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Digital Health Strategies | Full Stack Product Engineer (Ruby, JavaScript) | REMOTE (USA or Canada); Washington, DC; NYC; Vancouver, BC; | https://digitalhealthstrategies.com | $140k - $220k

We are a series B health tech and data company building software for large non-profit health systems to grow patient volumes, connect patients with the care they need, and raise money from grateful patients.

We offer the industry leading grateful patient web app that allows health systems stand up highly integrated web sites quickly and easily to collect stories and feed donor pipeline development.

We're a 30-person team, spread between Washington, DC, New York City, Philadelphia, and Vancouver, BC. We reached $4MM+ annual revenue before raising any outside capital.

We're looking for a mid to senior full stack software engineer generalist who is eager to manage their own product, likes to build quickly, and is focused on understanding the customer and solving their problems. You will have ownership and autonomy with minimal meetings. We use ruby, rails, javascript, postgres, aws, docker.

I'm Arif - reach out if this sounds interesting arif@digitalhealthstrategies.com.


Digital Health Strategies | Full Stack Product Engineer (Ruby, JavaScript) | REMOTE; Washington, DC; NYC; Vancouver, BC; (only USA or Canada) | https://digitalhealthstrategies.com | $140k - $220k

We are a series A health tech and data company working with large health systems to grow patient volumes, connect patients with the care they need, and, in the case of our non-profit clients, raise money from grateful patients.

We offer the industry leading grateful patient web app that allows health systems stand up highly integrated web sites quickly and easily to collect stories and feed donor pipeline development.

We're a 30-person team, spread between Washington, DC, New York City, Philadelphia, and Vancouver, BC. We reached $4MM+ annual revenue before raising any outside capital.

We're looking for a mid to senior full stack software engineer generalist who is eager to manage their own product, likes to build quickly, and is focused on understanding the customer and solving their problems. You will have ownership and autonomy with minimal meetings. We use ruby, rails, javascript, postgres, aws, docker.

I'm Arif - reach out if this sounds interesting arif@digitalhealthstrategies.com.


Digital Health Strategies | Full Stack Product Engineer (Ruby, JavaScript) | REMOTE (USA or Canada); Washington, DC; NYC; Vancouver, BC | https://digitalhealthstrategies.com | $140k - $180k

We are a series A health tech and data company working with large health systems to grow patient volumes, connect patients with the care they need, and, in the case of our non-profit clients, raise money from grateful patients.

We offer the industry leading grateful patient web app that allows health systems stand up highly integrated web sites quickly and easily to collect stories and feed donor pipeline development.

We're a 20-person team, spread between Washington, DC, New York City, Philadelphia, and Vancouver, BC. We reached $4MM+ annual revenue before raising any outside capital.

We're looking for a mid to senior full stack software engineer generalist who is eager to manage their own product, likes to build quickly, and is focused on understanding the customer and solving their problems. You will have ownership and autonomy with minimal meetings. We use ruby, rails, javascript, postgres, aws, docker.

I'm Arif - reach out if this sounds interesting arif@digitalhealthstrategies.com.


Digital Health Strategies | Full Stack Engineer (Ruby, JavaScript) | Washington, DC; NYC; Vancouver, BC; remote possible (USA or Canada) | https://digitalhealthstrategies.com

We are a series A health tech and data company working with large health systems to grow patient volumes, connect patients with the care they need, and, in the case of our non-profit clients, raise money from grateful patients.

We offer the industry leading grateful patient web app that allows health systems stand up highly integrated web sites quickly and easily to collect stories and feed donor pipeline development.

We're a small 17-person team, spread between Washington, DC, New York City, and Vancouver, BC. We reached $4MM+ annual revenue before raising any outside capital.

We're looking for a mid to senior full stack software engineer generalist who is eager to manage their own product, likes to build quickly, and is focused on understanding the customer and solving their problems. You will have ownership and autonomy with minimal meetings. We use ruby, rails, javascript, postgres, aws, docker.

I'm Arif - reach out if this sounds interesting arif@digitalhealthstrategies.com.


Currently 25% off bringing it to ~$155 so I pulled the trigger.

Was going to buy the air gradient but shipping is not free and is for the awair so difference was negligible.

Would also love to hear why grandparent poster has settled on recommending the awair over others.


Completely unnecessary and upsetting quote. If you must, just link it with some background instead of quoting a sensationalized headline.


You're really more upset at him for quoting a doctor who accidentally killed his own kid then fought to make backup cameras mandatory, than at the auto industry and regulators who fought against backup cameras for 15 years?

Just whose sensitive feelings are you trying to protect with such censorship, and why?

Did reading that upsetting quote ruin your day as much as backing over and killing your own kid would?

Some times you just have to upset people to affect change.

Do you also oppose quoting grieving parents to pass gun control laws too?

If you feel so strongly about it, then instead of just telling people to shut up, why not spend 15 years of your own life trying to pass a bill and enforce government regulations to prohibit quoting grieving parents -- maybe they'll name it after you.

>But while King and then-Senator Hillary Clinton got on board early, automobile maker resistance made sure that results came slow. King and Clinton introduced backover safety legislation in Congress and the Senate in 2005 and Congress enacted the Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act in 2008 requiring federal transportation officials to write a regulation to correct vehicle rear visibility problems. President George Bush signed the bill into law. But the the bill languished, thanks to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.

https://associationsnow.com/2018/05/advocacy-battle-behind-r...

>The Advocacy Battle Behind Rearview Cameras in Cars Tragic "backover" accidents involving young children gave advocacy groups a reason to push for a law requiring the use of rearview cameras. This week, federal regulations will require the devices in every new car on the road—a decade after the law was passed.

>[...] “I’m a pediatrician, I baby-proof my house, I go out of my way to make sure children are safe and healthy,” Gulbransen said in a recent interview with WABC. “And it happened to me? OK, guess what? It can happen to anybody. So use my example. I own it, I took responsibility, here it is. Let’s channel our grief and get something productive done out of it.”

>[...] “It took a long time, and sadly, along that journey, we had more families joining us in our fight because they had lost their children while knowing there is this preventable technology,” Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, told the Los Angeles Times. “It’s heartbreaking.”


Yes. I am. That guy (and everyone else involved) probably has ten times blood on his hands as a result of "wE doN't need TO CarE aBOUT REaR vIsIBILITY BeCaUsE we have a BACKup CaMERa" engineering and touch screen distractions than he's saved by getting backup cameras put in things.

Backup cameras are the unholy trinity of upper middle class moral panic and shirking of responsibility, government Doing Something (TM) and people's inability to accept small but concentrated bad things versus large diffuse and hard to measure bad things.


You can put duct tape over your federally mandated backup camera display if you really believe they're so distracting that they cause you to run over more people in reverse.

But maybe you should just stay off the road instead, so you have less blood on your own hands.


He's clearly talking about the second-order effects of backup camera-centric design (worse visibility through the windows and touchscreen controls). Try reading a little more closely.


>You can put duct tape over your federally mandated backup camera display if you really believe they're so distracting that they cause you to run over more people in reverse.

>But maybe you should just stay off the road instead, so you have less blood on your own hands.

Tape won't undo all the other changes to cars that OEMs engaged in once they were required to have a screen.

Congratulations. Your pet regulatory change has reduced back over deaths by under a hundred a year. In a vacuum with spherical cow that's great but reality isn't a vacuum with spherical cows. And now that you've put this hardware in cars and engineers have taken advantage of it you've increased back out accidents and merging accidents (both are inversely correlated with rear visibility) and you've made many of the critical 2nd order functions of operating a car less intuitive and more distracting to use. You've but you don't care about that because the metric you were gaming (back over deaths) is marginally improved. And when called out by people who want to look at the big picture you respond with insults. Screw you and the safety vest you rode in on.


That's an even stronger argument for you staying off the road.

Your sputtering anger and rage makes you an even less safe driver.


This is cool but as a long time macOS user who is now on Windows at least half time, I really miss Cmd + Tab application switching when on Windows.

Anyone know of a way to get that behaviour in Windows?


If you pin (you don't have to) an app to the taskbar, you can hit [Win] + [index num] on the keyboard and it switches to app at that index. Keep hitting the num key and you switch between the windows of that app.

Pinning the app will assign it an index (the icon won't change position) so you can switch to windows of your editor with Win+2 and windows of file explorer with Win+1 without even looking at the taskbar, for example.

Here's a detailed description from HowToGeek[0]:

> Press the Windows key along with a number key to launch the corresponding app. On the taskbar above, for example, Windows+3 would launch Google Chrome, Windows+4 would launch Slack, and so on all the way up through Windows+0 for Outlook. Using these keyboard shortcuts on an app that’s already running will toggle the app between a minimized and maximized state.

> You can also hold down Shift while using those shortcuts to launch a new instance of an app that’s already running. In our example, pressing Shift+Windows+3 would open a new window for Chrome, even if Chrome is already open.

> Using the Ctrl key with those shortcuts displays the most recently launched instance of an app. For example, say you had three File Explorer windows open on your PC, and File Explorer was in the first position on your taskbar. Pressing Ctrl+Windows+1 would show you the File Explorer window you most recently opened.

[0]: https://www.howtogeek.com/276982/the-most-useful-keyboard-sh...


Thank you for this. Have been trying to train my brain to use it for weeks, but as I'm sure you know, the limitation is I have to maintain context of what app I'm using when wanting to window switch whereas a global shortcut a la Cmd + Tab eliminates that bit of overhead.


Context: Cmd-Tab in macOS switches between the foremost windows of open applications (i.e. never between windows of the same app).

I don’t have a solution for you, but if you used the complement feature cmd-` (switch between open windows of the currently focused app) I did implement that for Windows: https://neosmart.net/blog/2017/easy-window-switcher/



Unfortunate that this is the top comment at the moment - there is zero evidence he was impaired at all. Others have quoted the exact lines stating so in the article.

Bird just playing a defamation game, gross.


Looks cool, nice work. Couple pieces of feedback:

- typically the check mark/ok button is on the right side and the cancel is on the left, in the date picker it’s swapped

- not clear to me what the 2 different cancel buttons do, one a solid x, the other just an x


Thanks for the feedback. I agree the meaning of the icons is unclear - one is cancel, the other is clear. I would prefer to have text on these buttons, but then localising the language becomes an issue. I will think over these issues!


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