Front-end Engineer for Research and Development Team
LinkShare Labs
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San Francisco, CA
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- Posted 21 days ago
About this job
Job type:
Full-time
Role:
Frontend Developer
Technologies
Job description
LinkShare Labs is the Research and Development team for LinkShare and Rakuten. We work with teams around the world (San Francisco, Chicago, Tampa, New York, London, Paris and Tokyo) on developing new technologies for global deployment.
As a Front-end Engineer with LS Labs, you would be responsible for building reusable HTML, CSS and JavaScript libraries for a number of products that we've developed 100% from scratch. You would also be working extensively with ASP.NET MVC 3. This position is not for someone who wants to maintain old code; this position is for someone who wants to help form the direction of all new web code and projects.
Writing something awesome from a blank Visual Studio window shouldn't be scary. LS Labs produces quality over quantity because of the large impact our technological decisions have inside of the company.
You should be very, very good at:
- HTML, CSS and JavaScript
- C#, ASP.NET
- Being a part of a very talented team
You should be very good at:
- ASP.NET MVC (or other MVC experience)
- Using REST and SOAP APIs (consuming)
- JSON, XML, AJAX... the usual web suspects.
- Cross-browser development
Things we use that it would be great if you knew but otherwise you could learn quickly:
- jQuery
- CSS grid systems
- Team Foundation Server (bugs, tasks, source control, builds, etc.)
- Agile development (we currently work in 2 week sprints)
- Cloud development
Regarding the Joel Test:
1. Source control: Yes, Team Foundation Server (TFS)
2. Build in one step: Yes, one click
3. Daily builds: Yes, nightly
4. Bug database: Yes, integrated into Visual Studio (TFS)
5. Fix bugs first: Yes, always
6. Up-to-date schedule: Yes, always up-to-date in wiki/TFS
7. Spec: Yes, always up-to-date in wiki/TFS
8. Quiet working conditions: Yes, until 6pm when we crank up the stereo
9. Best tools: Yes, three 24" LCDs, 8 CPU cores, 6gb RAM workstations for everyone, VS 2010
10. QA testers: Yes, an entire team with the sole function of testing
11. Code during interview: Yes
12. Hallway usability: Yes, through-out an iteration
As a Front-end Engineer with LS Labs, you would be responsible for building reusable HTML, CSS and JavaScript libraries for a number of products that we've developed 100% from scratch. You would also be working extensively with ASP.NET MVC 3. This position is not for someone who wants to maintain old code; this position is for someone who wants to help form the direction of all new web code and projects.
Writing something awesome from a blank Visual Studio window shouldn't be scary. LS Labs produces quality over quantity because of the large impact our technological decisions have inside of the company.
You should be very, very good at:
- HTML, CSS and JavaScript
- C#, ASP.NET
- Being a part of a very talented team
You should be very good at:
- ASP.NET MVC (or other MVC experience)
- Using REST and SOAP APIs (consuming)
- JSON, XML, AJAX... the usual web suspects.
- Cross-browser development
Things we use that it would be great if you knew but otherwise you could learn quickly:
- jQuery
- CSS grid systems
- Team Foundation Server (bugs, tasks, source control, builds, etc.)
- Agile development (we currently work in 2 week sprints)
- Cloud development
Regarding the Joel Test:
1. Source control: Yes, Team Foundation Server (TFS)
2. Build in one step: Yes, one click
3. Daily builds: Yes, nightly
4. Bug database: Yes, integrated into Visual Studio (TFS)
5. Fix bugs first: Yes, always
6. Up-to-date schedule: Yes, always up-to-date in wiki/TFS
7. Spec: Yes, always up-to-date in wiki/TFS
8. Quiet working conditions: Yes, until 6pm when we crank up the stereo
9. Best tools: Yes, three 24" LCDs, 8 CPU cores, 6gb RAM workstations for everyone, VS 2010
10. QA testers: Yes, an entire team with the sole function of testing
11. Code during interview: Yes
12. Hallway usability: Yes, through-out an iteration
About the company
Joel Test
Source control
One-step build
Daily builds
Bug database
Bugs fixed before writing new code
Up-to-date schedule
Specs
Quiet working conditions
Best tools that money can buy
Testers
Code screening
Hallway usability testing