Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | beckler's comments login

I’m assuming they’re talking about the in-game currency that you have to earn/accumulate.

There are no micro transactions, and you don’t have to pay anything.


TeamSnap | Multiple Roles | Remote (US Only) | Full-time | https://teamsnap.com

TeamSnap is hiring for multiple positions to join our remote-first team. We work every day to simplify the lives of players, coaches, parents, and sports organizations by taking the headache out of organizing sports.

Engineers at TeamSnap are critical to our technical and product innovation. We build applications and services with Ruby, Elixir, React, TypeSript, Go[lang], Swift, Kotlin, MySQL, RabbitMQ, Docker, Kubernetes, Firebase, and Google Cloud. On the Full Stack side, “T-shaped” developers are encouraged.

Open technical roles:

- Senior Android Engineer

- Senior Data Engineer

- Senior iOS Engineer

- Senior Software Engineer (BE/Fullstack)

- Software Engineer

We also have a number of non-technical roles available as well!

View all roles here: https://jobs.lever.co/teamsnap/?lever-via=0u_uZ-k-Wh&lever-s...


TeamSnap | Multiple Roles | Remote (US Only) | Full-time | https://teamsnap.com

TeamSnap is hiring for multiple positions to join our remote-first team. We work every day to simplify the lives of players, coaches, parents, and sports organizations by taking the headache out of organizing sports.

Engineers at TeamSnap are critical to our technical and product innovation. We build applications and services with Ruby, Elixir, React, TypeSript, Go[lang], Swift, Kotlin, MySQL, RabbitMQ, Docker, Kubernetes, Firebase, and Google Cloud. On the Full Stack side, “T-shaped” developers are encouraged.

Open technical roles:

- Security Engineer

- Senior Android Engineer

- Senior Data Engineer

- Senior iOS Engineer

- Senior Software Development Engineer in Test

- Senior Software Engineer (BE/Fullstack)

- Software Development Engineer in Test

- Software Engineer

We also have a number of non-technical roles available as well!

View all roles here: https://jobs.lever.co/teamsnap/?lever-via=0u_uZ-k-Wh&lever-s...


Hi beckler,

Is the team still hiring for the Security Engineer role?

About me

Cybersecurity professional with 2+ years of experience in web application security, incident response, and managing security alerts in a 24x7 SOC. Adept at identifying and remediating critical OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities, deploying DAST and SAST techniques, and utilizing FortiSIEM, Splunk, and the MITRE ATT&CK framework to enhance threat detection and streamline incident response.


Hi. On your job app, you seem to have a place for "Current location" and then "Where are you located? / What city do you live in?" Are these the same questions? Why are you adding busy work to an application form?

Why is, "If yes, who referred you?" a mandatory question? If someone selects "Nope! I found it on my own!" for the "Were you referred by a TeamSnap Employee?" question, doesn't that cover all the bases?

For "Briefly name the company or companies you acquired this experience," isn't that what a resume covers? If I'm doing this much work, can I just put myself on the payroll, too?

Why so many text-based questions? Do you feel like you're getting honest responses? Especially when applicants cannot even create an account?

"What interests you about working at TeamSnap?" is listed twice. What sort of quality controls does your HR team have in place to ensure that snafus like this are limited, if any?

When was the last time the person who approved this form workflow had to actually find a job?


“Commenters: please don't reply to job posts to complain about something. It's off topic here.”


TeamSnap | Multiple Roles | Remote (US Only) | Full-time | https://teamsnap.com

TeamSnap is hiring for multiple positions to join our remote-first team. We work every day to simplify the lives of players, coaches, parents, and sports organizations by taking the headache out of organizing sports.

Engineers at TeamSnap are critical to our technical and product innovation. We build applications and services with Ruby, Elixir, React, TypeSript, Go[lang], Swift, Kotlin, MySQL, RabbitMQ, Docker, Kubernetes, Firebase, and Google Cloud. On the Full Stack side, “T-shaped” developers are encouraged.

Open technical roles:

- Principal Engineer

- SecOps Engineer

- Senior Data Engineer

- Senior iOS Engineer

- Senior Software Development Engineer in Test

- Senior Software Engineer (BE/Fullstack)

- Software Development Engineer in Test

- Software Engineer

We also have a number of non-technical roles available as well!

View all roles here: https://jobs.lever.co/teamsnap/?lever-via=0u_uZ-k-Wh&lever-s...


I haven’t used it in a long time, but I enjoyed Shortcut (back when it was called Clubhouse).


move your domain(s) to porkbun, but setup cloudflare's nameservers on your domain. then you can manage your records and setup ddns through cloudflare.


For those of you that use DDNS for essentially homelab (say to allow friends and family to watch media on your self hosted Plex Media Server) - just use TailScale.

I would think about actual publicly know IP address (like it is for dynamic DNS) only for things like hosting your own mail server.


I saw Mikey give a speech about this back at the Velocity conference around 2014-ish. It was absolutely fascinating to listen to him talk about it!




101 Switching Protocols should really be a calzone.


A calzone is just a pizza that's already folded in half for you.


Acronyms are the worst.

I guess people do it to sound cool or something, but I once maintained a legacy project that had an acronym for a name. Not a single person working at the entire company knew what the acronym originally meant, and of course, it was never documented.


Acronyms are no different from words, in this regard. How many people remember/know why your storage is called a drive? A computer used to be a person. Why is the company Stripe named that?

Then there are backronyms and names that used to be acronyms, but technically aren't anymore.


Analyst firms (ie Gartner) are a big driver of this too. Couple that with the start up / VC model which needs to create new 'categories' to demonstrate differentiation, and you have a total mess.


I work for a vendor that sells a CNAPP. I've worked with this product before and it's been around for several years.

Until last week, I had never heard or read the term CNAPP.

"CNAPP is a term first coined by Gartner in 2021 to describe an all-in-one platform that unifies security and compliance capabilities to prevent, detect, and respond to cloud security threats. A CNAPP integrates multiple cloud security solutions that have been traditionally siloed in a single user interface, making it easier for organizations to protect their entire cloud application footprint."

Thanks, Gartner. What a racket they have as a self-ordained arbiter of market segments.


15 years ago some interns where I now work created a spreadsheet and named it an acronym of their first names. That project has since developed into a fairly important system with a front end and database. They kept the name the same, of course.


A long time ago I worked on a defense program called "XMS 3000", hilariously, it was explained to me that this literally did not mean anything. They needed a name and somebody came up with this to sound cool.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: