noahm | 8 years ago | on: John Perry Barlow has died
noahm's comments
noahm | 8 years ago | on: Amazon announces candidate cities for HQ2
I'm surprised to see a place like Boston on the list. Having lived there for ~15 years, I just can't imagine adding an additional 50,000 well paid tech workers and their families to that area. It's already densely populated and expensive.
noahm | 8 years ago | on: AWS Fargate – Run Containers Without Managing Infrastructure
noahm | 9 years ago | on: Jeff Bezos’ Annual Letter
Do you really think Amazon could build things like AWS, Alexa, the Go Store, etc, if it was a sweatshop where everybody but Jeff was in hell? I don't.
noahm | 9 years ago | on: Jeff Bezos’ Annual Letter
As a current employee at Amazon, that article might as well be fiction as far as I can tell. It describes nothing like what I or any of my co-workers have ever experienced here. We chuckle about it, occasionally, making jokes about crying at our desk, etc. But seriously, that article does not describe the place where I work.
When the article came out, Jeff sent a response to the company that has subsequently been published online. In it he said, paraphrased, "I would quit if my work environment was what the NYT article described, and I'm sure any of you would, too. If you're here, and you're work environment is anything like what the article describes, please _tell me_ so we can fix it."
You've mentioned elsewhere that Amazon has among the worst employee retention in the industry, but that's a fact that I'd also dispute. I've seen articles like http://www.slate.com/blogs/business_insider/2013/07/28/turno..., but as far as I can tell they're using median tenure as a proxy for employee retention. That's going to skew the results in any company that is hiring at a high rate. Imagine a hypothetical company that has gone from 50 to 100 employees in the past 12 months. Median tenure is only going to be less than 1 year at that company, regardless of whether or not anybody has quit. Amazon also hire lots of seasonal workers to handle shipping, customer support etc, which also very likely skews the results.
noahm | 9 years ago | on: If you publish Georgia’s state laws, you’ll get sued for copyright and lose
Obviously I cannot, but the absurdity of the idea that I can be legally bound by something that is not freely available to me is striking.
noahm | 9 years ago | on: List of Sites Affected by Cloudflare's HTTPS Traffic Leak
noahm | 9 years ago | on: Amazon Go
https://medium.com/the-mission/silicon-valley-has-a-problem-... is largely what I mean. I don't blame the tech industry, necessarily. It's society as a whole that seems to have developed such a warped set of values, and I have no idea what to do about it.
noahm | 9 years ago | on: IPv6 Support for EC2 Instances in Virtual Private Clouds
noahm | 9 years ago | on: Symbolics Lisp Machine Museum
They all believed that the loss of the lisp machine was a serious loss to society and were all very much saddened by it. I never used the system enough to come to my own conclusions in that regard, but it was interesting food for thought. As somebody for whom Linux/POSIX is very deeply entrenched, would I even recognize a truly superior system if it was dropped in my lap? More importantly, would society in general? The superior technology is rarely the "winner"
noahm | 10 years ago | on: Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace
noahm | 10 years ago | on: How I came to find Linux
Version control worked by posting your patches to the mailing list. Linus would apply your patches to his tree, which he'd occasionally tar up and upload to the mirrors.
noahm | 10 years ago | on: Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace
Yeah, I'm sure the teams have some ability to be flexible, and if I'd pushed I could have gotten more time. Managers understand very well how difficult it can be to hire a new engineer, and they recognize the importance of keeping the ones they've got, but the company-wide policy literally is zero paid family leave for fathers. Regardless of available workarounds, I wanted to express my dissatisfaction with the policy.
noahm | 10 years ago | on: Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace
noahm | 10 years ago | on: Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace
I worked in AWS, which I'd always understood to be culturally a bit different from the retail site. It sounds like most of the people interviewed for the article were on the retail side. In AWS, I never felt any sort of competition with my peers, nor did I feel like people were trying to sabotage me with the anytime feedback tool. In fact, it really felt like there was a refreshing lack of office politics there. Everybody worked very hard and there was mutual respect among all my peers. The workloads are heavy, for sure, but never really unmanageable, and the work is almost always interesting.
Ultimately what finally ended it for me was the complete lack of paternity leave. Amazon offers, to the letter, the bare minimum family leave that they can legally get away with. If the company isn't interested in my health or that of my family, should I really be putting effort into helping them succeed? I think policies like that really run counter to their "hire and develop the best" principle. How exactly do they plan on doing that if they don't treat them with respect?
noahm | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (May 2015)
At Socrata, we believe that data – when made transparently accessible – can illuminate, inform, and inspire. Socrata builds cloud-based software products that democratize access to public sector data and put it into people’s hands so they can use it at work, at home, and on the go. We power open data portals for City of Chicago (https://data.cityofchicago.org/), Los Angeles (https://data.lacity.org/), and many more.
We’re looking for a strong engineer to focus on developing our Mesosphere/AWS/Chef runtime platform. The full description of this position is at http://careers.socrata.com/jobs/?jvi=oNu7Yfw6,Job If you've got any questions, please don't hesitate to contact me [email protected] (I'm an engineer, not a recruiter!)
We release nearly all of our work, both from a DevOps and general engineering perspective, under Open Source liceses. Check out some of our repositories on GitHub at https://github.com/socrata/ and https://github.com/socrata-platform
Or, if you're not interested in our DevOps roles, considering checking out some of our other engineering roles at http://careers.socrata.com/engineers/
noahm | 11 years ago | on: Getting Drunk in Colonial America (2013)
noahm | 11 years ago | on: Google Has Most of My Email Because It Has All of Yours
So, to answer your question more directly, facebook doesn't "get a pass". Facebook simply doesn't get used.
noahm | 12 years ago | on: The Heartbleed Challenge
noahm | 12 years ago | on: The Heartbleed Challenge