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When would this be open to the world? :)


He is indeed - I was fortunate enough to work with Wilfred and he is truly passionate about OSS!


London, UK - EDITD http://editd.com/jobs/engineering/ or email jobs@editd.com

Currently hiring for Engineering, Data science and DevOps positions, and our stack is primarily Python & JavaScript, with a wide variety of frameworks like Django/Flask and Backbone/Marionette/d3/react. js to keep things interesting. We're an established startup, focused on doing important things for the fourth biggest industry in the world (fashion), helping them reduce waste and be more efficient. We have a beautiful web app, used every day by hundreds of people at ASOS, Gilt Groupe, Target, Gap and more. Our office is large and sociable, with people having lunch together every day and beer, wine, cheese and snacks in the office every Friday, as well as team days out.

Our engineering team is made up of some really clever people, solving diverse and interesting problems on a daily basis, like image analysis, big data visualisation and many others. We love good practices like extensive testing and continuous integration, and enjoy giving back to the community, so open source contributions are highly encouraged.

Half of the team has actually found and joined us through HN “who’s hiring”, so don't hesitate to get in touch, we're always happy to meet new people! If you want to talk to me directly, feel free to drop me an e-mail at andreas@editd.com :)


London, UK - EDITD http://editd.com/jobs/engineering/ or email jobs@editd.com

Currently hiring for Engineering, Data science and DevOps positions, and our stack is primarily Python & JavaScript, with a wide variety of frameworks like Django/Flask and Backbone/Marionette/d3/react. js to keep things interesting.

We're an established startup, focused on doing important things for the fourth biggest industry in the world (fashion), helping them reduce waste and be more efficient. We have a beautiful web app, used every day by hundreds of people at ASOS, Gilt Groupe, Target, Gap and more. Our office is large and sociable, with people having lunch together every day and beer, wine, cheese and snacks in the office every Friday, as well as team days out.

Our engineering team is made up of some really clever people, solving diverse and interesting problems on a daily basis, like image analysis, big data visualisation and many others. We love good practices like extensive testing and continuous integration, and enjoy giving back to the community, so open source contributions are highly encouraged.

Half of the team has actually found and joined us through HN “who’s hiring”, so don't hesitate to get in touch, we're always happy to meet new people! If you want to talk to me directly, feel free to drop me an e-mail at andreas@editd.com :)


It looks like it's dead, for whatever reason: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8119683


That one wasn't posted by whoishiring. Someone saw that and killed it, but didn't feel the need to make sure the whoishiring one was posted


Users rightly killed it with flags.

The whoishiring bot has been posting these staunchly for four years. We can be patient if it sleeps in every now and then.


It seems the bot did not create it automatically so I took on myself to create one, but for some reason it's out of the front page.


> I took on myself to create one

Please don't. It results in a race condition for karma, and we don't want that. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsfaq.html


Thanks for posting this; I submitted an "Ask HN" entry a few days ago to ask other start-ups how they go about hiring technical people (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7978111) - it didn't get much traction but this might be a good opportunity to find out a bit more :)


London, UK - EDITD http://editd.com/jobs/engineering/ or email jobs@editd.com

Data science, DevOps, Engineering. Python & JavaScript primarily.

We've got a great team made up of some really clever people, doing important things for the fourth biggest industry in the world (fashion), helping them reduce waste and be more efficient.

We have a beautiful web app, used every day by hundreds of people at ASOS, Gilt Groupe, Target, Gap and more.


I am not a big coffee drinker, but I think people who are into their coffee might like to know where exactly your coffee is coming from, if it's fair trade etc. So this is some information you might want to put on your landing page.

Also, maybe make it a bit more obvious what countries are eligible for deliveries? Currently I can only see this information in the drop down when placing an order, but making it a bit more obvious might help. For example, I would not expect to be able to get this in Belgium, so would be inclined to think just after looking at the landing page "Meh, sounds good but I bet it's just for the US/UK", close tab.


Same thoughts as well.

Eligible geographical areas is one of the big thing missing here. When I initially looked at the landing page, and did not see any mentioned of your delivery areas, I immediately thinking "great, only local delivery to SF, NYC, London or Berlin."

But you deliver all over Europe. Let the whole of Europe know about this on your landing page.


Didn't the fact the that the price shown (at least to me, as usual on the interwebs it's hard to be sure it's the same for everyone) was in Euros per cup provide a hint that this might be a European company?


Not really. Could be a cheap localization effort.

Although the weight is measured in kg, which speaks for a European company. But then again, the cheapest plan says "1kg every second month" instead of "500g per month" which is kinda weird.


That's because to minimize shipping costs you will get a package of 1kg every second month. Not 500 gram every month.

Thanks for the feedback


Ah thanks, that wasn't clear to me. I thought you just used 1kg as a baseline unit. Since pricing is monthly, I suggested that shipping would be too and thought it was just a weird way to describe 500g :)


using coffee which was roasted over a month ago is probably a deal breaker for a lot of people who would use a service like this. Good examples of coffee websites: www.hasbean.co.uk www.yorkcoffeeemporium.co.uk


That's exactly what I'm trying to test here, if there are people who don't care much about that as far as they get a lower price. Thanks


Another UK competitor is Square Mile coffee, whose subscriptions are separate monthly deliveries of 350g or 500g (http://shop.squaremilecoffee.com/collections/subscriptions).


Oh yeah, I've seen a few places around Shoreditch selling that, its pretty nice. I didn't realise they did subscriptions


The fact that they refer to the postal code as a "zip code" led me to believe the currency/weight conversion was involuntary on their part.


That's definitely a recurring point, there are (at least) two things missing to the landing page, "what beans are these" and "where do you ship to".

Working on that!

Thanks for all the great feedback!


Ground breaking stuff!


I do the exact same thing; MDN is an absolutely brilliant network and anyone can contribute to it.


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