5作者: andrewstetsenko28 天前原帖
Finding a true “Remote from Anywhere” role is harder than it looks.<p>Many jobs are labeled “remote,” but the fine print often ties them to a region, a time zone, or specific legal and tax requirements.<p>Here are practical checks that help you spot “remote anywhere” roles faster, and avoid common red flags.<p>1) Read the location line Start with the simplest signal: is there a geography attached?<p>- “US Remote” “Remote (EU)” “LATAM only” or “Remote within X countries” usually means location restrictions. - If time zones are listed, that can also imply location limits, even when the role is technically remote. - Look for explicit language like “Global remote,” “Work from anywhere,” “fully asynchronous,” or “distributed team across multiple countries.” These are not guarantees, but they are stronger indicators.<p>2) Treat salary as a clue<p>Pay ranges can indicate the target hiring market.<p>- A range like $100k to $250k often signals a US-centered market (not always, but often).<p>3) Watch the application form<p>Sometimes the job post is vague, but the ATS form tells the truth:<p>- Questions like “Which time zone can you work in?” can reveal the required overlap. - If the location dropdown includes only a few regions (e.g., US, Canada, Europe, Other), it often indicates there are specific geographic requirements. - Red flags that usually indicate US-only hiring include questions about US work authorization, a US tax ID, US-specific benefits or requirements such as Security Clearance.<p>4) Check the company on LinkedIn<p>If a company truly hires globally, you can usually see it in its team.<p>- Review employee locations. Even if LinkedIn shows only a few “top locations,” individual profiles reveal the real spread. - Search for your profession (e.g., Software Engineer) and check where they actually live. - If you see people working from India, Asia, Africa or other regions beyond the US and Europe, that is a strong sign the company can hire internationally.<p>5) Compare career pages and external job boards<p>Job descriptions are sometimes more detailed on the company website.<p>- Look for mentions of an asynchronous culture, a multi-national team, or the number of nationalities in the company. - Check LinkedIn job posts and external job boards. They sometimes include location constraints that are missing from the official posting.<p>Remote anywhere roles exist, but they are a narrower category than most people expect.<p>Companies balance time zone collaboration, employment compliance, payroll, and security requirements.<p>Good luck with your remote job search!
1作者: abrarnasirj28 天前原帖
Hi HN, I’m Abrar Nasir Jaffari, co-founder of HackLikeMe. We built an agentic CLI because we were tired of the context-switching between LLM web chats and the terminal when doing DevSecOps work.Most AI coding assistants are just wrappers for file editing. We’ve built 6 specialized agents (Coder, FullStack, Security, DevOps, Plan, Monitor) that have native terminal access.<p>It doesn&#x27;t just suggest code; it can:<p>Run nmap to audit your local network.<p>Use tshark to analyze packet captures.<p>Manage docker containers and kubectl clusters.<p>The &#x27;Pause to Think&#x27; feature: Before it executes a command, it generates a reasoning plan so you can see why it&#x27;s about to run a specific script.&quot;<p>The &quot;Beta&quot; Offer: &quot;We launched yesterday and we&#x27;re currently in beta. We are giving free Pro access for the first 100 HN users—no credit card required.<p>We’re running on a mix of AWS and GCP (leveraging some credits we just landed), so we’re able to offer some decent compute for the reasoning models during the beta.
3作者: FrankHobson28 天前原帖
I’ve tried most popular personal finance apps over the last few years, and I always end up quitting.<p>For me, the main reasons are:<p>- Core functionality hidden behind paywalls<p>- UX that feels bloated or optimized for upsells<p>- $100+&#x2F;year pricing for some<p>- Needing multiple separate tools (budgeting, tracking, investments) with manual syncing and often no decent mobile app<p>I’m starting an open personal finance tool as a side project because I want something I’d actually stick with long-term.<p>Before locking myself into the wrong design, I’d love to hear from others:<p>- Why did you stop using finance apps (if you used any)?<p>- What features are must-haves vs. nice-to-haves?<p>- What made a tool “click” for you — or never click at all?<p>Happy to hear if this feels redundant or already solved better elsewhere.