This is a guest post by Christophe Limpalair based on an interview (video) he did with Jon Cowie, Staff Operations Engineer and Breaksmith @ Etsy. Etsy has been a fascinating platform to watch, and study, as they transitioned from a new platform to a stable and well-established e-commerce engine. That shift required a lot of cultural change, but the end result is striking. In case you haven't seen
Poop emoji ( 1,000 件以上 件の関連する結果、 広告あり もっと見る ビジネスを拡大して、より多くの潜在顧客を集客しようとされているセラーの皆さまは、Etsy 広告プラットフォームを利用して、商品を宣伝できます。関連度やワンクリックに対してセラーが支払う金額などの要素に基づいて、広告結果が表示されます。さらに詳しく。 )
Why MongoDB Never Worked Out at Etsy December 26th, 2012 In 2010ish, we tried to roll out a feature (Treasury) using MongoDB. It was an interesting experience. I learned quite a bit in the process. I wrote about what I was thinking at the time here. But for the most part it was an abject failure and Ryan Young wound up porting the entire thing to the MySQL shards which had come to maturity in the
I joined Etsy back in February and knew immediately that there would be no shortage of technical challenges. Many of our job postings for Engineering positions describe the company as a place "where the word 'millions' is used frequently and in many contexts". I got a taste of that within my first weeks on the job. We are in the process of redesigning a few of the major sections around etsy.com.
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