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Hacker News job board reveals remote tech talent pool

Hacker News •
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A Hacker News thread asking 'Who wants to be hired?' has become a vibrant marketplace for remote tech professionals. Over 80 contributors shared detailed profiles, including locations, technical expertise, and career histories. The post emphasizes direct engagement, requesting readers email candidates rather than involve recruiters. Notable profiles include a DevOps engineer with Kubernetes and HPC/ML experience in the Pacific Northwest, a full-stack developer specializing in AI agents and TypeScript infrastructure tools, and a senior software engineer with 12 years in DevOps automation.

The platform wantstobehired.com aggregates these listings, offering searchable filters for location (remote-friendly options dominate), technologies (Python, TypeScript, Rust, and Go stand out), and industry focus (AI, cloud infrastructure, and open-source projects). One contributor highlighted building a TypeScript CLI reducing serverless deployment steps from 35+ to one command, while another detailed contributions to Firefox and NLP model deployment frameworks. The thread underscores a trend of candidates seeking roles aligning with their passion projects, such as RAG systems and observability exporters for AI analytics.

Geographically, candidates cluster in tech hubs like Colorado, New York, and India, with many open to relocation. A senior DevOps leader emphasized experience scaling infrastructure from legacy systems to modern CI/CD pipelines, while a Mozilla alum showcased expertise in extension update mechanisms. The diversity of backgrounds—from biophysics PhDs to legal career switchers—reflects the broad appeal of remote tech work. Technical specificity abounds, with detailed stacks including AWS CDK, OpenTelemetry, and PostgreSQL vector databases.

The thread’s success highlights demand for transparent, community-driven job matching. With contributors like a student researcher in 3D vision systems and a Meta veteran building mental health apps, the platform bridges niche expertise with innovative companies. As one profile notes, 'I can do anything I set my mind to'—a sentiment echoed across resumes emphasizing self-hosted infrastructure, open-source contributions, and interdisciplinary problem-solving. The site’s growth suggests a shift toward decentralized hiring in tech.