jbinto's comments

jbinto | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (August 2023)

TouchBistro (https://www.touchbistro.com/) | Senior iOS Developer, Developer Acceleration | Full time, Toronto OR remote Canada/select US states

TouchBistro is an all-in-one restaurant management system that has powered more than 29,000 restaurants around the world.

We are looking for a Senior iOS Developer to join the Developer Acceleration team. You will be a part of a close-knit group of experienced developers with a birds-eye view of all software development activities at TouchBistro. Our mission is to make our developers productive and fearless, to reduce toil, and to remove obstacles from our product development teams, while building the best restaurant software available in the market. We act as a force multiplier for the teams writing software for our customers.

Ideally, you are a strong iOS developer with experience (or strong interest) in release engineering. Our team maintains multiple CI/CD pipelines (using CircleCI, xctest, and fastlane) which allow us to release our flagship application to the App Store on a regular 2-week cadence. We make heavy use of feature flags using LaunchDarkly, and have a strong observability stack using Datadog and Sentry. We build libraries & abstractions that our developers use to build products and features. For example, we’ve designed systems that make it easy for our developers to manage database transactions, perform structured logging, implement authentication and authorization correctly, and more, so that product developers can focus on business problems and not underlying infrastructure.

This is a remote role (Canada/select US states only), with the option to work in our downtown Toronto office whenever you choose to do so. We fly everyone into Toronto a couple times a year for in-office socializing (today we are going to a Blue Jays game).

This is a high autonomy role with the opportunity to make a lot of impact on how we build software. We are a low-ceremony, friendly and experienced team that values incremental improvements and that likes turning over rocks, because somebody has to.

Note: I am not the hiring manager, but you would be working closely with me. If you have any questions you can email me (see profile) and I'll do my best to answer, but if you're at all interested, you should apply! See the job posting for more details: https://boards.greenhouse.io/touchbistro/jobs/5058791003

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: AT&T Charging Customers to Not Spy on Them

Square remembers your email address by credit card number.

This was really surprising to me. I used Square once at a shop in Seattle, and had an email receipt sent to me.

Almost a year later, I used Square back home in Toronto and asked for a receipt. To my surprise I didn't have to give any information: just using the same the credit card I swiped months earlier was enough.

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: How to join Facebook without giving up all of your and your friends’ privacy

Just because you opt out of letting Facebook (or Linkedin) see your contacts, does not mean your contacts have done the same thing.

e.g. If you are [email protected], and others have [email protected] in their address book and they let Facebook see it, they've got you already.

For this reason I use a dedicated email address for each social media account.

Also, while I'd normally recommend 2-factor authentication, giving these guys your phone number is a really bad idea if you value your privacy. Try to limit it to firstname lastname and one throwaway email if at all possible. If you're really paranoid, you can get a VOIP gateway that supports SMS for fairly cheap, certainly for cheaper than buying a burner phone.

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: RadioShack in Talks to Sell Half Its Stores to Sprint, Shutter the Rest

Radio Shack in Canada ended up in a similar situation. In 2005, they sold to Circuit City and opened as a rebranded store called "The Source" (after a brief legal dispute about the Radio Shack name).

When Circuit City went bankrupt in 2009, they sold the chain to Bell Canada (our version of Sprint or Verizon).

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: Plague

My feedback:

I just tried it in Toronto and had to swipe down about 50 times to get rid of obvious (and NSFW) spam.

The content is better now, but all coming from the eastern USA.

I tried to comment on something, and got prompted to register. But after I registered, I lost the card I was going to comment on, and there appears to be no way to go back to a previous card.

The geolocation is a little wonky ("Nueva York, Estados Unidos").

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: Show HN: Black Friday deals for developers

That is true, the discount is only good for e-books.

I hardly even thought to make the distinction. These days, for technical topics anyway, the "e-" prefix is just as optional for "book" as "mail".

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: Amazon DNS error

Amazon.com is up for me, but is entirely missing product images.

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: Launching in 2015: A Certificate Authority to Encrypt the Entire Web

Yes. That's not perfect. But it raises the bar for forgery to "can sign certificates as a root authority", which is still fairly high. (e.g. I can't do it, and neither can you.) It stops coffee shop/hotel wifi operators and mobile providers from injecting content into your session.

If we encourage users to blindly accept self-signed certificates (giving us end-to-end encryption but sacrificing identification), nothing would stop those actors from altering your HTTPS sessions as easily as they alter your HTTP sessions today. It's throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

jbinto | 11 years ago | on: Bezos Faces Season of Worsts as Losses Mount

They should have never diluted the "Kindle" brand by mixing e-ink products and iPad-knockoff products.

I still think e-ink is the best way to read long texts, and it's a shame that you can no longer colloquially refer to a 'Kindle' and have people know what you're talking about.

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