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CareCar | USA | Senior Site Reliability Engineer | Remote US only | https://carecar.co/

CareCar is looking for an experienced Site Reliability Engineer to help build, operate and scale the software powering our care services platform. As a key member of our small engineering team, you will collaborate directly with the development, product and service teams to deliver features and ensure consistent service that will empower our users to provide higher levels of care to the patient populations we serve.

CareCar is a technology and health services company focused on transforming the non-emergency transportation industry and quickly working to tackle various social determinants of health. We partner with healthcare organizations across the US to improve health outcomes and reduce risk by using our platform to manage supplemental benefits for Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial populations.

Our tech stack is built around an Elixir backend serving REST and GraphQL API’s; PostgreSQL database; frontends in React, Remix, and Expo; Snowflake and DBT for data analytics, and Python tools for machine learning and logistics optimization. These systems are deployed to AWS using a mix of Terraform and Ansible infrastructure-as-code tools.

For more information, please refer to the full job description [0]. Feel free to reach out with any questions about the role or about CareCar; send inquiries and applications to eng-jobs-2024-devops-sre at carecar.co.

[0]: https://carecar.notion.site/2024-11-CareCar-Site-Reliability...


The demo signup form has a required field "Token" that's blocking me from signing up


You can use Google SSO without a token. If you don't have a Google account, can you contact us with the contact form? we'll send you a token.


I read that, but as a rather heavy user of tmuxinator, I wouldn't really want to have all my projects running in the background at all times. I like that with tmuxinator, I can just start up the project(s) I'm currently working on, and leave the rest idle.

I am going to try out tmux-resurrect, but it's value to me would be mostly for ad-hoc tmux sessions; I think I'll still set up dedicated tmuxinator configs for each of my longer term projects.


I saved a PDF, though it doesn't have the right colors:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/2273870/Steve%20Jobs%20R...


Links don't work on this.


What is the difference between GitLab Annex and git-annex?

https://git-annex.branchable.com/

Edit: Just found the relevant quote from the article

> In GitLab 7.8 Enterprise Edition this problem is solved by integrating the awesome git-annex.

I guess the repeated branding of "GitLab Annex" just seems a bit strange to me.


GitLab Annex is git-annex integrated in GitLab. Meaning you have the authentication and protection that GitLab gives you with git-annex.


The new Outlook iOS app is pretty slick, and works just fine with regular IMAP accounts.


How do you add a regular IMAP account to it on iPhone? I don't see any options!



Agree 100%. I had the same thought process and assumed it was a tool for websites until I noticed the Objective-C syntax in the code screenshots.


Definitely an effective way to get your name out there.

I'm curious how the "you pick the rate" method is working out for you? The calendar on your site [1] still shows early December - does that mean you're no longer accepting clients this way?

I'd also love to know more about "Free Dev Time" (5 hrs/night). That seems like an interesting way to explore some new projects and technology without the hassle of estimates and contracts. And because you want to convert these people into paying clients, you've got some motivation to actually finish the projects you start for them, as opposed to personal projects that seem to fall by the wayside (for me, at least).

Great work, I'm inspired! And good luck with that plane flight. Looks like you'll have plenty of new work opportunities.

[1] http://rcodeteam.com/availability/


You're entitled to your opinion, but code style checking is not something new and was most likely not cooked up by Apple coders. Checkstyle [1] is a Java code style tool and has been around since at least 2001.

[1] http://checkstyle.sourceforge.net/


I stand corrected. Thank you.


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