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janpieterz
Joined 211 karma
[ my public key: https://keybase.io/janpieterz; my proof: https://keybase.io/janpieterz/sigs/ojXWbjBZYnB8N1DJXtzj7-6iVKWHfCaDIoT6J-1cXqw ]

Verifying my Blockstack ID is secured with the address 1DF8pL4vBExWbHnKaoNvTVBypGyqtEW5Lz https://explorer.blockstack.org/address/1DF8pL4vBExWbHnKaoNvTVBypGyqtEW5Lz


  1. We can have a great philosophical chat about it! Let's chat.
  2. Since we do location based pay (based on benchmarks) it's tough to give a range as it'd be a huge range (North America has a significant variety of pay scales), and the various levels themselves in just the US have big ranges as well.

    We'll address this in our first orientation call with a candidate to make sure we're in the same ball park of ranges.

    But point taken, we'll look into if we can make some range indications available. For now, if you lookup compensation ranges for companies in our peer group and your geography it should match, but very happy to discuss your specific during a call.

  3. Trinsic | Software Engineer | REMOTE (North America) | Full‑time

    We’re building the first Identity Acceptance Network—the “Visa for ID.” Humanity is editing genes, starting space tourism and working on artificial intelligence. Meanwhile, identity verification is still done by taking pictures of plastic cards . We’re bringing identity into this new age, where trust is essential and becoming more so every day with AI. We enable accepting digital IDs that users already have (mDLs, BankIDs, reusable IDs) and verify users ~10x faster across 40+ networks covering 500M+ people.

    Role

    - Software Engineer (#5 on the team; ~20% of eng capacity). High ownership, product-minded, backend and systems leaning.

    - You’ll ship fast, prune scope, and help shape our engineering culture.

    - You’ve thrived in early-stage environments, can tackle fires independently, and care as much about product as code.

    - Strong backend experience; generalist who enjoys moving up/down the stack.

    - You care deeply about user privacy and data security.

    Stack & ways of working

    - .NET (C#) backend, React + TypeScript frontend, Azure, GitHub CI/CD.

    - Remote‑first in North America; strong async work habits; <5 hrs/week of recurring meetings; frequent pairing/huddles.

    - We’re keen but responsible adopters of AI tooling to hit our high bar of excellence.

    Comp & benefits

    - Salary set by a transparent formula (we target ~60th percentile cash for our stage) + meaningful equity, usually 90th+ percentile for a startup of our stage.

    - Premium US healthcare (75% of premiums covered for you & dependents), at least 15 days PTO, $900/yr fitness stipend, $350/mo coworking or $200/mo home office, first week is “Think Week” to help you transition into your new role, paid family leave, top‑tier laptop, twice‑yearly in‑person offsites.

    Learn more / apply

    - JD: https://trinsic.notion.site/Software-Engineer-163b6be993cd80...

    - Comp philosophy: https://trinsic.notion.site/Compensation-Philosophy-bf9b66a5...

    - Working at Trinsic: https://trinsic.notion.site/Work-at-Trinsic-0faef9dbfbd84627...

    How to get in touch

    Reply with your GitHub/LinkedIn + a few lines on what you’ve built, or email jp@trinsic.id.

    If you’re North America‑based and excited about identity, I’d love to talk.

    JP, CTO @ Trinsic

  4. Love it! Even just simply freeing my main branch would be a big win so I can keep working as well.

    But no way to find out if there’s any data sent to your servers etc, unless I’m missing some links?

  5. Perhaps to some degree, but I've never seen a skyscraper that was almost done being torn down to be re-architected and rebuilt.
  6. Waterfall in software development was different than a Gantt chart based "project that was managed" like the construction of a bridge (an example close to my house). They added new requirements to this bridge (like they wanted the surrounding grounds to be maintained nicely, so added irrigation and gardening etc). But no new requirements were added to the foundational "here's a bridge and it needs to cross this stream from this point to that point" (high level).

    Waterfall in software was continuously changing those fundamental parts. You'd be fine tuning the irrigation and needed to destruct the whole bridge because some new requirements came up. That's where the anti-Gantt and "bad waterfall" comes from, the reality is the software world as a whole moves way quicker and requirements are way more malleable, subjective than building a bridge.

  7. How do you suggest we handle the rental market?
  8. I assume they were talking about re-usable plastic containers vs glass. Glass breaks.
  9. Right, but now I’m basically running a huge performance hit, need to parallelize my queries etc.

    I was parsing a document recently, 10-ish questions for 1 document, would make things expensive.

    Might be what’s needed but not ideal.

  10. How would I do this reliably? Eg give me 10 different values, all in one prompt for performance reasons?

    Might not need JSON but whatever format it outputs, it needs to be reliable.

  11. What would you recommend?
  12. There is also a Federated Credential Management (FedCN) API coming in, that should help somewhat.

    https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FedCM_API

  13. Yea, that's my understanding of the introduction of the NEM 3 policy. Production of energy isn't the problem in California (aka: sun), having it stored and accessible at the right moment is. Previously people would be feeding back solar during peak sun hours and getting paid, while taking energy at night and having an effective "0 dollar use" bill if they consume the exact same amount (there is some base connection fee).

    The NEM 3 policy reduces a lot what you get paid unless you contribute back during the peak use hours, they say it's "avoided cost" pricing. On the surface it seems fair, you're paying for more than generation when you use energy so you generating and contributing back during huge surplus isn't as valuable as you using during night time.

  14. Any resources in that? Seems ridiculous. I get a “net connection fee” and can even somewhat feel comfortable with this NEM 3 thing, but what I generate should be mine to control, I could do it completely off grid if I wanted.

    As mentioned in other comment, moved here recently and exploring the situation.

  15. Huh, thank you. Moved here recently so going to have to check it out. If I have battery storage to supply my home, surplus would at least make some money right?
  16. Why did you choose not to feed it back?
  17. Compared to simply walking out, packing everything into your bags right away without needing to scan with either a hand terminal or "repacking" at self checkout is a lot more friction. Didn't really think it would be until I tried a couple of times in a row and it was incredible.
  18. It would be an interesting idea to fund a company (probably best as a non-profit) that takes patent trolls to court selecting cases based on what trolls are suing and where we can find prior art. Troll the trolls.
  19. Don't know why the company wouldn't give you a raise for increased cost of living? Plenty of companies will adjust pay based on location, including moving around. And plenty of companies adjust for inflation as well.

    Of course any adjustment in pay needs to fit budget, so the company and line manager would need to have the budget to afford to. And there's probably plenty of companies that won't have this as an option or won't adjust for inflation, but there's also plenty of examples that do.

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