What I do is use L2TP/IPsec VPN to phone into my home network and then login and use Synology NAS "locally". There's no inherent need to open your NAS to the internet if you don't want to.
I find it amusing that there are just two mentions of COVID-19 in the small quote in the middle of article. Yet everyone completely understands what this article is about. Wondering how soon it won't be so obvious (probably not very soon, but still).
Location: Ukraine
Remote: yes, preferred
Willing to relocate: no, but depends on company;
Technologies: Go, JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, NodeJS, React, Django, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Docker, Kubernetes
Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kW28ngKjg4HIA48wyyj94x6kYP-SWsRl/view
Email: [email protected]
I'm a software developer with 8 years of experience in a variety of both backend and frontend technologies/frameworks. Looking for a remote position or part-time remote consulting opportunity (may consider relocation after travel restrictions due to quarantine are lifted).
Love learning new things (currently mastering Rust) and solving hard problems (optimization, debugging etc.).
Location: Ukraine
Remote: yes, preferred
Willing to relocate: no, but depends on company;
Technologies: Go, JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, NodeJS, React, Django, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Docker, Kubernetes
Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kW28ngKjg4HIA48wyyj94x6kYP-SWsRl/view
Email: [email protected]
My current position is a bit unstable due to lockdowns and quarantines, so I'm looking for a more stable job right now. Have almost 10 years of industry experience, worked remotely and within distributed team previously.
I suffered pay cut due to outbreak affecting my company. It was profitable and growing steadily, but due to outbreak people stopped using it (and paying). Right now we're in the red, this is not sustainable, so I think in a couple of months I will be laid off (unless situation stabilizes by then).
It's a bit scary to be in this position, as I know most companies here stopped hiring, so I'm not sure if I'll be able to find a new job quickly.
Sorry to hear this, I dug through your profile to see if maybe I can help. I can't guarantee anything, of course, but we're hiring Go developers at Sourcegraph and are 100% remote so if you meet the other qualifications here please do consider applying with us: https://github.com/sourcegraph/careers/blob/master/job-descr...
Thanks, I've applied. Didn't know Sourcegraph is a remote company. BTW, I've used it on one of my projects before and it was really easy to set up and proved great for onboarding new developers, so thanks for developing it :)
Glad to hear it :) If you have any feedback we'd love to hear it, as well.
We went 100% all-remote at the start of the year, and historically over 50% of over our team has always been remote. This has been a really good boon for us as we started writing down and documenting even more of our processes, etc. in a handbook: https://about.sourcegraph.com/handbook
Location: Ukraine
Remote: yes, preferred
Willing to relocate: no, but depends on company;
Technologies: Go, JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, NodeJS, React, Django, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Docker, Kubernetes
Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kW28ngKjg4HIA48wyyj94x6kYP-SWsRl/view
Email: [email protected]
Kind of feeling I'm hitting the ceiling working locally (doesn't feel like I'm doing impact, as local companies don't really have interesting problems to solve), but not really willing to relocate right now. Looking for a place that is technically challenging as I would like to improve my skills and learn something new. And one that follows good development practices (CI/CD, testing - passes Joel's test in a nutshell).
Location: Ukraine
Remote: yes, preferred
Willing to relocate: no, but depends on company;
Technologies: Go, JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, NodeJS, React, Django, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Docker, Kubernetes
Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kW28ngKjg4HIA48wyyj94x6kYP-SWsRl/view
Email: [email protected]
Kind of feeling I'm hitting the ceiling working locally (doesn't feel like I'm doing impact, as local companies are smallish), but not really willing to relocate right now. Looking for a place that is technically challenging as I would like to improve my skills and learn something new.
Kind of a smaller ones, but "Hanabi" and "Grizzled" are also nice. The good thing in these two games is they're not feeling like group solitaire (and I love a good game of Spirit Island, but point stands), you actually have to cooperate with another people, you can't win them by yourself.