I came here to bump our posting for a UI Developer, but instead I think 
everyone should probably apply for that Space Telescope Science Institute job 
(http://jobs.code4lib.org/job/26113/), because holy #$** Hubble!

Anyway. If you, like me, are not qualified to run a library for badass space 
scientists, maybe you’re qualified to join us at UMN Libraries:

For more details and to apply: http://z.umn.edu/ulib359

The University of Minnesota Libraries is seeking a user interface developer to 
join our Web Development team, to help us in our goal to produce one of the 
fastest [1], most usable, and most useful academic library websites in the 
country [2].

Our portfolio includes two large Drupal sites, homegrown PHP, Ruby, and Node.js 
applications, themes for third-party applications like DSpace and ILLiad, and 
more. Our current front-end stack is based on Bootstrap, and we use a static 
site generator to build themes and components for consistency across our varied 
sites and applications. This project would be yours to manage, evolve, or 
replace according to your vision for best practices in front-end development.

The University Libraries runs in-house usability tests monthly [3], and you 
would join our Usability Testing Team to help ensure that our user interfaces 
are demonstrably usable.

We are eager to measure the performance of our sites and applications, both in 
baseline speed and in user interactions. You would be responsible for ensuring 
that our sites are optimized for speed over the wire and that user events are 
tracked in a way that enables us to understand user behavior while respecting 
user privacy.

The University of Minnesota Libraries are located in Minneapolis, where you’ll 
find some of the nation’s best parks, lakes, cycling, public schools, and arts 
and cultural institutions. Also there is weather.

The Libraries offer a compensation package for developers that is competitive 
with industry [4], including a generous retirement plan [5] and 75% payment of 
tuition for University courses [6].

The tens of thousands of users of our sites and applications come from 
incredibly diverse backgrounds. Among the many ways we aspire to serve our 
users is by building an organization that reflects the diversity of our user 
base. To this end, we particularly encourage women, people of color, people who 
identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender, and others who identify 
with groups that are under-represented in IT to apply.

For more details and to apply: http://z.umn.edu/ulib359

Questions? Feel free to contact us:

Cody Hanson - Director, Web Development
@codyh (Twitter, Code4Lib Slack)
[email protected]

Michael Berkowski - Web Applications Developer
mberkowski (Code4Lib IRC)

Jen Tantzen - Web Applications Developer
@lastfinalgirl (Twitter)
[email protected]

Gabe Ormsby - Web Applications Developer
@gormsby (Twitter)
[email protected]

David Naughton - Web Developer
@naughton (Code4Lib Slack)
@nihiliad (Twitter)
[email protected]

[1]: http://www.speedleaderboard.com
[2]: https://www.lib.umn.edu
[3]: http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/libtech_conf/2016/sessions/11/
[4]: 
http://humanresources.umn.edu/sites/humanresources.umn.edu/files/sup072-13_it_individual_contributors_classification_and_salary_structure.pdf
[5]: http://humanresources.umn.edu/employee-benefits/retirement
[6]: http://humanresources.umn.edu/benefits/tuition-benefits

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