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Archive for February 2008

Unix Pipefitter

24 February 2008 by Simon ~ Permalink


Tap
Originally uploaded by sfllaw.

At Akoha, we have been very, very, very busy. So busy, in fact, that Éric and I have no time to take care of the growing number of computers that we are using. We must, it appears, get some help.

Now, we’re looking for someone bright, energetic, and loving in their care of Ubuntu systems. We use a wide range of interesting technologies and you certainly will not be just a system administrator.

You’ll be a Unix Pipefitter!
(en français)

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Posted in Akoha, Team having no comments »

The Internship Experience: Straight from the Mouth of a Ninja

21 February 2008 by Malini ~ Permalink

Hi! I’m Malini Das, and I’ve been wrangling pythons with Akoha since the beginning of January 2008. I first found this internship opportunity from my school’s job bank, and was immediately interested in the position. The job description was already unique with its quirkiness, and I appreciated the level of emphasis that they placed on employee enthusiasm and love for development. Since starting this internship, I can see how well the description reflected the work environment and software. Everyone is enthusiastic about work, a pleasure to talk to, and we all love what we do! Working here has been unbelievable; I’m only one month into my internship but I’ve learned an immeasurable amount about web design and development, and I thoroughly enjoy what I do.

This is my second internship, my first being a position as a quality assurance analyst with a much larger company that has been around for a while. My previous job experience taught me a lot, but working here has definitely given me a greater feeling of contribution. Now, working in development in a smaller start-up company, ideas are free-floating and there’s source code just waiting to be written, so I know that my contributions are significant to Akoha, and I’m always rewarded with the sense of accomplishment of getting things done. This isn’t the kind of job where youre stuck doing the same uninspired thing everyday; new features need developing, new bugs need resolving, and being able to see all of your work in production really gives a great sense of satisfaction.

I really encourage anyone interested in doing an internship to consider working at Akoha. You’re never stuck doing mind-numbing tests or monitoring, nor are you assigned menial coding tasks. You’re given responsibilities and projects, and as a result your work has significant impact with the company. Working here requires you to be dynamic, and to be confident with your ability to diagnose and solve problems on the fly. The environment is fun and relaxed, with flex-time and Guitar Hero just waiting to be played! Trust me, if you’re tired of a drab, stale environment where your work goes unnoticed, a move to Akoha make a phenomenal impact on your work experience.

Working at Akoha has been a great experience. Being able to work with awesome people, great software and cool ideas has definitely been a breath of fresh air. I know that this is rather tacky, but I believe my main point can be best explained by what my sister has told me shortly after I started working:

“It’s good to see that every time you come home from work, you have a smile on your face!”

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Posted in Akoha, Team having 2 comments »

The Quest For Interns

19 February 2008 by Éric ~ Permalink

So we hired 3 interns in January, for a 4 month coop: Malini from Waterloo, Daniel from ÉTS and Maxime from Sherbrooke University. We weren’t sure what the response would be to an apprentice ninja posting from a brand new, completely unknown startup. Back in November/December when we posted those jobs, we didn’t even have a blog, all we had was a bare website announcing something would come.

The response from Waterloo was a good surprise: we had somewhere around 40 applications. And the quality was there, too: we selected about 10 students that we wanted to meet in an interview. Of those there were probably 2 or 3 that we would have liked to work with, and one clearly stood out, and she accepted the job. A couple more students were very interesting, but their english was really not at a sufficient level. We don’t require a stellar handle of the english language, but do need to be able to converse with them pretty easily, and that they understand what’s going on.

Looking for interns

We also posted the job at many universities around here: McGill, Concordia, Polytechnique, USherbrooke, ÉTS. The response was the same from all 4: an itsy bitsy teeny tiny trickle of CVs. Less than 5 from each, quality greatly lacking from most. The only ones we wanted to meet were Daniel and Maxime. Fortunately, they both impressed us and we made them an offer, which they thankfully accepted.

All 3 are doing wonderfully well.

But why the discrepancy in the responses???

­ This time around, we have a website with a blog and pretty (and not so pretty) pictures and we’re starting to make ourselves known. We also have a larger team, and existing interns who can vouch for us. So we thought the local response would be better, but so far, no good. 4 applications from ÉTS, 1 of which we want to meet, and we’ve seen 1 from McGill that we want to meet out of something like 3 or 4 applications. We have yet to receive the applications from USherb, Polytechnique, Concordia.

That’s the other problem: scheduling. The deadline for ranking the Waterloo applicants is fast approaching, but we haven’t even received CVs from half the universities around here and haven’t met anyone else, so the timing isn’t very good between the different programs. It’s good between universities in the Montréal region, just not across provinces.

With what we’ve seen so far, we decided to hire 2 from Waterloo, which had sent us over 30 CVs, 10 of which we deemed interesting enough to interview, and 3 of which we’d like to work with.

But, again, why the discrepancy?

I spoke with a very nice internships supervisor from ÉTS, who told me that one “problem” was a red hot market for engineering coop students in Montréal. She said that for most coop terms recently, they have many more coop positions available than students to fill them, so the students have plenty of choice, and only apply to a handful. However, from what i gather, it’s the same situation at Waterloo, where most students told me they applied on 5 to 10 positions and saw many hundred postings. One guess is that there is simply more of a startup mentality at Waterloo, where students know of a few companies that originated from the university. How do we change that here?

If anyone has an input on this, and on how to make it easier for us to recruit quality students, please contact me (eric at akoha dot org). That being said, our current students are doing a great job, and we did get some very interesting applications for the next term.

So what are we looking for in an intern?

It’s simple, really: someone smart who gets things done. Someone with enthusiasm, someone who gets the project. Just as important as all that, someone we’ll get along with, who we know it’ll be fun working with.

Someone special.

We use technologies that are too new to be known by many, or aren’t new but for some reason still aren’t taught, so though we’d love to see someone who has excellent javascript-fu from writing an AJAX site for their school’s robotics club, or someone else who wrote a search algorithm in python that works efficiently on a 100e6 rows database table, it just doesn’t happen. So we look for people who are smart, motivated and interested and who we know will be able to pick up these skills easily.

Many students show interests outside of school, and that’s always a big plus. Some showed me some pretty good web work they’ve done. Some are just very cool people who actually dress for the part in the interview (you know who you are), and who at the end of the interview you figure you really want on your team.

I won’t say more, for fear of being attacked by a horde of applicants who will have prepared a scripted interview that would show exactly what we’re looking for, but that’s the gist of it.

So what are you waiting for?

If you’re a smart student whose interest was piqued by recent news from us, who’s already noticed our presence in different corners of the virtual universe, who thinks you’d get along great with our team, then please apply - we’ll always have interns and will always be on the lookout for them. Send us your resumé and cover letter to jobs at akoha dot org.­

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Posted in Akoha, Team having 4 comments »

Montréal Python 1 is Tomorrow

6 February 2008 by Simon ~ Permalink


Green Tree Python
Originally uploaded by nasmac.

Akoha’s sister company, Standout Jobs, has been hosting Montreal on Rails for quite a while. We figured we’d get into the act.

So we’re sponsoring the first Montréal Python gathering tomorrow. Sadly, we don’t really have enough space for everyone, so we’re commandeering the Standout Jobs offices upstairs. After all, what good are siblings if you can’t ask them for favours?

I will actually be on a train to Toronto, so I’m going to miss David Goodger talking about crazy awesome stuff he does in Python. But you should go!

Intimidated? Don’t think that Python is for you? Worry not! Python programmers are friendly, charming, and helpful.

Montréal Python

Montréal Python 1
Thursday, 7 February 2008
18:30 – 21:00
Standout Jobs
3981 boul. St-Laurent #615
Free admission

( Website | Facebook | Google Maps )

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Posted in Akoha, Web Development having no comments »

Mesh Panel on Social Change and the Web

6 February 2008 by Austin ~ Permalink

Last year I had the pleasure to give be part of a panel on Social Change and the Web at the MESH conference, one of Canada’s premier events for the Web community.

Our friends at MESH put up the video of the panel which included our friend Tom Williams speaking about his project at GiveMeaning.

For those of you who weren’t able to attend, we wanted to share this with you.

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Posted in Akoha, Media Mentions having 5 comments »

Hello World, We’re Akoha

5 February 2008 by Austin ~ Permalink

So what is Akoha? When are you launching? Who are you?

These are just some of the fun questions we’ve gotten over the last year.

We have been hard at work putting together our team, building our product, lining up our ducks and generally keeping a low profile during 2007.

With the company beginning some limited user testing, and some exciting news forthcoming we thought it was a good time to start to pull back the curtain showing a little of what is occurring backstage at Akoha.

While we won’t be pre-announcing a lot of details about the nuts & bolts of Akoha, we will be talking about our inspirations, our beginnings and some of the technologies we’ve been using to put Akoha together.

We look forward to inviting more of our friends to join us in testing over the next couple of months. If you would like to help us as we test Akoha please sign up for the beta. You can also join our Facebook group.

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Posted in Akoha having 7 comments »