CVs

Amp: A Revolution in Source Version Control (in Ruby!)

amp.png Amp is a new Ruby based project that aims to "change the way we approach VCS" (version control systems).

Linux Sys Admin – Join the Brightbox team!

We’re looking for an experienced and motivated Linux Systems Administrator to join our Technical Team here at Brightbox.

You’ll work closely with our Technical Director and Senior Sys Admin to run our virtual hosting platform, our Ruby on Rails hosting clusters, our network and our MySQL databases. A full job description is below.

The role is full-time and you can work from home, from our office in Leeds, or a bit of both (the rest of us do a bit of both).

Senior Rails Developer – Join the Brightbox team!

We’re currently looking for an experienced and motivated Senior Rails Developer/Project Manager to join our development team here at Brightbox.

You’ll work closely both with our Development and Technical Teams to develop our customer control panel and other backend systems. We’re looking for someone who, in addition to being a great coder, will be an integral part of the team and an organised and enthusiastic project manager.

The role is full-time and you can work from home, from our office in Leeds, or a bit of both (the rest of us do a bit of both).

PHP.git

PHP moved from CVS to Subversion. Why should you care? Because they’ve got an official mirror on GitHub: http://github.com/php.

They’ve also published a nice mini guide to Git that you can give to your friends. Good work guys!

RubyMine 1.0: A Cross Platform Ruby IDE People Actually Seem To Love

rubymine.png

Join the Brightbox team!

Brightbox is looking for two new people to join the systems team, a Senior Linux Systems Administrator and a Linux/Rails System Support person. Both roles are full-time and you can work from home, from our office in Leeds, or a bit of both.

Send a hello, a CV and salary expectations to jobs at the Brightbox UK domain. CVs should be in an open format, preferably PDF or plain text. Closing date is 31st May 2009.

As always, recruitment agents should e-mail our special recruitment company email address: root@localhost

what git is not

There are obviously many reasons why Git is awesome (and why it sucks too), and there comes a point where it helps to dispel some of the rumors and issues surrounding Git. The following list attempts to show what Git is not. If you have your own reasons, feel free to contribute them to the comments and they may be added in.

Git's avalanche

I remember thinking how impressive the roll-out of Subversion was. They reached some magic point where the majority of the development world just flipped and most everyone who've previously been on CVS switched in what seemed like an overnight transition.

Of course it didn't happen like that, but the perception of a sea of developers all collectively deciding to move on and knight Subversion the next savior seemed impressive at the time.

Moving on from centralised-decentralised development, or: what’s after github and gitorious?

Distributed SCMs: Be Smart, Use the Bleeding Edge

I’ll preface this title by admitting I’ve not paid much attention to my version control software. When you’re smart (cue 16-ton weight), you try to think ahead and choose software or hardware which will vastly reduce the effort of programming. While staying on the edge with most things, for version control I neglected to really think about it.

Syndicate content