The monthly "Who Is Hiring?" submissions here on HN are posted
automatically on the first by the "whoishiring" user, along with related
freelancing submissions. You can find them here:
If I understand correctly, a post with "remote work currently not possible" statement will be tagged as remote? (not that I have a better idea, just wondering how it works :)
EDIT: postings are a bit difficult to read because of (lack of) newlines. Also, I would prefer Verdana to Helvetica, but that's my personal preference...
[AngJobs](http://angjobs.com/#!/jobs/inbox/hn?july) allows free custom filters, so you could easily add a location filter, although not possible to combine with other filters at the moment
You got downvotes because some people are sick of flaws in design being bigger talking points than the content. Soemthing I don't agree with. If the design is that horrible then it is a good discussion.
He wasn't even saying the design is horrible, merely giving actionable feedback on one design element. I'm sure the site author was grateful, most of us who have released web products would be, I think.
Yeah good and useful.Thanks for making this, really. But you fell on the same mistake remoteok.io: when I search for Scala, I find matches with "scalable", "scalability". Can you please fix it?
16 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 39.3 ms ] threadhttps://news.ycombinator.com/submitted?id=whoishiring
Typically, the listed jobs are programming and sysadmin related, but on rare occasions you might be able to find "sales" jobs in there.
EDIT: Nicely done otherwise, thanks!
The tags are hardcoded, they are keywords I'm interested in. I'm looking for a remote job and there was no way to search for a combination of tags.
You can see the code I used to extract the data here: https://github.com/lsenta/pow/blob/master/who-is-hiring-2015...
If I understand correctly, a post with "remote work currently not possible" statement will be tagged as remote? (not that I have a better idea, just wondering how it works :)
EDIT: postings are a bit difficult to read because of (lack of) newlines. Also, I would prefer Verdana to Helvetica, but that's my personal preference...
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9639001
As outlied by mattmanser, the standard for non-remote is ONSITE. Which is respected by most of the posters this month.
Here's a screenshot: http://imgur.com/BnZn8ZS
(Edit -- why downvote this comment? The OP may not be aware that the chosen font is hard to read on some computers.)
Sorry, reflex; every time I hear a bell ring, I downvote one of your comments.