[tor-commits] r25666: {website} make an overview jobs page. now there's room for the QA auto (website/trunk/about/en)

Roger Dingledine arma at torproject.org
Mon Jun 4 19:52:03 UTC 2012


Author: arma
Date: 2012-06-04 19:52:03 +0000 (Mon, 04 Jun 2012)
New Revision: 25666

Added:
   website/trunk/about/en/jobs-coredev.wml
Modified:
   website/trunk/about/en/jobs.wml
Log:
make an overview jobs page. now there's room for the QA automation build
engineer world savior position, or whatever it will turn out to be called.


Added: website/trunk/about/en/jobs-coredev.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/about/en/jobs-coredev.wml	                        (rev 0)
+++ website/trunk/about/en/jobs-coredev.wml	2012-06-04 19:52:03 UTC (rev 25666)
@@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
+## translation metadata
+# Revision: $Revision$
+# Translation-Priority: 3-low
+
+#include "head.wmi" TITLE="Tor Project: Jobs (core developer)" CHARSET="UTF-8"
+<div id="content" class="clearfix">
+	<div id="breadcrumbs">
+    <a href="<page index>">Home » </a>
+    <a href="<page about/overview>">About » </a>
+    <a href="<page about/jobs>">Jobs</a>
+  </div>
+	<div id="maincol">
+<h1>The Tor Project is looking for another dedicated core developer!</h1>
+
+<p>
+Your job would be to work on all aspects of the main Tor network daemon
+and other open-source software.
+This would be a contractor position for 2012 (starting as soon as you're
+ready and with plenty of work to keep you busy), with the possibility of
+2013 and beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Any candidate must:
+</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Have extensive experience in C, and several other programming
+    languages. At least 5 years experience with C is probably necessary
+    for the level of expertise we want; most people would need more.</li>
+<li>Have a solid understanding of issues surrounding secure C programming.</li>
+<li>Be comfortable working from home (or wherever your preferred
+    Internet connection is).</li>
+<li>Be familiar and experienced with nonblocking, event-driven networking
+    programs.</li>
+<li>Be comfortable and experienced with interacting with users online.</li>
+<li>Be comfortable and experienced with driving the entire lifecycle
+    of a new feature in an existing piece of software, from design to
+    implementation to testing.</li>
+<li>Be comfortable and experienced getting code and design reviewed,
+    and reviewing the code and design of others.</li>
+<li>Be comfortable with transparency: as a non-profit, everything we do
+    is in public, including your name and pay rate.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>
+An ideal candidate would also:
+</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Know enough of the basics of cryptography in order to understand
+    how to implement our protocols and discuss changes to them. (Actually
+    implementing block ciphers and stuff like that isn't necessary.)</li>
+<li>Know enough about networking in order to understand how to implement
+    our protocols and discuss changes to them.</li>
+<li>Have experience with high-performance networking code.</li>
+<li>Have experience with open-source software development, including
+    working with distributed teams across different time-zones containing
+    employees and volunteers of differing skill levels over email and IRC.</li>
+<li>Have basic familiarity with distributed version control systems.</li>
+<li>Have contributed significant chunks of code to multiple
+    open-source projects in the past.</li>
+<li>Genuinely be excited about Tor and our values.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>
+Being a core Tor developer includes triaging,
+diagnosing, and fixing bugs; looking for and resolving security
+issues; and working collaboratively with coworkers and volunteers
+on implementing new features and protocol changes at every stage from
+design to maintenance. We'd also need help making our code more scalable,
+testable, and maintainable. Sometimes, we need to drop everything and
+scramble to implement last-minute anticensorship schemes, or to deploy
+urgent security updates. You'd also be reviewing other people's code and
+designs, and looking for ways to improve it. For an idea of the
+breadth and depth of the work you'd be doing, have a look at <a
+href="https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/blob/HEAD:/ChangeLog">the
+ChangeLog file from the Tor source distribution</a>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Other notes:
+</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Tor developers don't have an office; you can work from wherever you
+    want, in basically any country. You'll need to be comfortable in
+    this environment! We coordinate via IRC, email, and bug trackers.</li>
+<li>Academic degrees are great, but not required if you have the right
+    experience.</li>
+<li>We only write free (open source) software, and we don't believe in
+    software patents.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>
+How to apply:
+</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Link to a sample of code you've written in the past that you're
+    allowed to show us.</li>
+<li>Provide a CV explaining your background, experience, skills, and
+    other relevant qualifications.</li>
+<li>List some people who can tell us more about you: these references
+    could be employers or coworkers, open source projects, etc.</li>
+<li>Email the above to jobs at torproject.org.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>
+About the company:<br>
+ The Tor Project is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to research,
+ development, and education about online anonymity and privacy. The Tor
+ network's 3000 volunteer relays carry 14 Gbps for upwards of half a million
+ daily users, including ordinary citizens who want protection from identity
+ theft and prying corporations, corporations who want to look at a
+ competitor's website in private, people around the world whose Internet
+ connections are censored, and even governments and law enforcement. Tor has
+ a staff of 13 paid developers, researchers, and advocates, plus many dozen
+ volunteers who help out on a daily basis. Tor is funded in part by
+ government research and development grants, and in part by individual and
+ corporate donations.
+</p>
+
+  </div>
+  <!-- END MAINCOL -->
+  <div id = "sidecol">
+#include "side.wmi"
+#include "info.wmi"
+  </div>
+  <!-- END SIDECOL -->
+</div>
+<!-- END CONTENT -->
+#include <foot.wmi>
+


Property changes on: website/trunk/about/en/jobs-coredev.wml
___________________________________________________________________
Added: svn:keywords
   + Author Date Id Revision
Added: svn:eol-style
   + native

Modified: website/trunk/about/en/jobs.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/about/en/jobs.wml	2012-06-03 20:41:17 UTC (rev 25665)
+++ website/trunk/about/en/jobs.wml	2012-06-04 19:52:03 UTC (rev 25666)
@@ -10,103 +10,16 @@
     <a href="<page about/jobs>">Jobs</a>
   </div>
 	<div id="maincol">
-<h1>The Tor Project is looking for another dedicated core developer!</h1>
+<h1>The Tor Project is looking for more great developers!</h1>
 
-<p>
-Your job would be to work on all aspects of the main Tor network daemon
-and other open-source software.
-This would be a contractor position for 2012 (starting as soon as you're
-ready and with plenty of work to keep you busy), with the possibility of
-2013 and beyond.
+<p>Specifically, we're looking for the following people currently:
 </p>
 
-<p>
-Any candidate must:
-</p>
-
 <ul>
-<li>Have extensive experience in C, and several other programming
-    languages. At least 5 years experience with C is probably necessary
-    for the level of expertise we want; most people would need more.</li>
-<li>Have a solid understanding of issues surrounding secure C programming.</li>
-<li>Be comfortable working from home (or wherever your preferred
-    Internet connection is).</li>
-<li>Be familiar and experienced with nonblocking, event-driven networking
-    programs.</li>
-<li>Be comfortable and experienced with interacting with users online.</li>
-<li>Be comfortable and experienced with driving the entire lifecycle
-    of a new feature in an existing piece of software, from design to
-    implementation to testing.</li>
-<li>Be comfortable and experienced getting code and design reviewed,
-    and reviewing the code and design of others.</li>
-<li>Be comfortable with transparency: as a non-profit, everything we do
-    is in public, including your name and pay rate.</li>
+<li><a href="<page about/jobs-coredev>">Core developer</a></li>
 </ul>
 
 <p>
-An ideal candidate would also:
-</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Know enough of the basics of cryptography in order to understand
-    how to implement our protocols and discuss changes to them. (Actually
-    implementing block ciphers and stuff like that isn't necessary.)</li>
-<li>Know enough about networking in order to understand how to implement
-    our protocols and discuss changes to them.</li>
-<li>Have experience with high-performance networking code.</li>
-<li>Have experience with open-source software development, including
-    working with distributed teams across different time-zones containing
-    employees and volunteers of differing skill levels over email and IRC.</li>
-<li>Have basic familiarity with distributed version control systems.</li>
-<li>Have contributed significant chunks of code to multiple
-    open-source projects in the past.</li>
-<li>Genuinely be excited about Tor and our values.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>
-Being a core Tor developer includes triaging,
-diagnosing, and fixing bugs; looking for and resolving security
-issues; and working collaboratively with coworkers and volunteers
-on implementing new features and protocol changes at every stage from
-design to maintenance. We'd also need help making our code more scalable,
-testable, and maintainable. Sometimes, we need to drop everything and
-scramble to implement last-minute anticensorship schemes, or to deploy
-urgent security updates. You'd also be reviewing other people's code and
-designs, and looking for ways to improve it. For an idea of the
-breadth and depth of the work you'd be doing, have a look at <a
-href="https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/blob/HEAD:/ChangeLog">the
-ChangeLog file from the Tor source distribution</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other notes:
-</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Tor developers don't have an office; you can work from wherever you
-    want, in basically any country. You'll need to be comfortable in
-    this environment! We coordinate via IRC, email, and bug trackers.</li>
-<li>Academic degrees are great, but not required if you have the right
-    experience.</li>
-<li>We only write free (open source) software, and we don't believe in
-    software patents.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>
-How to apply:
-</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Link to a sample of code you've written in the past that you're
-    allowed to show us.</li>
-<li>Provide a CV explaining your background, experience, skills, and
-    other relevant qualifications.</li>
-<li>List some people who can tell us more about you: these references
-    could be employers or coworkers, open source projects, etc.</li>
-<li>Email the above to jobs at torproject.org.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>
 About the company:<br>
  The Tor Project is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to research,
  development, and education about online anonymity and privacy. The Tor



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