Showing posts with label hiring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hiring. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Meet the Team: Mose

The Bitnami team is a diverse group of talented people distributed all over the world. Get to know them better through this series of blog posts.

Based in Taipei, Taiwan, Mose works remotely for the Webdev team.

A Brief Bio

When Internet came to France around 1994, I was a working in advertising as a creative director, but my passion was around automating things. So, I had to learn programming to automate my first websites, first statically and later dynamically with php in 98. Then, I became a developer, learning all I could from practice (thanks to the internet bubble of the 2000’s), and by participating in various open source projects, a real fertile ground for self-learning. Since then, I made my way into programming and system administration while engaging in some activism around Open Source, collective intelligence, environments, and various other things. I always have used Linux, preferably Debian flavored.

In 2008, I decided to learn a new language that was not for programming.. I chose Chinese. I moved to Taiwan and spent one year at a university learning Chinese there. And I never left. Taiwan is a really great country to live in, as a foreigner.

I consider myself a life-long geek with a weird mixed background. More details on http://mose.com

Why you joined Bitnami and what excites you about working here?

What excited me about Bitnami was the type of products that we deliver. Packaging Open Source applications for various platforms and environments is like a public service for the internet. We are at the age where more and more SaaS platforms offer services that transform the internet user in a mere consumer with no control over their data, so Open Source software lost a bit of its power to liberate people. With Bitnami, people can easily deploy Open Source applications in various places, which empowers them to take back control of the internet....and this is a big deal for me.

But there were also many other factors that attracted me to Bitnami like the flexibility to work remotely, and the deliberate intention to make remote work possible and efficient. Since I’m in Asia, I had multiple options to work remotely for other companies, but without a real concern about remote workers in a company, it can be tricky. I was confident that Bitnami would provide a better experience than I had in the past since the overall culture and values are a big part of the company. And the values really have weight internally, it’s not just some paint for external eyes. I like it.

Also, the fact that Bitnami remains on the edge of what’s new and fresh in term of technologies gave me the guarantee that it would be a good environment for potential exploration and discoveries.

What are you working on?

I am on the Webdev team, which is in charge of automating delivery of our packages and images to cloud vendors, and also maintaining various websites and tools available at Bitnami, either publicly or internally.

I just began one month ago, but I can predict that I won’t ever be bored with the work I am doing. There is a lot of different processes to manage and automate. Each cloud vendor, platform or format brings new challenges since there is no real standard in this industry. This is certainly why Bitnami is so valuable because it handle such diverse software and solutions.

The work within my team is mostly focused on writing code to facilitate the pipeline of delivery and the management of workflows, so that the software can reach it's destination in a usable shape and multiple flavors. It’s a lot of invisible work, deep down in the machine, but it’s very pleasant because it’s not simple and it requires a good amount of creative thinking.

What do you like to do for fun?

Mose enjoying a walk around Hong Kong

I’m a very boring person, because for fun, I do some more coding, or sysadmin stuff. I participate in various local and international communities, but it’s usually (not exclusively though) with other geeks. I’m not anti-social at all, it’s just that I’m comfortable with my peers and I like keeping my head inside the game.

Sometimes I do some biking, but I don’t like working out, it is just a logical transportation device for me. Sometimes I cook, but well, that doesn’t count, I’m french after all.

I prefer to have no stress in my daily life. I favor working on things I consider are fun, interesting and make sense, so I don’t feel the need to escape or decompress. I guess that’s the benefit of being older, I play for the long run.

Interested in working with Bitnami and Mose? Apply for one of our open positions!






Thursday, September 21, 2017

Meet the Team: Victor Tuson Palau


The Bitnami team is a diverse group of talented people distributed all over the world. Get to know them better through this series of blog posts

Victor is the Director of Engineering, and works from our Sevilla Office.

A brief bio

I was born and raised in Barcelona. Growing up, I was always keen to learn about how things worked. My interest was equally divided between technology and nature. So much so, that the decision to do engineering came a few days before submitting my university choices. I set Computer Networks as first choice, followed by Veterinary Medicine as second. Luckily for the animal kingdom, I got my first choice.

Another of my passions is learning new cultures, so to complete my final-year degree project, I moved to England for 6 months… long-story short: I stayed there for 17 years, married an English woman and had two kids. In between, my wife and I managed to fit in 18 months living and working in India. 

Enjoying some outdoor time with the family
I soon discovered that although I liked engineering, I really loved working with engineers and helping them build awesome products. Over the years, I worked in the mobile phone industry (Nortel,Symbian and Nokia) before moving towards Open Source.

Before Bitnami, I was the Vice President of Customer Engineering at Canonical, helping our commercial partners to build and ship Ubuntu products.

Why you joined Bitnami and what excites you about working here?

Serverless, Containers and Kubernetes - these are three technologies that are changing the landscape of cloud computing. Bitnami is doing amazing work to bring our highly successful one-click-deployment developer offering from our installers and cloud instances to them. That was what got me talking to Bitnami.

It was meeting the fantastic engineering team in Seville that convinced me to jump on a plane and move to the South of Spain with my family. I am extremely lucky to cycle to the office every day through a city packed with Unesco World Heritage sites, and come to work in a start up packed with world-class professionals, both in our offices in Seville, San Francisco, and our remotely located colleagues. It also doesn't hurt having two very talented founders at the helm of the company! They provide a very crisp and exciting vision for our business and technology.

What are you working on?

As Director of Engineering, my role is to support the team in shipping products and becoming more efficient in the process.

For example, we have just added 4 new database multi-VM cluster solutions to our catalog. We are able to keep growing our catalog by investing in automation and improvements every iteration. Often, the most valuable feedback comes from our community forums and we make sure we help everyone who has a question.

The most important asset in Bitnami are our people; right now I am working with our Director of Operations to roll out improved practices in order to support engineers continuous learning and growth. With these programs, we focus on product, project and people skills and depending on their career choice, we help them achieve the right balance between the three.

I spend a large part of my time on our selection process. We are growing! Hiring the right people to enrich the team’s culture and skills is very important to me. We are looking for engineers for our assets (packaging and CI automation), tools development (golang), and Kubernetes teams.

What do you like to do for fun?

I just moved to Seville, so a lot of my spare time is spent wandering about Seville, visiting places and trying out new restaurants with friends. When it gets too hot, I have fun with my kids in the local pool!

Interested in working with Bitnami and Victor? Apply for one of our open positions!

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Meet the Bitnami Team: JuanJo Ciarlante

The Bitnami team is a diverse group of talented people distributed all over the world. Get to know them better through this series of blog posts

JuanJo is a Senior Site Reliability Engineer on the SRE team, which is part of the Kubernetes Squad, and works remotely from Argentina.

A brief bio

¿ Cómo funciona (How does it work) ?

I’ve been passionate about «how things work» since I was a child. I still recall how anxious I was when waiting for my father to bring home the latest issue of «Cómo funciona» magazine. Not surprisingly, many years later FOSS became the major driver in my career.

That token[ring card] that changed my life.

My 1st taste of Internet came thru a Metro-Area-Network at the govt department I was working at, c.a. 1995, in Mendoza/Argentina, where we got a “lease” for one of those shiny public IP addresses. Alas, it was linked via a single token-ring NIC installed in our Slackware Linux gateway box (an old IBM PS/2 we had recycled for that purpose). With no budget for a second TR NIC, several hundred dollars at that time and baby Linux 1.2 only supporting a single address per interface, it quickly became unsustainable to switch between our formal govt’s private address and the precious public one.

Hm … what about that ~2MB linux-1.3.xx.tar.gz source that’s written in that C language I had been tinkering with? After some weeks, many tries+rebuilds+crashes along the way, I had hacked up something beyond WFM, post-able to the linux-kernel mailing list -- with the help and feedback mainly from Alan Cox¹, we got ip_aliasing finally merged in linux-1.3.47 \o/
Since then I contributed to many other FOSS projects: Linux IP masquerading improvements, user/kernel space OpenSWAN crypto algo modularization, IPv6 transport support for OpenVPN, among other sparse bits.
Cloud-y times ahead.

In 2007 I joined Google at their Switzerland HQ as an SRE. By 2012 I had to return to my home country (was techlead of the GMail/Abuse-backends SRE team by that time) ... those times you’d want fork() to be a real-world thing.


Alas, an opportunity to work from home for Canonical had opened, which I was lucky enough to grab: joined as Webops/SRE, later CRE (Cloud-RE) to wheel OpenStack-s for fun and profit.

Being back home also allowed me to resume my courses at the Universidad de Mendoza - re-joining that synergy that comes from teaching↔learning.

During my career I had been so lucky to have great challenges, learn so much from my awesome colleagues, work+contribute to FOSS projects, what else could I ask for? →

Why you joined Bitnami and what excites you about working here?

→ Kubernetes 

I’d been missing a rock-solid cloud orchestration platform (yeah, every Xoogler misses Google’s Borg I guess), but then Kubernetes came to life! Then Bitnami -- with its focus on the application orchestration realm together with its strong involvement in k8s projects in like kubeless, helm and ksonnet/kubecfg -- made a perfect fit for me :))

I also love the company-wide team culture, how horizontally you can approach managers and founders, it’s a great place to work !

What are you working on?

As member of the SRE team, we are involved in a pretty diverse set of devops tasks and projects, while also actively contributing to our Kubernetes efforts - for example, I recently added integration tests to kubeless, which ended being quite a trip (riding Travis to spawn a kubernetes cluster for your tests to land-on is an interesting challenge).

What do you like to do for fun?

Hmm guess that bash 1-liners don’t count here, so let’s try something else :#)

I love cooking (yeah you may say that’s meal-Engineering, but I’d like to convince myself that’s not only that ;). I also enjoy travelling to learn from other people’s culture, art and nature.

I’ve recently joined a local runners’ group, which gives another way to enjoy the beautiful hills surrounding Mendoza.

¹FWIW Interesting thoughts and discussion with Alan Cox: he pushing me to come up with something that would not require extra tools than ifconfig, then telling me why my original choice of ‘/’ as a shell-friendly aliased interface separator (i.e. no ‘|’, ‘$’, etc) was actually a bad idea - hmm not many choices left:
@ ←nah, so email-ish
% ←ditto (uucp routing, anyone?)
. ←meh looks like a file extension
: ←yeah, available! - plus there’s no such thing as drive-names on *nix OSes, after all ;)

Interested in working with Bitnami and JuanJo? Apply for one of our open positions!


Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Want to Join the Excitement? We’re Hiring!

There are many exciting things that are happening at Bitnami, so we are getting a head start on growing our team for the next year!

This past year we have almost doubled, and we don’t plan on stopping anytime soon. If you enjoy clouds, containers and all things startup, we would love to talk to you!

We spend a majority of our time working with all the major cloud providers while also creating new Docker container solutions such as Stacksmith. In our spare time, we get to enjoy perks such as two team trips a year to surprise locations, exciting monthly team events, and even more fun birthday competitions!




Want to join our awesome team? Apply now for any of the positions below.

Engineering
Director of Engineering (US)
DevOps/Stack Engineer (US and Spain)

Marketing


Partner Marketing Manager (US)
Marketing Operations Manager (US)

Operations

Senior Recruiter (US)
Administrative Accountant (Spain)

Business Development
    Program Manager (US)


Don’t see the position for you? Make sure to check out our open positions regularly for any new or updated job openings.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Join the BitNami Team!

If you are reading this post, you are probably already familiar with BitNami. We provide a library of free, ready to run open source applications that you can run locally or in the cloud. Our stacks have helped literally millions of developers and end users worldwide, from Fortune 500 companies to universities, governments and two-people teams building video games.

We are growing and we are looking for talented, passionate individuals to join our support team.

What your job will look like: You will be responsible for helping BitNami users get started with our apps and work with them to solve any setup and configuration issues they run into.

What we are looking for: Smart, inquisitive minds that have fun solving technical problems and genuinely enjoy helping others.

You should have outstanding communication skills and be comfortable setting up and configuring web-based applications in Linux/Unix. Some of the apps and frameworks we package include Joomla!, Drupal, WordPress, Redmine, Ruby on Rails and Django. You do not need to be an expert on all of them (or at least not at the beginning!) but you need to be proficient enough to help others and learn the technologies you are not familiar with quickly.

Having fun in Sierra Nevada!
We are headquartered in the US, but most of our development team is in Seville, Spain and Krakow, Poland. Ideally you would be located in one of these cities but we will also consider a remote position for the right candidate. You will need to be available to travel a couple of times a year for our company get-togethers (the latest ones involved snowboarding in the Spanish Sierra Nevada and four wheeling on the island of Tenerife, so the travel is not too bad :)

Ready to join the BitNami team? Send us your CV to careers@bitnami.org together with a brief cover letter telling us why you would like to join our team and sharing one example of a complex technical problem you solved and how you went about it.