noteworthy that outside from presidential elections, candidates need to purchase and provide these paper ballots (plus official flyers mailed to registered voters) on their own cost and only get reimboursed if they score more than 5%.
to be precise, public funding is based on the results of the upcoming legislative (national assembly) elections. France has 577 districts, each elect on representative in two rounds.
Parties receive about 40k€/year for every elected representative and another ~1.40€/vote/year for every vote in these elections provided (!) you make more than 1% in at least 50 districts.
These amounts get reduced considerably if you do not respect gender-parity across your candidates.
We maintain a similar Javascript library at work called jIO [1][2]. It provides the same API to different storages (currently Memory, IndexedDB, WebSql, WebDav, Dropbox, GoogleDrive, ERP5) plus handlers for functionality and complex storage trees (eg zip, union, query, replicate, crypt storage). It's relatively straightforward to extend and query data sources with an open API since you just have to reimplement the jIO API methods.
Nexedi | Lille | Software Engineer | FULLTIME and 4-12 months INTERNS | ONSITE or REMOTE - https://www.nexedi.com/jobs
We're looking for new colleagues and trainees to help improve our Free Software stack (https://stack.nexedi.com/). We do custom implementations and participate in publicly funded R&D projects, currently for industrial automation, drones, and interoperablity in cloud technologies. We run a small Free Software Endowment fund (https://www.fdl-lef.org/), try to establish an alternative vRAN standard (https://www.simpleran.org/) and are trying to build a hyper open European cloud provider (https://www.rapid.space/).
We offer neither fame nor fortune, but if you're idealistic and passionate about Free Software, we'd like to hear from you. Candidates will do a programming challenge and 1 interview (2 for full time). We're currently searching trainees and full time positions for the following topics:
The developer in me says life and our society are like open source software. A gigantic piece of code constantly being rewritten and growing exponentially over time. Too much for anyone to truly grasp in its completeness as time progresses, but also not purely spaghetti code, so you can always break it down into smaller components one can eventually understand. Of course, like the author argues, you can use this software without ever caring or wondering about its inner workings. Or you can try to make contributions. However, there are no contribution guidelines for life. "Usefulness" depends on everyones' individual definition (improve the kernel or code readability) and "capacity to act" doesn't age well (I started hacking with jQuery). A contribution can be anything that may leave an impression on someone - a single person or any amount of people, a good or (for sake of completeness) a bad impression, something forgotten after an instant or something passed on for generations in some form or another - legacy contributions that eventually also get rewritten over time. Personally, I don't think the results matter as much as trying to make these contributions. After all, not all merge-requests make it into production code, but they are all worthy efforts of trying to improve small parts of the software of life and move our society forward.
Same here. My brothers and me could name all the Caribbean islands, we tried to sail to Europe from Bermuda and I remember my Dad sinking a half our galleons in the span of minutes we let him play on our Commodore64.
Nexedi | Lille | Software Engineer | FULLTIME and 4-12 months INTERNS | ONSITE https://www.nexedi.com/jobs We're looking for new colleagues and trainees to help improve our Free Software stack (https://stack.nexedi.com/). We do custom implementations and participate in publicly funded R&D projects. We run a small Free Software Endowment fund (https://www.fdl-lef.org/), try to establish an alternative vRAN standard (https://www.simpleran.org/) and are trying to build a hyper open European cloud provider (https://www.rapid.space/). We offer neither fame nor fortune, but if you're idealistic and passionate about Free Software, we'd like to hear from you. Candidates will do a programming challenge and 1 interview (2 for full time). We're currently searching trainees and full time positions for the following topics:
Nexedi | Lille | Software Engineer | FULLTIME and 4-12 months INTERNS | ONSITE https://www.nexedi.com/jobs
We're looking for new colleagues and trainees to help improve our Free Software stack (https://stack.nexedi.com/). We do custom implementations and participate in publicly funded R&D projects. We run a small Free Software Endowment fund (https://www.fdl-lef.org/), try to establish an alternative vRAN standard (https://www.simpleran.org/) and are trying to build a hyper open European cloud provider (https://www.rapid.space/). We offer neither fame nor fortune, but if you're idealistic and passionate about Free Software, we'd like to hear from you. Candidates will do a programming challenge and 1 interview (2 for full time). We're currently searching trainees and full time positions for the following topics:
We're looking for new colleagues and trainees to help improve our Free Software stack (https://stack.nexedi.com/). We do custom implementations for large industrial clients and participate in several French and European R&D projects. We offer neither fame nor fortune, but if you're idealistic and passionate about Free Software and want to help us prove its abilities across multiple domains, we're looking forward to hearing form you. Candidates will do a programming challenge and 1 interview (2 for full time). We're currently searching trainees and full time positions for:
Amarisoft and Nexedi also launched a joint company called Rapid.Space last year. It combines cloud and 4G/5G infrastructure operation and is "HyperOpen" = using open-source software, open hardware and open service.
I work at a regional govt in Germany - we want to transition to local cloud - and think this is great product. If these 'NayuOS" can by synced to our own nextCloud installations. Could you help?
Thnx
We're recruiting mostly for our R&D projects, since it's a good way to familiarize yourself with our stack - https://stack.nexedi.com/
One project is https://www.osie-project.eu/ - building an open source/open hardware framework for industrial automation and robotics
Another one is https://www.cython.plus/ - trying to port multi-core concurrent programming from Golang to Python.
Third project about deploying SlapOS on swarms of drones has no site online yet as we just started.
We have also launched a hyper-open cloud provider, called https://www.rapid.space/ - hyper-open meaning open source, open hardware & open service. One other notable for Rapid.Space is the upcoming release of our openRRH project through the free software endowment fund we're working to establish - https://www.fdl-lef.org/
Albeit all of this, we're still only a small team of about 40 scattered across the globe. Our main offices are in Lille, Munich and Tokio. Our learning curve is quite steep, so pre-Covid it always helped to have new Nexedians start out in one of our offices or at least spent a few months with us. Depending on your topic and Covid, remote work is not a problem. Aside from this, we have a flat hierarchy and expect everyone to be able to work autonomously. If this is not your thing, you'll have a hard time here. We're also obviously opinionated about open-source, our stack is mostly Python and Javascript and we only use Chromebooks (with our own OS). We're free of VC-funding to keep our solutions free, the downside being that we don't have the marketing budget for flashy sites and large communities. C'est la vie as we say in France :)
If you're interested, our current offers are on https://nexedi.com/jobs , my mail is on my profile. Thanks!
What does that mean to have an open hardware cloud when your CPUs looks like to be Intel hardware which AFAIK is not open ?
Do you have RISC-V or any open ISA CPU servers?
Is secure boot / TPM available with open implementations on your machines?
Open Service means we must be transparent about what suppliers, components and procedures are used to provide a cloud (or any other) service, so that anyone can use/study/copy/operate the service. Used components should be open-source on the other hand. We cannot guarantee them to be in order to provide the service.
Open Hardware is the same. It must be transparent regarding components being used, so bill of materials, PCB design files etc must be available so that anyone can rebuild a product. All components then should be open-source, but it cannot be guaranteed that they are.
When you instead insist on "must be open-source" you may end up without a solution or something very expensive or very slow for which there may be no market. Or you can make a competitive product, which must be transparent, can be replicated and should be open. Then invest over time to open-source the remaining non-open components. The openRRH project fits into this principle.
The question was more like, have you explored running servers with actual open hardware such as RISC-V CPUs, Alibaba seems to be putting out a non-toy RV64GC (https://conferences.computer.org/isca/pdfs/ISCA2020-4QlDegUf...), and I guess they will want to apply it for their clouds. At least, it is based on an open source ISA, that's closer to open hardware than Intel CPUs, AFAIK.
Also, it's unclear whether secure boot / TPM are available on your servers based on your website.
re Alibaba: We're aware of the Alibaba CPU and are following it. It is indeed very interesting. But we also visited one of the factories where their servers are produced. Everything is secret and there seems to be no open-source culture, so we don't have much hope. We tried working with OpenPower servers, but when testing with real workloads, they were ~4x slower than x86 or ARM.
re Secure Boot: We use secure boot / TPM only in Capri servers and it causes of lot of work with suppliers. We are working on a drakut uefi boot with secure boot and are slowly sloving BIOS issues. Linuxboot bios is used on some servers, but it's not maintained and no secure boot, plus the information from Intel to maintain linuxboot is secret with NDA. In general, securing the boot process requires hopping piggyback on larger companies with the same issues and the bargaining power to speak with AMD or Intel, because NDAs are a dead end and without bargaining power, your mileage is short.
If you're interested to discuss in more detail, send me an email and I'll connect you with my boss who knows a lot more.