We have a lot of work. Do you have enough skills?

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Web.TrueOffice is a cocky new studio. We've started with the small sites and gradually went on to bigger projects. The original team consisted of 100 people, if you speak binary: one programmer, one designer, one templater and one tester. As the amount of clients started to grow up, the amount of workers remained constant, which led to more money overworking. A common decision is then to find other developers and move them into office. But the problem is: we have no office.

Or maybe it's not a problem. Maybe it's the greatest advantage of working for us: being able to stay at home and produce high-quality code without any distractions from phones, colleagues and upper management (who's that, anyway?). One thing we realized from completing the orders without meeting each other in person for weeks is that once the areas of responsibility are properly divided, e-mail is enough. It's only before the very deadline that our Skypes are on. That's possible, because we actually love the job.

If you got no office to pay for, where do the spare money go? Into the members' pockets, of course. Unsurprisingly, working at home has financial benefits, too.

And, hey, have you ever been reporting to a boss who knows nothing about what you do? He could be a good guy, no problems, but you have difficulty explaining that investing two days in making the system better would result in time savings in future? I had such a boss, and I didn't like that. In TrueOffice, you'll be reporting to people who had previously been doing your job.

Oh, what's the job like? Well, I need a symfony programmer. Yeah, that's it. If I've convinced you that TrueOffice is a great workplace, please complete the basic test. It is created to filter out the people who can't program at all, or don't know what symfony is, so I reckon you'll pass it without any problems. If you have a question, suggestion or any misconception, contact me at Denis.Gorbachev गुरु trueoffice.ru. Good luck!

And... you know what? I've just realized that the test could be completed by people without any particular experience in symfony. Indeed, the very fact of passing proves that person's ability to grok at the code structure and extract the much-subtle patterns. So, if you have no beforehand knowledge of symfony, don't hesitate to take the test... Still, I must stress that the reverse proves nothing: not being able to pass doesn't mean any ineptness whatsoever.