I have just going through https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/pricing/ and found the prices to be 45 $/ month or 1199 $/year for Professional subscription. Is this cost per user? if so, do I need to purchase 100 subscriptions (4500 $ / per month!) for 100 developers in my company?
It's per user. It's better described on the following page:
https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/pricing-details/
I'm just looking for the same and you can be glad to have a price tag of $1199 - to me as single user located in Germany this turns into 1540€ on check-out, that would be $1813. VAT is only a small share of that difference.
Btw, the fee is for the first year, renewal will be relatively cheaper.
With your larger number of seats, you should also investigate the SKU 77D-00092 and 77D-00095 respectively. As I see them advertised in various places these still come with two years of MSDN subscription rather than the one year offered on the MS web site, also at a lower price. Maybe they are missing bundled Azure credits? Those SKUs appear to require an "Open License" plan with at least 5 seats - that's as far as I got.
Does google have an API for this feature?
https://www.google.com/search?q=product+manager+jobs&oq=product+manager+jobs+&aqs=chrome..69i57j0l4j69i60l3.5823j1j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&ibp=htl;jobs&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjPuIDJhebnAhWTqp4KHTXeCB0QiYsCKAB6BAgGEAM#htivrt=jobs&htidocid=2YjfCdSoJeXy_7nXAAAAAA%3D%3D&fpstate=tldetail
Wherein in the API I can pass a keyword then returns open jobs related to the keyword.
Right now google does not have such API, they only have an API for a job to be indexed and appear as a result. If you want to get jobs results you can use third party solutions for it.
I work at SerpApi and we have an API for Google Jobs.
You can check the playground and documentation to get a better idea of how it works.
Here is a part of a response sample for an individual job listing:
"title": "Staff Product Manager",
"company_name": "BuzzFeed",
"location": "New York, NY",
"via": "via Greenhouse.io",
"description": "The Role\n\nWe’re looking for an experienced product manager who is eager to help us drive retention and loyalty across our core BuzzFeed Products. You’ll be the product lead on a cross-functional team of engineers, designers, and data scientists that are focused on creating a differentiated and compelling site experience that our community of users will love.\n\nWhat You'll Do\n• Develop a strategy for driving retention and loyalty across our products by working with your other team leads and partners throughout the entire organization\n• Your purview over the core site experience would span BuzzFeed.com as well as our Google AMP, Facebook Instant Articles, and Apple News pages.\n• You would closely collaborate with our app team with the potential (but not requirement) to also manage an additional product manager\n• You would be responsible for thinking through how people are interacting with and coming to our various pages and empowered to create a strategy for the best way to drive... retention and a deeper level of engagement\n• You would be expected to help set the team strategy, prioritize the team’s work, write OKRs for individual products or projects, and communicate and coordinate the team’s plans with stakeholders within and outside of Tech\n\nYou Are\n• Experienced: You have hands-on experience launching and managing digital products, with a slant towards a consumer experience and how that drives the business and 5+ years of product management experience\n• Collaborative and communicative: You have a demonstrated ability to work well and communicate with engineers, designers, and data scientists -- experience working with business and editorial stakeholders is a plus\n• Curious, analytical, and proactive: You don’t merely accept outliers in data, but actively investigate and dive into the numbers and research to find novel insights and new product ideas\n• Comfortable in the spotlight: You will need to collaborate with and help influence senior leaders across the company to advance the team’s vision and product strategy in a fairly complex problem space\n\nA few examples of current team projects\n• Launching a new user profile experience\n• Creating new ways to reward engagement and establish habitual user behavior\n• Improving our notifications system\n• Improvements to the quiz taking experience\n• Creating ways to subscribe to topics to improve and personalize the site experience\n\nAbout BuzzFeed Tech\n\nBuzzFeed Tech is a group of about 150 product managers, engineers, data scientists, and designers that are focused on building great products and content experiences that bring our audience joy and truth. We’re a collaborative and friendly bunch that works in a typical agile way with sprints, JIRA, OKRs, and a close working relationship with management.\n\nLife at BuzzFeed\n\nAt BuzzFeed, we believe our work benefits from the diverse perspectives of our employees. As such, BuzzFeed celebrates inclusion and is committed to equal opportunity employment. At BuzzFeed, you can expect:\n• A supportive, inclusive atmosphere on a team that values your contributions\n• Opportunities for personal and professional growth via work experience, offerings from our in-house Learning # BuzzFeed team, our Employee Resource Groups, and more\n• An attractive and equitable compensation package, including salary and stock options\n• A generous and well-rounded benefits program featuring PTO, unlimited sick time, comprehensive medical benefits, a family leave policy, access to mental health platforms, retirement plans, gym and wellness discounts, and much more\n• Plenty of snacks (healthy and indulgent), catered lunches, beverages, etc..\n\nBuzzFeed is the world’s leading tech-powered media company, with a cross-platform news and entertainment network that reaches hundreds of millions of people globally. The company aims to spread truth and joy across the internet by producing articles, lists, quizzes, videos, original series; lifestyle content through brands including Tasty, the world’s largest social food network; original reporting and investigative journalism through BuzzFeed News; strategic partnerships, licensing and product development through BuzzFeed Marketing; and original productions across broadcast, cable, SVOD, film and digital platforms for BuzzFeed Studios.\n\nBuzzFeed is proud to be an equal opportunity workplace. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to, and will not be discriminated against based on age, race, gender, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, veteran status, disability or any other protected category",
"extensions": [
"Over 1 month ago",
"Full-time"
]
},
I'm trying to sort alphanumeric using unpack command in Ruby but it doesn't work my and I don't know how to solve this.
This is my list:
accidentally
accommodation
accompany
according to
account
account for
accurate
accurately
accuse
achieve
achievement
acid
acknowledge
a couple
acquire
across
act
action
active
actively
activity
actor
actress
actual
actually
ad
adapt
add
addition
additional
add on
address
add up
add up to
adequate
adequately
adjust
admiration
admire
admit
adopt
adult
advance
advanced
advantage
adventure
advert
advertise
advertisement
advertising
advice
advise
affair
affect
affection
afford
afraid
after
afternoon
afterwards
again
against
age
aged
agency
agent
aggressive
ago
agree
agreement
ahead
aid
aim
air
aircraft
airport
alarm
alarmed
a
abandon
abandoned
ability
able
about
above
abroad
absence
absent
absolute
absolutely
absorb
abuse
abuse
academic
accent
accept
acceptable
access
accident
accidental
I use this command:
ruby -e 'array = File.read("lista").lines ;sum= Hash.new(0); m5g= array.sort_by { |l| +l.split(";")[0].unpack("B*")[0].to_i }.join("");print m5g' >fsssfff3
And I obtain this:
a
ad
act
add
age
ago
aid
aim
air
able
acid
aged
about
above
abuse
abuse
actor
adapt
admit
adopt
adult
after
again
agent
agree
ahead
alarm
abroad
absent
absorb
accent
accept
access
accuse
across
action
active
actual
add on
add up
adjust
admire
advert
advice
advise
affair
affect
afford
afraid
agency
abandon
ability
absence
account
achieve
acquire
actress
address
advance
against
airport
alarmed
a couple
absolute
academic
accident
accurate
actively
activity
actually
addition
adequate
advanced
aircraft
abandoned
accompany
add up to
advantage
adventure
advertise
affection
afternoon
agreement
absolutely
acceptable
accidental
accurately
additional
adequately
admiration
afterwards
aggressive
account for
achievement
acknowledge
advertising
accidentally
according to
accommodation
advertisement
Is it possible to use another unpack decodification .unpack('B*') for doing this?
I am working with a client to migrate their 12 year old ecommerce site to a more modern platform. The manner in which they process credit cards is something I don't have experience with, and either I can't seem to punch the right combination of words to get google to spit out what i'm looking for, or this is an oddity.
Their business does not process any credit card transactions itself. They use mals ecommerce shopping cart, and when customers place orders, the credit card information is stored there, but not processed. Their partner then logs into Mals and is able to retrieve all the card information and then process it externally on their own equipment.
Is there a common name for this process
Is this an acceptable practice (It seems kinda sketchy to me)
If so, can someone point me in the right direction for research
in our website www.theprinterdepo.com we are going to implement google checkout. However I am not sure in what shipping methods or strategy to use.
In this page:
https://developers.google.com/checkout/developer/Google_Checkout_XML_API_Carrier_Calculated_Shipping#Process
Google says that they calculate based on the total weight of the items, but the thing is if one person buys one printer thats fine, but if he orders 3 printers of 50lbs, the shipping cost is invalid calculating it with 150lbs. It has to be calculated as 3 packages of 50lbs.
How would you do it in this scenario??
I have only had minimal investigation to this, but I don't think this can be handled by default installation. I know that you would need a shipping extension that can support the Google API shipping-packages, but real issue is that not even the Google API can support more than one package, either by API limitation or restriction by choice.
The <shipping-packages> tag encapsulates information about
all of the packages that will be shipped to the buyer.
At this time, merchants may only specify one package per order
I would love to see this come to full use as it would be a great addition to be able to say that anything with a weight over x requires additional packaging but currently I don't think it is possible. While this can be accomplished by separating the order into three orders, but that will over complicate the user experience and possible cause loss of sales.
Source:
https://developers.google.com/checkout/developer/Google_Checkout_XML_API_Carrier_Calculated_Shipping#tag_shipping-packages
The "limitation" mentioned above is only if you will rely on Google to calculate shipping for you using what they call carrier-calculated-shipping.
You do have other options to calculate shipping:
you can pre-calculate using whatever formula (or shipping service/plugin) you have based on the cart contents (you would know this prior to handing off the cart to Google for Checkout), which is essentially sending a flat rate shipping cost to Google, or perhaps;
use the merchant-calculations-api option so you can account for the destination/delivery address (not just cart contents). This option is more complex (you need to handle callbacks from Google), but it does give you critical information to work with when calculating shipping.
hth....