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Cloudera | Sr. Software Engineer (Backend, Java, JVM) | Full-time | Remote (US)

Enjoy solving hard problems with streaming data at scale? Come join the Cloudera Streaming Analytics team!

We're a small, autonomous group with a deep interest in stateful stream processing and SQL. We're building cutting edge tools that allow developers to integrate streaming SQL into their high-volume stack more easily.

Do you enjoy engineering reliable, scalable distributed systems? Hacking on Apache Flink? Solving hard problems around materialized views on massive streams? We'd love to hear from you!

Our tech stack includes: Java, Spring Boot, Python, Typescript, Apache Flink, Apache Kafka, Linux, etc.

Check us out here: https://cloudera.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/External_Career/job/U...


ObjectRocket (http://objectrocket.com) - Austin, TX or London, UK - Systems Engineers (Linux/Unix) + MongoDB DBAs

We're a DBaaS company (acquired by Rackspace last year) based in the Capital Factory in Austin, TX. The teams are small and tight (30 people or so right now), and stacked with smart, friendly people that love building great things. We focus primarily on MongoDB today, but also supporting technologies as well. All the excitement of a start-up, but with the perks of working for an established company!

Nerd keywords: Linux, Python, Flask, OpenVZ, Fusion-IO, Cisco, MongoDB, Ansible, Performance Tuning, HAproxy, IPVS, Virtualization, Datacenters, BGP, OSPF

Check the careers page for more information:

http://objectrocket.com/careers

If you think you might be a good fit, let us know! We're hiring for senior and junior level positions, so if you're interested, don't hesitate to reach out. We're changing the way developers think about data in the cloud, and we'd love to have you on our team.

Contact us at careers !at$ objectrocket .com.


Congrats, very exciting!


I got a dog largely because I wanted an excuse to go on long, mind-clearing walks for no reason. It's worked out really well.

(Note that you should probably already want a dog if you're going this route - I did).


Did the same and it's working out quite well. Still, having a dog implies more responsibilities than just a walk in the evening.


Interesting article - but it would have been nice if the Globe had more clearly explained the distinctions between making academic papers available for free, vs. making commercial software like Microsoft Excel or SimCity available free - a lot of readers will come away with the wrong idea there. Aside from the prosecutor and the venue, these cases really aren't very similar.


Probably like a lot of people, I'm addicted to reading these articles now. I had a lot of respect for Aaron when he was still here, and even though he's gone now, it's encouraging that his actions continue to inspire so many people to make change for the better. The Economist did a really good job on this.

And I have to imagine Aaron would have laughed too when he heard them call Perl an "elegant langauge".


I, too, chuckled at this.


I didn't know Aaron, but I've been using web.py for years, so I kind of felt like I knew him from hanging around the online community. I really don't know what to say - he was incredibly intelligent, and made great contributions - the 'net gets a little lonelier every time we lose someone like this. :( RIP.


Hugely exciting to read things like this. It feels like a lot of the early craziness that made things fun is missing from the Valley today. Sun, and the group of people they managed to attract, doesn't get enough credit for the remarkable company they were. RIP.


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