We're a small team working on projects targeting web browsers and native platforms, looking for an experienced versatile programmer with strong knowledge of low-level systems programming and experience with building networking programs, with focus on simplicity and performance. Great if you're familiar with low-latency real-time streaming, virtualization and reverse engineering. We use C, WebAssembly and Node.JS.
Send a resume to jobs@browserling.com if interested.
We're a small team working on projects targeting web browsers and native platforms, looking for an experienced versatile programmer with strong knowledge of low-level systems programming and experience with building networking programs, with focus on simplicity and performance. Great if you're familiar with low-latency real-time streaming, virtualization and reverse engineering. We use C, WebAssembly and Node.JS.
Send a resume to jobs@browserling.com if interested.
We're a small team working on projects targeting web browsers and native platforms, looking for an experienced versatile programmer with strong knowledge of low-level systems programming and experience with building networking programs, with focus on simplicity and performance. Great if you're familiar with low-latency real-time streaming, virtualization and reverse engineering. We use C, WebAssembly and Node.JS.
Send a resume to jobs@browserling.com if interested.
If anyone likes CSS2, then I’m hiring. We use vanilla CSS2 (and vanilla HTML4 and vanilla JavaScript via <script> tag — no node modules or bundlers) as it simply works. Message me if interested.
Definitely my preferred approach. If I'm building a website, creating and managing a build process is almost always an encumbrance.
I work with some younger developers that honed their craft after things like SCSS and modern JS frameworks became commonplace. They can't seem to fathom the idea of building even a simple website without node.js.
For many projects - sure - a JS framework, a CSS framework, SCSS, etc, have their place, but I'm convinced many developers are killing themselves with unnecessary complexity. Just wait until you revisit that old blog site you made with tailwind after a few years without updating the mountain of JS dependencies. Oh boy...
In my opinion all of that extra complexity needs to be justified, and for a very large number of basic websites I don't believe it can be.
None of that is to say I don't use (and enjoy using) things like React and Svelte. I am however loving the resurgence in simpler approaches like HTMX.
Without knowing what you actually do, that sounds like the Amish way of coding — defining an arbitrary point in time where you deem technology to have been „good“.
Same in the previous company I worked for. All in one account, spending millions of dolards on it, terrible architecture. From the top of my head: Unecessary peerings everywhere, bad subnet configuration that provoked network conflicts in certain cases, no autoscaling, IAM access based exclusively on keys, no VPN etc And if that wasn't enough, everything was "done" with one of the most terrible examples of "automation" I've ever seen in my whole life: A huge Terraform mono repo with hundreds of files with hundreds of duplicated resource calls (because they didn't even use modules). It took them at least a week for just adding a simple IAM user without breaking anything else and the CD would take hours to finish. An absolute nightmare. As no one else in the company had experience with the cloud, the team managing all I mention was threated as some kind of supreme elite as everyone else though they were doing a great job. Beyond me.
We're a small team working on projects targeting web browsers and native platforms, looking for an experienced versatile programmer with strong knowledge of low-level systems programming and experience with building networking programs, with focus on simplicity and performance. Great if you're familiar with low-latency real-time streaming, virtualization and reverse engineering. We use C, WebAssembly and Node.JS.
Send a resume to jobs@browserling.com if interested.