We are looking for a web developer well-versed in JavaScript to help us build a next-generation dashboard for mobile advertising. The role will focus on developing our front-end single page application built on top of Backbone, Marionette and React. There will also be opportunities to work on our back-end, a Node.js-powered API. You must be have experience building non-trivial JavaScript-powered web apps. Web pages with some scripting does not count.
We are located in Liberty Village in downtown Toronto.
About us
Addictive Mobility is a successful, rapidly growing company, with expanding offices in Toronto, New York, Vancouver, London and Dubai. We’re one of the most innovative companies in Toronto, and one of Canada's fastest growing startups. We increasingly exceed the needs of our diverse client base, including major, well-known retailers and internationally recognized agencies in the US, Canada and the Middle East.
About you
- You want to work on exciting projects with only the latest technologies and modern techniques
- You understand IIFEs, function scoping, context switching, and know "the Good Parts" by heart
- You’re not afraid of asynchronous code
- You make use of new HTML5 features, but also know how to fall back gracefully
- You lint your code with JSHint / JSLint
- You believe in Atwood's Law
If you do not fit the above descriptions, you need not apply.
Addictive Mobility is a successful, rapidly growing company, with expanding offices in Toronto, New York, Vancouver, London and Dubai. We’re one of the most innovative companies in Toronto, and one of Canada's fastest growing startups. We increasingly exceed the needs of our diverse client base, including major, well-known retailers and internationally recognized agencies in the US, Canada and the Middle East.
About the role
We are looking for a web developer well-versed in JavaScript to help us build a next-generation dashboard for mobile advertising. The role will focus on developing our front-end single page application built on top of Backbone, Marionette and React. There will also be opportunities to work on our back-end, a Node.js-powered API.
You must be have experience building non-trivial JavaScript-powered web apps. Web pages with some scripting does not count.
We are located in Liberty Village in downtown Toronto.
About you
- You want to work on exciting projects with only the latest technologies and modern techniques - You understand IIFEs, function scoping, context switching, and know "the Good Parts" by heart
- You’re not afraid of asynchronous code
- You make use of new HTML5 features, but also know how to fall back gracefully - You lint your code with JSHint / JSLint
- You believe in Atwood's Law
If you do not fit the above descriptions, you need not apply.
In reality, I suspect very few people actually notice what is going on in the ad. Ironically, they /will/ get a lot of 'wow' but mostly from the virality of the video and maybe award submissions. Which means they need not have produced the actual signage but just the video and probably would have achieved the same result. But that would have been too easy to earn them any publicity. How meta.
While Coda's 2010 blog post is clearly the most commonly linked-to bcrypt reference – the post itself includes a many links including one to an article by Derek Slager (quoting tptacek) from 2007, links t both Java and Perl implementations from 2006, and a link to a Usenix paper from 1999.
If Adobe didn't switch to intentionally-slow hashes with proper salting until "last year", that puts them over 20 years behind "best practice" (as well as 2 or 3 years behind fully deserving of online mockery, laughable uninformed-newbie levels of security engineering).
Sorry I can't help you with marketing... But on the usability side, please put the like/dislike buttons in a fixed position. It is very easy to misclick as they move around with every photo!
Yes. This is a pet peeve of mine, too. I've got an instagram-style comment drawer that I'm working on which will fix the position of the action buttons.