out-compete incumbents** by thinking from first principles about how organizations interact with data. We are very competitive.\n\n# Benefits\n- Fully remote\n\n- Flexible working hours\n\n- Generous compensation and equity package\n\n- Opportunity to make high-impact contributions to an agile team\n\n# How to Apply? Questions?\n[**Complete the job application**](https://4o99daw6ffu.typeform.com/to/ePkNQiDp)\n\nIf you have any questions or concerns, feel free to email us at [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) \n\nPlease mention the words **DESERT SPELL GOWN** when applying to show you read the job post completely (#RMjE2LjczLjIxNi4yMzY=). This is a feature to avoid spam applicants. Companies can search these words to find applicants that read this and see they're human.\n\n \n\n#Location\nWorldwide
# How do you apply?\n\nThis job post has been closed by the poster, which means they probably have enough applicants now. Please do not apply.