Dentally | Senior Software Engineer | UK, Remote | https://dentally.co
Dentally is the UK's leading cloud dental platform & we're looking for talented engineers to join our team to help us take Dentally international. We currently have openings for both full stack & frontend engineers.
Dentally is the UK's leading cloud dental platform & we're looking for talented engineers to join our team to help us take Dentally international. We currently have openings for both full stack & frontend engineers.
Dentally (https://dentally.co) | Software Engineers | London | Onsite or Remote
At Dentally we helping improve oral healthcare by building cutting edge, online tools for dentists. Dentally is used by dental practices and patients all over the World.
We're looking for experienced and talented individuals to join our small engineering team to help us bring our next ideas to life. You'll be iterating quickly on features and services that dental practices depend upon. You'll be given autonomy and independence when writing your own code and will be expected to manage your own projects. That said, we work as a close knit team so you'll also be involved in other projects and will collaborate with the rest of the team to ship features.
We are interested in people who have strong product experience, people who have spent a lot of time paying attention to the finer details about what really matters to customers.
Current open positions:
* Frontend engineer (Javascript/Ember JS)
* Backend engineer (Ruby, Postgres, Redis)
If you'd like to know more simply get in touch with us at jobs@dentally.co
We're using this & found it works well at slowing down heap growth however we still end up with the same maximum memory usage as before, it just takes longer to get there.
Wow, this is awesome. You should add a link to the Puma guide [1] as I've been wanting to make use of Puma workers for a while but have always been worried about running out of memory.
I'm actually quite surprised to see so many posts on HN discussing ways to pirate Olympic content. The BBC is restricted to UK IP addresses for a reason. Every household in Britian pays the equivalent of around $230 per year for the right to watch live television, whether it be on your phone, laptop or TV. The BBC has a finite amount of resources to spend on hosting online content & if the whole World logs on to watch the Olympics it could end up spoiling it for those of us who've paid for the service. I can understand the Americans frustration with NBC (or whatever broadcaster is showing the Olympics in your region) but if you really do want to watch the BBC, the least you can do is pay for it https://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/pay-for-your-tv-licence/
While it still may not be technically legal, ethically I believe you're in the clear. Enjoy all of the 24 BBC Olympic channels - you'll probably find BBC iPlayer quite useful for catching up on the days events as well!
Tech: Rails, Ember.js, Postgres, Redis & AWS
https://www.dentally.co/uk/careers/senior-software-engineer-...
Contact: jobs[at]dentally.co