Hi, I’m the Dir of Eng at Casa and we're looking to fill a handful of engineering roles, e.g. a Sr Software Engineer - Backend, iOS Engineer, Android Engineer, Data Engineer, QA, and SRE Lead. We're also open to general engineering inquiries from humans looking to join our mission to give everyone sovereignty over their digital lives via multi-sig security and ownership over their private keys.
Our team is a fantastic set of engineers that focus on writing quality code, with an eye for beautiful systems design and a passion for security. We’re currently about nine engineers, including one QA and a few infrasec engineers. Side projects or experience in crypto is not a hard requirement--we are aiming to build an amazing engineering team to nurture and grow into crypto for years to come. Our product and fundamentals over the past five years gives us a unique opportunity to think long.
If you want to help build new products and features that leverage our best-in-class, multi-sig security for your crypto, please apply or connect with me on twitter: @talweezy or via email nickt at team dot casa. Thank you!
I'm working on an app that enables people to send unlimited content over cellular, organized into stories. In the moment is when network and context is lost for created content. It's how we should preserve moments: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keepsake-send-tons-photos/id...
When are we going to learn? Ripping some tech PR and being at SXSW getting PMF with techies and media-types for a product that needs mainstream traction is a death-knell.
The same happened with Secret/Whisper last year and I commented that based on my focus groups in the Midwest, Yik Yak was going to clean their clock. And they did.
It's because mobile is so pervasive and mainstream we need to look at the market from a mature distribution perspective. Dare I say even from a packaged goods perspective. How do you get a new brand of yogurt on the shelves? What's the quality bar necessary? If you win at distribution where everyone lives, you win period.
The "Crossing the Chasm" Christensen model that worked for Google over a decade ago when the preferred medium of distribution of a tech product was not mainstream does not apply today for consumer.
Great article and totally stand by this in how I've designed my consumer product. However, it is quite poorly written. If I had not spent a ton of time reading academic papers there's no way I would have been able to follow this.
Yes, I do! I've long held this belief. Especially now when there are so many platforms, devices, toolsets, designs, and languages you can use. Coding has converged to an artistic medium in itself. One of the prevailing characteristics of an artistic medium is boundless permutations to express oneself. Think about letters and words on a page for a poem or paint colors and strokes on canvas. I wrote about this at length in this post awhile ago, which has a deliberately tongue-in-cheek title: https://medium.com/@eastbeast/i-am-an-artist-and-tech-is-my-...
CameronBanga, appreciate you sharing this! As a long-time iOS designer and developer, I appreciate you helping and effort in finding a great one.
I unfortunately think that all of your questions are at best, filtering questions to ensure they have base familiarity with pretty benign facts and at worse, questions that give no insight at all into iOS abilities. Your design questions are, in particular, extremely trivial and almost silly.
Feel free to reach-out to me if you'd like to collab on a better list.
Everyone else reading this, no even semi-serious iOS developer or designer would endorse these questions as a robust way to filter candidates or even teach yourself.
Posted a link here, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8828209, explaining. This was a quick starting point for a friend and I, hoped a post here would encourage a person or two to help out, and seeing a huge unexpected response.
I am more than happy to accept any suggestions, I understand most are super trivial, I assume these as a starting point for any conversation, or as basically a few things that could help give someone an idea as to where to start.
PRs are appreciated, or feel free to just email me questions and I will add (email in profile). Create an issue and add there as well, and I will go ahead and work in. Whatever is easiest!
Thanks for all of the attention everyone. I know it's basic, but it's a start. Hopefully we can work to evolve it into a much more detailed document that a few of you can benefit from.
Yes! I am a hacker that loves to cook. Here are my answers:
1. I do it because I find it to be relaxing and a welcome hands-on activity that is just creative enough to dig into fast after hours of staring at a screen.
2. This past summer I would plan ahead and cook quite a bit on Sundays to get meals together for the week. Eliminates a lot of spend and thinking as well as waiting around during lunch time when you want to just focus.
3. I cook things that scale well for myself and the team as well as have a good balance of protein/veggies. Roasts with roasted veggies. Whole chickens. Lasagna with spinach salad. Stir fry. Curries. Fried rice. Bean salads.
4. Not really. I generally eat not as many carbs, but by no means am I a no-carb or low-carb. I focus on getting veggies in the mix.
5. To be more productive in the kitchen is to have a well-stocked freezer plus fridge and have an organized shopping list every week at a certain time. Also a good amount of spices and high quality canned goods to round-out meals when you are out of something.
I feel the same way about Keepsake and I taught myself to code 9 months ago to build it and will work on it forever. It's roughly in the same market as HeyDay, but with a different perspective around grouping content semantically and quickly sorting it to publish on your iPhone: http://www.getkeepsake.com/
Hi, I’m the Dir of Eng at Casa and we're looking to fill a handful of engineering roles, e.g. a Sr Software Engineer - Backend, iOS Engineer, Android Engineer, Data Engineer, QA, and SRE Lead. We're also open to general engineering inquiries from humans looking to join our mission to give everyone sovereignty over their digital lives via multi-sig security and ownership over their private keys.
Our team is a fantastic set of engineers that focus on writing quality code, with an eye for beautiful systems design and a passion for security. We’re currently about nine engineers, including one QA and a few infrasec engineers. Side projects or experience in crypto is not a hard requirement--we are aiming to build an amazing engineering team to nurture and grow into crypto for years to come. Our product and fundamentals over the past five years gives us a unique opportunity to think long.
If you want to help build new products and features that leverage our best-in-class, multi-sig security for your crypto, please apply or connect with me on twitter: @talweezy or via email nickt at team dot casa. Thank you!