Pacific Medical Data Solutions | Frontend Developer | Full-Time | Denver, CO | Onsite
PMDS is a healthcare technology company which provides a physician productivity and compensation platform to hospitals around the US. We're looking for a frontend developer to join our engineering team focusing on our new SaaS product. An ideal candidate should have experience working in Angular 4+ or similar frontend framework and the ability to develop and deliver an intuitive and polished user experience to our customers.
This role is onsite in our office in the DTC just south of Denver. Please reach out to chris.vanlaw@pacificmds.com for more information or to apply. Please include "HN" in the subject line.
Pacific Medical Data Solutions | Frontend Developer | Full-Time | Denver, CO | Onsite
PMDS is a healthcare technology company which provides a physician productivity and compensation platform to hospitals around the US. We're looking for a frontend developer to join our engineering team focusing on our new SaaS product. An ideal candidate should have experience working in Angular 4+ or similar frontend framework and the ability to develop and deliver an intuitive and polished user experience to our customers.
This role is onsite in our office in the DTC just south of Denver. Please reach out to chris.vanlaw@pacificmds.com for more information or to apply. Please include "HN" in the subject line.
In the end it's impossible to criticize Agile because the way supporters frame it is that all good things are Agile, all bad things are not Agile and / or Waterfall. Goodness and Agile are inherently linked, so the presence of badness must mean that it is not Agile, or at least not properly practiced Agile.
Agile as it's practiced by 99% of practitioners is more like "processes and tools over individuals and interactions". Infantile retrospectives, constant stand up status meetings, status meetings dressed up as "grooming" and "planning" where the only real (non)decision that's being made is how many "story points" should be assigned. You can barely go to the bathroom without filing a Jira
> In the end it's impossible to criticize Agile because the way supporters frame it is that all good things are Agile, all bad things are not Agile and / or Waterfall.
Agile-as-defined is a fairly abstract set of priorities, it doesn't specify practices, so criticizing particular practices isn't criticizing it. There are plenty of legitimate criticisms of it, still, particularly that its too ill-defined to concretely implement.
Criticism of "Agile"-as-practices are generally misplaced, because there is no coherent unity in the practices people implement and apply that label too. Criticizing the various practices that people call "Agile" is better done by focussing on the actual practices that are being criticized than on "Agile".
At least, if one is interested in usefully sharing experience in a way that informs and advances quality practices. If one is merely interested in emotional venting, then "Agile" is a fine target.
> Criticism of "Agile"-as-practices are generally misplaced, because there is no coherent unity in the practices people implement and apply that label too
72% of Agile practitioners use some form of Scrum. 80% do standups, 71% do "planning", 69% do retrospectives. That's a pretty coherent majority that engage in practices labeled Agile.[1]
Around 70% of Agile practitioners do these - does it have to be 100% before these practices are Agile? There ABSOLUTELY is a coherent set of implemented practices that are Agile
> Criticizing the various practices that people call "Agile" is better done by focussing on the actual practices that are being criticized than on "Agile".
I did: "Infantile retrospectives, constant stand up status meetings, status meetings dressed up as "grooming" and "planning" where the only real (non)decision that's being made is how many "story points" should be assigned. You can barely go to the bathroom without filing a Jira".
You're proving my point that it's impossible to criticize Agile... But I will admit that (paraphrasing) 'All your criticisms are invalid because Agile is abstract!' is a twist! That's much more interesting than just screaming "WATERFALL!!"
If you had questions or criticisms of my criticisms, ask for clarification or make counter arguments - I want a good debate! It's intellectually light-weight to call someone emotional, while one is obfuscating and acting obtuse.
Several stores in Colorado have started accepting debit cards in the past month or so - maybe this is becoming less of an issue.
Source: I live in Colorado
Do you have an example of an MVP vs MVE? It sounds like the MVE approach focuses more on a minimum quality of user experience rather than a minimum set of features; is there a particular way to state this that you've found effective?
There's also the issue of waste disposal. After a patient is identified can most US hospitals handle the extra waste? I saw this (http://www.cnbc.com/id/102027557) earlier, and it sounds like the hospital in Atlanta that treated those two cases had trouble with waste disposal initially.
PMDS is a healthcare technology company which provides a physician productivity and compensation platform to hospitals around the US. We're looking for a frontend developer to join our engineering team focusing on our new SaaS product. An ideal candidate should have experience working in Angular 4+ or similar frontend framework and the ability to develop and deliver an intuitive and polished user experience to our customers.
This role is onsite in our office in the DTC just south of Denver. Please reach out to chris.vanlaw@pacificmds.com for more information or to apply. Please include "HN" in the subject line.