Typst, a very nice Latex alternative, written in rust has published job listings.

  • Giooschi@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    While they don’t write it explicitly I think they’re looking for a good junior developer, given that:

    • they are not asking for Rust work experience, instead for good Rust knowledge and experience with open source development, both of which you can obtain on your own if you’re a competent student

      • but also, is there even anyone that has experience in Rust and compiler/interpreter/typesetting development and is looking for a job? If they did require that almost nobody would qualify and the cycle of “I don’t have experience for applying to this job to get experience” would continue
    • 57k€ is not a bad salary for a junior developer in Europe

    • the two founders have graduated recently (~3 years ago) and have been working on Typst since then (their master thesis was on creating Typst itself), so it’s likely they are looking for someone like them.

    • rglullis@communick.news
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      20 days ago

      Once upon a time, a “meaningful wage” was something that would allow you to raise a family of 4 while living a comfortable middle class standard of living.

      57k€ gross salary in Berlin amounts to ~3360€ per month net income. Rent alone will eat 30-40% of that.

      You can survive on that salary, which is more than most people are managing to do nowadays. But to think that someone with such specialized competency should expect a “not bad” salary shows a pretty sad state of affairs.

      • BatmanAoD@programming.dev
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        19 days ago

        Rent eating 30-40% of your income is extremely normal, isn’t it? Or is that only true in the US (where it has recently become much more than that for many people)?

        • rglullis@communick.news
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          19 days ago

          You missed the last paragraph, didn’t you?

          I don’t know about you, but I don’t think we should accept to be working for less or to accept a lower standard of living just because so many people have it worse.

          As long as your work is:

          • honest
          • ethical
          • providing real value to whoever is paying for it
          • not pushing externalities for others

          Then “what is normal” should have no bearing in this.

            • rglullis@communick.news
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              19 days ago

              Not so much of a good measure of how you live but on how much (or little) people are left for other things, including saving/investing towards their own homes.

              • BatmanAoD@programming.dev
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                19 days ago

                I feel like we’re talking past each other. My impression was that 30% towards your living situation is a pretty decent target; what would you expect the percentage to be?