Our frontend team is looking for a seasoned engineer with a passion for world-class UX design and elegant UI development workflows. As part of this small team of senior developers and designers, you get to make a big impact building reusable React components and implementing our new style guide across all our products.
AdRoll is one of the most widely used adtech companies, with 25k+ companies using the product globally and $100M+/yr in revenue.
Our frontend team is looking for a seasoned engineer with a passion for world-class UX design and elegant UI development workflows. As part of this small team of senior developers and designers, you get to make a big impact building reusable React components and implementing our new style guide across all our products.
AdRoll is one of the most widely used adtech companies, with 25k+ companies using the product globally and $100M+/yr in revenue.
Our Frontend Core team is looking for a seasoned engineer with a passion for world-class UX design and elegant UI development workflows. As part of this small team of senior developers and designers, you get to make a big impact building reusable React components and implementing our new style guide across all our products.
AdRoll is one of the most widely used adtech companies, with 25k+ companies using the product globally and $100M+/yr in revenue.
I'm currently using Fluxxor[1] which reifies the Flux architecture with Stores and a central dispatcher. I did some research into Backbone.Model bindings but eventually decided to go "full Flux". I've yet to regret my decision even though my app has grown quite complex.
The best part is, thanks to React & Flux I'm building a large scale web app without jQuery for the first time in my life :)
Two.js[1] has a WebGL renderer and abstractions for basic vector graphics and polygons. I haven't had the chance to use it in a project yet but it seems promising. Two.js could even be used as a basis for a WebGL charting library (thus providing another layer of abstraction).
Coincidentally, we just launched an improved version of our GitHub analytics app with hourly page view charts. We also show rankings by country and language for all repos (not just the top 25 ones).
You might want to check it out if you're interested in finding out why your project is trending: https://bitdeli.com/
THANK YOU. I was thinking to myself "Wow they even took the examples straight off of Buffer's website".
Shame on this company for blatantly stealing content without attribution.
EDIT: Before I feel foolish, there is a disclaimer at the bottom that says "Reprinted with permission from Buffer", so I might've overreacted a tad. I'll leave my original comment intact as a monument to my shame.
I've been a happy Sidebar subscriber from day one and I always browse through the weekly links. Thanks Sacha!
A quick anecdote: While reading this article I noticed that I don't remember getting my referral link from Sidebar. I searched my Gmail for "in:spam sidebar" and there it was - the only Sidebar email which Gmail has ever flagged as spam.
I know MailChimp has tools for testing the spamminess of a campaign and this message probably passed all of them since there's nothing particularly spammy about it. Maybe it was random or maybe the referral link was just enough to trigger the spam filter in (my) Gmail.
If the open rate for the MailChimp campaign wasn't particularly low spam filtering wasn't probably a significant factor in the overall conversion rate.
And you're right, the open rate is much lower than usual (19% vs 63% for the one before). I didn't noticed it before because the daily edition containing the same referral link that I sent on the same day went through fine.
This happens from time to time and I'm not sure what I can do about it.
I honestly don't understand how Gmail's spam filter can be so "dumb" (at least from a human point of view). You'd think that if someone open, reads, and clicks emails from a particular address regularly, the filter would be smart enough to know that there's a very high probability it's not spam.
Gmail's spam filter definitely seems to be erring on the aggressive side nowadays. I honestly can't remember when any real spam last reached my inbox. On the other hand, I did find many other false positives while going through the spam folder, mainly from newsletters and social notifications I really have subscribed to.
I guess the least we can do is help Google tune their filters and periodically mark all false positives as "not spam".
I assume the text on the Kickstarter page is written by her mother - she used the first-person viewpoint to enhance the narrative. You can read the same paragraph with a 3rd person viewpoint and it makes more sense ("since she's 9 she's starting with RPG maker...").
Regarding your second point: It would be a great move by the parents to donate most of the pledges to a charity for kids'/women's/STEM education. I don't know what Kickstarter's stance on this would be though.
I have spent many hour-long train commutes entranced by Super Hexagon. The game is really really hard, but the fast-paced sessions and minimalistic controls are very well suited for the mobile form factor.
Senior UI Engineer (React, Redux, JavaScript ES6/ES7, private npm, Browserify/Webpack, SASS)
Our frontend team is looking for a seasoned engineer with a passion for world-class UX design and elegant UI development workflows. As part of this small team of senior developers and designers, you get to make a big impact building reusable React components and implementing our new style guide across all our products.
AdRoll is one of the most widely used adtech companies, with 25k+ companies using the product globally and $100M+/yr in revenue.
As we build, we're also sharing our code...
http://tech.adroll.com/blog/frontend/2015/12/21/gulp-react-d...
...and learnings with the open source community:
http://tech.adroll.com/blog/frontend/2015/11/19/rollup-major...
I'm happy to share more details via email (jyri@adroll.com), Twitter (@jtuulos) or over coffee in SF.