Qualified | Software Engineers (Full-time) | San Francisco OR Remote (US/Canada) | https://www.qualified.com
We believe corporate websites should be more than just digital brochures. Sales teams should be able to engage with prospective customers without the "Request a Demo" or "Contact Us" back and forth. Our tech facilitate conversations – think Zoom-like meetings – on your website, right when a prospect is most interested in learning more about your products or services.
We're looking for engineers who enjoy working closely with customer-facing teams, care about end-user experience and ownership of their work, yet recognize delivering great product is about collaborative engineering not just the individual developer.
Tech: React, Ruby, PostgreSQL. Early-stage with ecstatic customers. Funded by Salesforce, Redpoint, Norwest (Series A).
Founders have previously built successful enterprise-focussed products (e.g. GetFeedback, acquired by SurveyMonkey)
why wouldn't you call it affordable? CMU has a $72k sticker price (which only 30% of students actually pay in full) and has an average financial aid award of $44k. if your parents are actually destitute, you will pay very little. the elite universities in america do not cost much more than a typical state school if you are poor.
Kaby Lake/Coffee Lake have full hardware VP9 decoding, so all told you'll probably be using more energy playing H.264 in Chrome if you're on a Kaby Lake or Coffee Lake processor.
Yes, been using that. Problem is that YouTube quietly removed 1440p h264 videos too! Used to be my indicator that I can turn off h264ify for a minute to view 4k content...
The original pitch was a black car service, but the legend that TK talks about, in Paris in the snowstorm of December 2008, was that he could ask “anyone there” to drive him, which is closer to carpooling.
(I was at that conference: everything went wrong, but it was mostly super cold. Cars were stuck in slippery snow, so someone suggesting the idea of carpooling sounds odd, but I suspect anyone there would have loved to wait out the traffic inside a heated car.)
Depression isn't just an error of thought. It's not a lack of understanding about how great your life really is. It's a hardware error causing the software to malfunction.
Reminds me about the woman who can smell Parkinson's:
> She sniffed six sweaty tees from people diagnosed with Parkinson’s, and six from healthy controls. Milne correctly identified which six had Parkinson’s, but she also tagged one of the control subjects as having the disease.
> Despite that error, Barran was intrigued—all the more so eight months later, when the same supposedly healthy control subject Milne had identified was diagnosed with Parkinson’s.