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Materials Project | Berkeley, CA | ONSITE | Full-time | https://materialsproject.org

Berkeley Lab (https://www.lbl.gov/) is looking for a talented web developer who will work on building powerful web-based tools for materials scientists on the Materials Project team (see https://materialsproject.org). The Materials Project is one of the world’s foremost databases of computed materials science data, and has helped pioneer a change in how we design and search for new materials, with a large active community of users in both academia and industry. We use millions of CPU hours a year in our calculations, and all of this data is publicly available and free of charge, and we develop all our software openly and under open source licenses.

This is a great opportunity for a developer with an interest in science and energy-related innovation. You'll work with a team of scientists and engineers and will have a major impact on any aspect of the project that interests you — from application architecture to data visualization.

A successful applicant will have experience in:

* HTML/CSS

* JavaScript — someone who is happy to help maintain our legacy platform {Backbone.js, CoffeeScript, Require.js} but is also not afraid of new technologies where appropriate {React / Plotly Dash}

* Web services technologies and REST APIs

* Information visualization — knowledge of javascript graphing libraries such as {d3, HighCharts, Plotly} and understanding of information visualization techniques highly relevant

Ideal applicants will also be experienced with:

* Python and Django (or similar framework)

* Writing unit- and end-to-end tests for client side applications

* Unix environments

* User interface design principles

A successful applicant will also:

* Be keen to work as part of a small team, including working with other researchers (graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, collaborators) who are excited about sharing their data with the world

If you're interested in applying, or you simply want to ask some questions about the position (I’m the team’s lead web dev), feel free to ping me at dwinston@lbl.gov. The official position description and application portal is at <https://jobs.lbl.gov/jobs/web-developer-1934>, but because Berkeley Lab is a public research institution, the hiring/contract style is different than a typical industry job (e.g. “1-year term appointment” means guaranteed for 1 year at minimum -- this position definitely has long-term, extension-without-reapplication potential; full benefits start from day 1; etc.), so again please feel free to ping me for any clarification. :)


Oh, and I learned about the Materials Project from a "Who's Hiring" thread several years ago, so yay HN.


Hi, I'm also a member of the team here and we're really excited to hear from any applicants. Please be in touch :) -- Matt


Also, I've heard the Berkeley Lab jobs require a drug test. Can you speak to that?


You can read Berkeley Lab's policy on drug testing here: https://commons.lbl.gov/display/rpm2/Workplace+Substance+Abu...


Only for jobs where you drive a vehicle in an official capacity, e.g. shuttle driver. See the policy document to which mkhorton linked.


> breaks the link...



The SAT is designed and delivered by a private, for-profit company. They are providing additional information that they think will add product value for their customers (schools). Do we want our public schools to continue encouraging/requiring such products?


Lawrence Berkeley National Lab | Berkeley, CA | Full-Time | ONSITE, VISA okay

Berkeley Lab’s Energy Storage & Distributed Resources Division has an opening for a Software Developer. The Software Developer will be part of a team that drives the Materials Project (https://materialsproject.org/) in new and exciting directions as the number and diversity of our simulations grow. You will occupy an important role in a small team composed of both computer scientists and materials scientists, a team which will continue to grow and evolve as our fast-paced project pushes new boundaries.

Job posting: https://jobs.lbl.gov/jobs/materials-software-developer-1700


> To remain highly effective, not just being productive, particularly for a project manager, it's imperative to spend time only on tasks that require critical decisions to be made, and to delegate the rest.

This mirrors Andy Grove's practice (detailed in his book High Output Management) of focusing on "high-leverage" activities, where "leverage" he defines as the ratio of output/impact versus time spent.


To elaborate on this, there are currently only seven US states that require employers to pay tipped employees full state minimum wage before tips: Alaska, California, Nevada, Oregon, Minnesota, Montana, and Washington. For seventeen states, the state minimum cash wage payment is the same as that required under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act ($2.13/hour).

This is not to justify abstaining from tipping in the seven "full-minimum-wage" states. This is merely to provide some quantitative clarification of "being asked to share with a service worker's employer some of the burden of compensating them".

Source: https://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm


The application is unviewable with Javascript disabled.* Note to applicants: please consider the value of progressive enhancement.

* I had temporarily disabled Javascipt on Firefox for debugging something a couple days ago. I had been using Chrome since then, but decided to open Firefox for this. I was confused until I tried to check my Gmail, whereupon I was informed that I had Javascript disabled. Oops. I've re-enabled Javascript.


The idea that "nagging works" is widely used to craft advertising for children's television (source: The Corporation (film)). Is the march toward such advertising in this nascent children's entertainment medium inexorable?


I worry as well. Who stands to profit? Unsurprisingly, PB's employer. I'm not going ad hominem here, I am just in the habit of asking such questions, and there may be sharks in open water.


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