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At Irth Solutions we build software that improve resilience and reduce risk to critical infrastructure that millions of people and businesses rely on each day. Our systems handle millions of requests a day, coordinating activities between critical infrastructure providers, contract locators, excavators, and a variety of other stakeholders throughout North America.

We’re growing our team and are in immediate need for a Senior Software Engineer. Here are some notes on the technical requirements:

* C# development experience using .NET Core, WebAPI, and Entity Framework

* Experience building browser applications using Angular and Typescript

* Strong relational database experience with Postgres (preferred) or MS SQL Server including SQL, database functions, indexing, and performance tuning

* Kubernetes, Docker, Linux

Apply here: https://apply.workable.com/irth-solutions/j/33AD66BA3A/

We’re growing, so new positions will open up frequently. Please check back with if this one doesn’t fit your background


I read George Dyson’s “Analogia” with a bit of skepticism a few years ago, now all of the sudden it feels relevant (if you can make it past all of the chapters on kayak-building).


This is fantastic. In the span of 5 minutes I had my old record player calibrated. Really great work.


I’ve seen this happen. We call it having great cardiovascular fitness but not so great metabolic fitness. One of the reasons that zone 2 or maintaining aerobic fitness seems to have such an impact on longevity is that it requires and reinforces metabolic fitness.


I’ve been doing ultra marathons now for over a decade and the key is slow. Walk a lot at first if you have to. Some key resources getting started are Jeff Galloway and his run walk method. Once you build up to mostly running just mix in a few “strides” a week: pick two workouts and run 5x 30s at a “not quite sprint” speed. That’s it. Anything else you mix in (tempo, intervals, progressions, blah blah blah) is the last 10% and completely optional.

Your zone 2 speed will change over time. I do most of my training in zone 1 now, and that’s like a 9 minute per mile pace. When I started more than 15 years ago a 9 minute mile felt like death. Patience. This takes a lot of time.


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