Magnolia operates globally with offices on five continents and more than 200 Magnolia-certified partners worldwide.
SREs apply software engineering approaches to infrastructural and operational challenges - the ultimate goal is to develop and maintain highly-exposed, fault-tolerant systems in an ever-growing and complex IT landscape. We continuously innovate to make our product more reliable, robust and fault-tolerant to fulfil our business-critical mission. SRE team plays a key role in Magnolia’s mission to further evolve its product in a world of automation and microservices.
Yes, slovenia, but in other countries it's probably the same, just with different prices, and at some price point, it becomes expensive enough to eat out, that you'd rather choose to cook
From my experience in Switzerland a lot of times holds true for me(in city however I can achieve a lot more then Mbit/s)
But for sure it depends on location, but for now in the remote areas I have been there it worked like a charm.
But recently in a relatively big city in US, i was at measly 5 Mbit/s.
However I am sure there are as always areas with low or maybe even nonexistent coverage in any case in any country. But the percentage of that can cover widely practically speaking.
I can update you on that. At the moment the heaviest part of the laptop is the display. But I think it may not be bellow 2kg, but above. I can update when I have a better estimate.
After a bit more investigation while I wait for the parts... I think it should be quite fine, beacuse the battery will probably be the heaviest part, but it is quite possible that either left or right side of the laptop will be quite heavier. Hopefully I'll make it fit :D
I found an interesting battery with 12V in and separate 12 out and another 5V USB out, so it should be fairly straightforward hopefully with that to power everything with it.
I was actually quite suprised how hard it is.
The amount of different LCD and subsequent separated driver panels that are possible in configuration is absolutely huge.
To be honest I am a lot less worried about LCD working then keyboard, since in the worst case I would need to rewire the whole one manually.
But for LCD I will hopefully have everything needed after getting my specific LVDS driver board
A mapping for the keyboard matrix can be "discovered" by pressing all keys in sequence. There are lots of AVR-based projects that emulate an USB HID for a custom keyboard matrix or other input; for an example, see [1][2].
This actually is making me fairly frustrating. Me and my team were literally just finishing the GSS integration and all of the sudden the only option google is suggesting is "will automatically convert to Custom Search Engine (CSE). Custom Search Engine is an ads-supported product "
Per the Google's statement: "On April 1, 2017, Google will discontinue sales of the Google Site Search. All new purchases and renewals must take place before this date. The product will be completely shut down by April 1, 2018."
If I were you and you really had already finished the Google Search dev work you referenced, I would pay for service as soon as possible for the duration up until April 1, 2018. Use the service, see how user users are really using it, then use what you've learned to plan for the future.
I use Evernote if that helps, it suits my purpose. Even though I do use some extra hotkeys for formating.
The best use out of it for me is the search functionality.
Apply here: https://www.magnolia-cms.com/about/careers/hq-senior-site-re...
Magnolia operates globally with offices on five continents and more than 200 Magnolia-certified partners worldwide.
SREs apply software engineering approaches to infrastructural and operational challenges - the ultimate goal is to develop and maintain highly-exposed, fault-tolerant systems in an ever-growing and complex IT landscape. We continuously innovate to make our product more reliable, robust and fault-tolerant to fulfil our business-critical mission. SRE team plays a key role in Magnolia’s mission to further evolve its product in a world of automation and microservices.
Stack: AWS, Kubernetes, Terraform/Terratest, Datadog, Prometheus, Java, Go, Python, Bash