kde
Make a career being Qt
Submitted by Jesper on March 6, 2012 - 09:05Apologies for the spam, but I think some people here may find this interesting...
My employer, Mendeley, is looking for another talented Qt developer for cross-platform (win, mac, lin) development in London. It's a great place to work, and the company is growing like crazy!
Job description here: http://www.mendeley.com/careers/london-cpp-qt-software-eng/
Email me directly (jesper at jespersaur.com) for more info/etc.
Hack like a madman, collect massive amounts of cash!
Submitted by Jesper on May 10, 2011 - 14:31(Not directly KDE related, though likely of interest to many of you here :) Sorry for the noise to the rest of you!)

Long time no blog! Just wanted to draw your attention to this neato competion my (new) employer (Mendeley) is currently running; a chance to flaunt awesome KDE technology in the face of academia and rake in some nice cash:
Happy 2011!
Submitted by Jesper on January 2, 2011 - 17:50How to file a Qt bug report in the new bug tracker
Submitted by Jesper on March 3, 2010 - 09:54
Shameless plug to a post written by yours truly on the Qt Labs page that fellow KDE folks may find interesting:
How to file a Qt bug report in the new bug tracker
KDE users in Chile? You aren't alone!
Submitted by Jesper on November 5, 2009 - 10:30Just a heads up to any readers who are in Chile (or South America for that matter) that feel like they would like to make some new KDE friends. There is an active KDE chile group on google groups which you really should subsribe to and check out.
http://groups.google.com/group/kde-chile/

Encuentro Linux 2009 Day 1 Report
Submitted by Jesper on October 23, 2009 - 19:30So a child of the frigid north found his way all the way to the other side of the world for yet another spectacular free software conference. This time it's to celebrate the Encuentro Linux conference 2009 in Valparaiso/Vina del Mar in sunny Chile.
Hosted at the picturesque Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria, this conference has attracted hundreds of Linux enthusiasts, students, and business folks. With a view like this, it's no wonder that you often see people standing outside discussing their software, instead of the auditoriums and class rooms:
