Josh Gross

Josh Gross

Partner @ Planetary Joined over 10 years ago via an invitation from Jared E. Josh has invited Logan Alexander

  • 8 stories
  • 5 comments
  • 31 upvotes
  • Posted to Ask DN: Who's Hiring? (February 2015), Feb 03, 2015

    Planetary (http://planetary.io) — fully REMOTE — we're looking for a full-time Backend Developer and a part-time Design Intern. We're a New York City-based digital product studio where happiness, empathy, and exploration are our core values. We want to inspire our clients and build products that will make them (and their customers) more productive and impactful in the industries they represent.

    Working with startups and big corps alike, we've had the opportunity to forge new approaches to product development and change the way many of our clients think about the process. We build everything from platforms to mobile apps. With so much exciting work happening, we'd love for you to join us and be part of the team! Check out the job pages[1][2] and shoot me an email if you're interested: josh@planetary.io

    [1] http://planetary.io/jobs/backend-developer

    [2] http://planetary.io/jobs/design-internship

    1 point
  • Posted to Ask DN: Best online places to order business cards from?, Sep 01, 2014

    I've found PrimoPress/PrimoCards (primopress.com / primocards.com) to be exceptional. Used them back when they were called UVCards.

    They just opened up the letterpress arm of the company and we recently used them to print new cards. Reasonably inexpensive for what we asked, very high quality, and they went out of their way to get the paper weight just right by duplexing their own paper in-house.

    4 points
  • Posted to Why I'm giving my time away for $1, in reply to Javin Ladish , Nov 06, 2013

    You can get through a surprising amount in just an hour, so I like to think I'd be able to provide at least that much value in 60 minutes :)

    0 points
  • Posted to Ask DN: Curious - Has anyone tried this? , Feb 28, 2013

    I've not used this one specifically, but it looks very similar to Susy[1], which I have used extensive. It is, by far, my favorite way to build a responsive grid. Everything stays in SCSS/CSS and you don't end up fighting with the grid (i.e., you can break out of it easily when you need to).

    [1] http://susy.oddbird.net

    0 points
  • Posted to Please stop using Twitter Bootstrap, in reply to Connor Tomas O'Brien , Feb 20, 2013

    I'm not saying you need a designer, or even to spend a lot of money. There are plenty of free and very inexpensive options out there that will at least take you a step beyond 'default Bootstrap'. A prototype—as I mentioned—would be an appropriate use case, but beyond that, a little effort would be good.

    0 points
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