CareCloud is transforming the healthcare experience with the industry’s most modern, flexible and powerful cloud-based platform. We are a dynamic, performance driven and growth oriented organization, seeking to attract and retain the industry’s best talent. We have one of the best cultures in South Florida and we use several of the latest and greatest technologies including Kafka, AWS, Node, React but also have projects using Java, Scala, Rails and more! Come join our awesome team!
We're hiring for many roles, including:
* QA Engineer
* Senior Fullstack Engineer
* Senior Backend Engineer
* Software Development Engineer
If you're interested, email me directly with [HN] in the subject line at msavoury@carecloud.com
CareCloud is transforming the healthcare experience with the industry’s most modern, flexible and powerful cloud-based platform. We are a dynamic, performance driven and growth oriented organization, seeking to attract and retain the industry’s best talent. We have one of the best cultures in South Florida and we use several of the latest and greatest technologies including Kafka, AWS, Node, React but also have projects using Java, Scala, Rails and more! Come join our awesome team!
We're hiring for many roles, including:
* QA Manager
* Senior Fullstack Engineer
* Senior Backend Engineer
* Software Development Engineer
If you're interested, email me directly with [HN] in the subject line at msavoury@carecloud.com
I've always felt that if there was an Eclipse 'lite' it would garner lots of attention and be the go-to Java IDE for lots of developers. Eclipse got waaay to big and slow and had several bugs where the solution was always 'restart Eclipse'.
That being said, programming in Eclipse reminds me of simpler times where I would program just for fun.
As soon as I read your post I wondered if it was the 'AWS Lambda' book that keeps showing up in my recommendations. I clicked the link and sure enough there it was! Of course, now I HAVE to buy it. :D
Look at the job ads in your area. Take that into consideration when choosing your stack. If you're looking for an enterprise job I think Java would be a safe bet.