Hendrixer's comments

Hendrixer | 7 years ago | on: Show HN: Tipe (YC W18) – Generate an API-First CMS from a GraphQL Schema

Hey HN. We're Tipe (YC W18). We're trying to solve how teams manage content in the the apps they build today. All you have to do is create a GraphQL Schema file, and we'll do the rest. Tipe generates a full GraphQL API complete with mutations, queries, and filtering (REST Too). Content creators and marketers get a visual editor that they can use to edit the content on any web app you create. You can also prototype offline with Tipe, and never have to wait on that content to be ready or trying to fake out content yourself. Check us out and sign up to access private beta. Ask your questions, I'll answer them.

Hendrixer | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (July 2018)

Tipe YC W18 | San Francisco, CA | Backend Engineer, UX Designer | Full-Time | ONSITE | REMOTE (for right backend person)

We're a content platform for all your apps. We allow teams to move faster by separating their content from their apps, and put it behind GraphQL and REST API's. So yea, like a CMS!

We are doing some CRAZY things with GraphQL and data modeling. Tipe is in beta right now and we're working with exciting companies to build something they'll love.

For Backend Dev, Expert experience with a DB like Mongo or PSQL is required, and well versed in NodeJs as well. Everyone on the team is a well respected and engineer with open source projects, online courses, and conference talks. We like to understand our customers and build what is valuable while still taking advantage of what's coming.

For UX person, we prefer someone with strong researching and prototyping skills. Tipe is mostly a web product and has tons of interesting usability concerns to address. Need someone to help us dig for gold with our customers.

We're a YC venture backed company. I'm the founder and CEO of Tipe. contact me at [email protected]

Hendrixer | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you choose what's worth learning?

I have a list of things. On that list, I weight all those things to learn with 3 categories. Relevancy, practicality, and excitement. If something hits all 3 categories, I learn it now. 2 categories, it's up next. 1, I may never learn it. None, absolutely never.

Hendrixer | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Tips for finding a mentor for a 'learn to code' startup?

I'm not so interested in the money but I'd be happy to talk. I've taught courses and pretty much every top online coding site . Egghead, front end masters, pluralsight. I've also created my own online courses on my own platform reaching 40k students in 3 months. Before that I was an engineer at Udacity and Hack Reactor. Both of which are coding education companies.
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