BotChain wants to put bot-to-bot communication on the blockchain
Microsoft and Red Hat now offer a jointly managed OpenShift service on Azure
Watch the Microsoft Build 2018 keynote live right here
Microsoft and DJI team up to bring smarter drones to the enterprise
Microsoft brings more AI smarts to the edge
As Kubernetes grows, a startup ecosystem develops in its wake
Mesosphere hauls in $125 M Series D investment
Kubernetes stands at an important inflection point
Skills Compilation
Skills:
A minimum of three (3) years of related work experience or any equivalent combination of education and experience which provides the following knowledge, skills and abilities:
- Experience in one or more software languages and technologies including Java, JavaScript, HMTL5, J2EE, Python, etc.
- Extensive experience in full-stack software development using Java, NodeJS, RESTful, HTML/HTML 5, Javascript, JSON, Ajax and CSS technologies.
- Experience building web services, like REST/OAuth/JSON, and a good understanding of microservices architecture.
- Experience with commonly used open source products like Hibernate, Angular, and Maven.
- Experience with automated test tools used during the development process (e.g., Selenium, Cucumber, JUnit).
- Extensive experience with relational database development, database queries, stored procedures, data modeling (e.g., MySQL, MS SQL).
- Experience with NoSQL database technologies like Cassandra, MongoDB, DynamoDB is a plus.
- Experience with application servers like Tomcat, Wildfly, etc.
- Experience with source code/configuration management tools (CVS, GitHub)
- Expertise in a DevOps environment.
- Experience with collaboration tools (e.g., Jenkins, JIRA, Confluence).
- Programming experience on/with Linux platforms.
- Experience and skill in the use of development tools (e.g., databases, report writers) and conventions for the PC, client/server and mainframe environments.
- Strong interpersonal skills.
Key Responsibilities:
· Work within and across teams to provide software solutions for our customers
· Participate in all aspects and ceremonies associated with Agile development
· Determine complexity level of a story in a Sprint/Development cycle
· Communicate with Project Managers on current project status
· Build scalable software through architecture discussions with the HCM team
· Apply test-driven development
· Manage work using JIRA, including tasks, bugs, estimates and actuals
· Have familiarity with continuous integration and deployment concepts.
Requirements:
· 3 or more years of professional software development experience
- Strong proficiency in developing and debugging JavaScript applications
- Ability to layout and style an HTML page by hand
- Experience building data intensive REST based applications
- Experience with current debugging tools
- Experience with one or more JavaScript frameworks (React, AngularJS, etc.)
- Experience with one or more distributed version controls (Git, etc.)
- Understanding of one or more server side programming languages
- Understanding of asynchronous and event driven programming
- Understanding of test driven design patterns
- Experience using Module Loaders (RequireJS, Almond, Bower, CommonJS, etc. )
- Bachelor’s Degree in CS, MIS or a related field
Preferred:
· Experience with Python and Python frameworks such as Django and Twisted
· Familiarity with PostgreSQL / NoSQL / MongoDB
· Experience using Creative Design tools (Photoshop, Illustrator, etc.)
· Understanding of ORM concepts and data driven applications
· Experience working using an Agile development methodology
Google-led Kubeflow, machine learning for Kubernetes, begins to take shape
Datadog provides visibility into Kubernetes apps with new container map
SoundHound has raised a big $100M round to take on Alexa and Google Assistant
Upbound grabs $9M Series A to automate multi-cloud management
Cisco is acquiring business intelligence startup Accompany for $270M
Workplace, Facebook’s enterprise version, now has 52 SaaS apps and bots, opens up for more integrations
ScienceLogic release gives IT view across entire stack
Google endorses Clean Power Plan ahead of expected repeal
Google has joined Apple in a growing chorus of tech giants coming out in support of the Clean Power Plan. The company filed a statement with the Environmental Protection Agency, which it has since shared with TechCrunch, supporting the Obama-era legislation.
The legislation, which sought to curb power plant emissions by more than 30 percent by 2030, is expected to be repealed by the Trump administration. As with Apple’s earlier filing, Google cites both environmental and economic fallout, should the policy be repealed.
“Wind and solar deployment—as well as the associated supply chains—have been among the fastest-growing sectors of the U.S. economy in recent years,” the company writes in the letter dated April 25, “with job growth rates significantly exceeding the growth rate of the overall labor force.”
The company also notes its own personal interest in supporting the policy, citing its work to shift toward renewable energy, along with the CPP’s potential to drive job growth. “The Clean Power Plan can continue to drive innovation and job growth,” Google adds, “while spurring the modernization of the American electricity system and reducing carbon dioxide emissions and helping to mitigate the threat of global climate change.
Under embattled head Scott Pruitt, the EPA has suggested that the CPP was an illegal extension of the agency’s authority. Late last month, Trump signed an executive order mandating a review of the policy, a move most observers have interpreted as the first steps toward its eventual repeal.
Don’t just stir; Stircle
Although I do my best to minimize the trash produced by my lifestyle (blog posts notwithstanding), one I can’t really control, at least without carrying a spoon on my person at all times, is the necessity of using a disposable stick to stir my coffee. That could all change with the Stircle, a little platform that spins your drink around to mix it.
Now, of course this is ridiculous. And there are other things to worry about. But honestly, the scale of waste here is pretty amazing. Design house Amron Experimental says that 400 million stir sticks are used every day, and I have no reason to doubt that. My native Seattle probably accounts for a quarter of that.
So you need to get the sugar (or agave nectar) and cream (or almond milk) mixed in your iced americano. Instead of reaching for a stick and stirring vigorously for 10 or 15 seconds, you could instead place your cup in the Stircle (first noticed by New Atlas and a few other design blogs), which would presumably be built into the fixins table at your coffee shop.
Around and around and around she goes, where she stops, nobody… oh. There.
Once you put your cup on the Stircle, it starts spinning — first one way, then the other, and so on, agitating your drink and achieving the goal of an evenly mixed beverage without using a wood or plastic stirrer. It’s electric, but I can imagine one being powered by a lever or button that compresses a spring. That would make it even greener.
The video shows that it probably gets that sugar and other low-lying mixers up into the upper strata of the drink, so I think we’re set there. And it looks as though it will take a lot of different sizes, including reusable tumblers. It clearly needs a cup with a lid, since otherwise the circling liquid will fly out in every direction, which means you have to be taking your coffee to go. That leaves out pretty much every time I go out for coffee in my neighborhood, where it’s served (to stay) in a mug or tall glass.
But a solution doesn’t have to fix everything to be clever or useful. This would be great at an airport, for instance, where I imagine every order is to go. Maybe they’ll put it in a bar, too, for extra smooth stirring of martinis.
Actually, I know that people in labs use automatic magnetic stirrers to do their coffee. This would be a way to do that without appropriating lab property. Those things are pretty cool too, though.
You might remember Amron from one of their many previous clever designs; I happen to remember the Keybrid and Split Ring Key, both of which I used for a while. I’ll be honest, I don’t expect to see a Stircle in my neighborhood cafe any time soon, but I sure hope they show up in Starbucks stores around the world. We’re going to run out of those stirrer things sooner or later.
Solar project lending startup Wunder Capital raises $112 million as renewable energy shines
As renewable energy continues to gobble up more and more of the new energy capacity coming online, the solar project lending company Wunder Capital has raised $112 million in primarily debt financing to boost its business.
The 90 percent debt and 10 percent equity commitment came from the multi-strategy investment firm Cyrus Investments, which has backed renewable energy projects for years through its investment in RePower Group.
“The debt component is going to blow out the lending opportunity,” says Wunder chief executive Bryan Birsic.
Wunder chose to consolidate the debt and equity round with a single lead investor to simplify the negotiation process on both sides of the table, Birsic said. “Since Cyrus is an equity holder in the company we can come to better terms,” on debt facilities and repayment, he said.
Wunder lends money to commercial solar energy development projects throughout the U.S. and its business has been buoyed by a flood of demand for new solar energy projects coming online.
Since its launch in 2016, the company has financed more than 180 projects throughout the U.S., which are generating somewhere in the range of 50 megawatts (or enough electricity to power roughly 32,500 homes).
The Boulder, Colo.-based company makes money in three ways: It charges closing fees, a servicing fee and annual interest rate on the debt it provides — typically Wunder will pull in between 4 percent and 5 percent off of each loan it provides to a project.
And business… for renewable energy… is booming.
For instance, the industry appears to have shaken off concerns over price increases stemming from the tariffs imposed on solar panels as part of broad punitive measures President Trump has taken against China (which supplies most of the world’s solar panels).
“It was really pleasant to see that folks were less reactionary and more responsive to the data,” says Birsic. The headlines, Birsic explains, were worse than the reality for the industry. The headlines in January predicted a 30 percent tariff on solar panels, but banks thought those increases would ultimately result in a 3 percent price increase for residential solar installations and a 4 percent price increase for commercial solar.
Those price increases would only bring costs in line with what they were at the end of 2017, since over the course of the year prices on installations declined 10 percent, Birsic says.
“We’re very cool with the economics as it existed in 2017,” he said.