Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | mpresh's commentslogin

Veracode | Burlington, MA | Cloud Engineer, SysEng

Veracode is a vibrant application security company. Great culture, great benefits. (i.e. unlimited time off) Lots of openings. Feel free to send me an email with any questions. mpreshman@veracode.com


Veracode (www.veracode.com)

Burlington, MA

Hiring For: Cloud Engineer Systems Engineer Director of Channel Enablement (Services) Security Program Manager Customer Support Engineer Channel Marketing Manager

We are a software security company securing the worlds information. We have a great culture (hackathons), great benefits (unlimited time off :)) and much, much more. Interested? feel free to contact mpreshman@veracode.com.


Veracode, Burlington MA Lots of open positions. http://www.veracode.com/about/careers Feel free to send email to mpreshman@veracode.com with any questions.


Veracode, Burlington MA We are hiring Python/AWS/Mobile Security engineers. Unlimited time off, fun challenging projects. Reach out to learn more. mpreshman@veracode.com


Burlington, MA http:/www.veracode.com

We are a security company looking for AWS Cloud engineers. We are also looking for Python developers looking to work on Mobile security challenging problems. Feel free to reach out for more details. mpreshman@veracode.com


Cloudlock.com in Waltham MA. We are a funded startup building very cool and challenging applications on top of Google App Engine to provide security and analytics for companies that are using Google Docs/Apps as their file sharing platform.

Feel free to contact me directly (mike@cloudlock.com) with any questions.


The best way to get over your fear is to practice. Start form smaller groups and work your way up. Eventually the fear goes away and you can turn that fear into positive energy when you are on stage.

I am the president of MIT speech club where members give speeches and participate in impromptu speaking. We meet Tuesdays at 6 pm in room 2-105. Feel free to email me at mpresh@gmail.com or just show up.

Looking forward to you joining us.

Best, -Mike


Room number correction: its actually 2-132.

-Mike


I would recommend the classic book Structure and Interpretation of Computer Languages. Its available for free online. It is the book taught at MIT. I do want to say it's not easy after the first couple of chapters. The videos are available online as well. But this is a great way to start.


For those that don't want to google it,

http://mitpress.mit.edu/sicp/full-text/book/book.html


another one is actually http://www.htdp.org/ by Mathias Felleisen from Northeastern University. Also a great way to learn to program the right way.


Professor Felleisen is an amazing professor, I had him for the fall semester for "Fundamentals of CS 1" and he really pushed you. Then his higher level course, "Software Development", I hear that he radically changes the requirements at the last minute. I guess that's to help you learn how to design a solid program in the beginning and then be able to easily change it down the road. It's supposed to be more like the "real world" (but I'm not quite sure when I'll get there).


I am not sure how many people in New York would be interested. I go up to NY once every two three months. My friend lives on 37th and 5th so if it wouldn't be too far, I wouldn't mind meeting for lunch on a Saturday some time and meeting people from New York and try to form a joint Boston New York community.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: