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SEEKING WORK | Toronto | Remote | Freelance/Contract Only

Senior Dev looking for interesting projects/mvp type work.

Backend: Scala, Cats and Rust/Tokio

Frontend: React, Redux Toolkit, Typescript

Domains: eCommerce, Online Learning, Custom Portals, Real-time Dashboards, Integrations and Data Wrangling...

Please get in touch: [email protected]


SEEKING WORK

Location: Toronto, Canada

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies:

* Ruby on Rails, Scala + Play and C# .NET Core

* Postgresql, Mongodb, Sql Server, Redis + Memcached

* React w/Redux

* Ubuntu, Nginx, Docker

* AWS, GCP and DigialOcean

Email: [email protected]

Interests: E-commerce, Learning management, Cloud migrations, API development and caching :)

Let’s talk :)


Location: Toronto, Canada

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies:

* Ruby on Rails, Scala + Play and C# .NET Core

* Postgresql, Mongodb, Sql Server, Redis + Memcached

* React w/Redux

* Ubuntu, Nginx, Docker

* AWS, GCP and DigialOcean

Email: [email protected]

Interests: E-commerce, Learning management, Cloud migrations, API development and caching :)

Let’s talk :)


True, but I believe the point is having an atmosphere (investors, universities, creative thinkers, etc.) that helps build a company.


The problem I face in Canada (Toronto) is that I prefer to stay as a contractor. I looked into a few startups myself, and the pay wasn't that interesting (that and the fact I'd have to commute 2 hours per day).


I agree, contract work is where you can make more money.

"HR departments here lag the USA and can't accept what techs are worth." You are referring to full-time work right?


Yes, full time work. HR departments rarely get involved with contract rates, they'd have a heart attack after their first SAP project.


@pcc are there any limitations on how many employees you have? Can single founders apply?


In principle anyone with eligible work can apply. Its even possible for unincorporated individuals to claim SR&ED on personal tax.

I would recommend though that you go to one of the public info sessions held in your area, since there are various angles to be aware of, that will help you optimize your claim. For example:

- a small Canadian corp typically gets a better rate than a claim on personal tax;

- if you're a "specified employee" (meaning you own 10% or more of the corp) they place certain caps on things like how much of the "proxy amount" you can apply in your claim

- a lot of the claim revolves around how much of your expenses was for eligible work. You typically have to be careful that a founder who is also doing marketing etc, is only claiming for the portion of time spent on the R&D part.

They go into all of this in the public info sessions, and they typically have specialists from various SR&ED areas available to answer pretty much any question.

You can also call them on various info lines, e.g. they offer a "first-time claimant" service where they try to make it easier for people looking at doing a first SR&ED claim, even coming out to visit your business if helpful.

They also offer a "preclaim project review" service where they'll give you a prelim opinion on the eligibility of a project, without you having to file a formal claim. (While this is not guarantee, it can for instance be used while raising funding, to demonstrate to prospective investors that you have a reasonable expectation of getting SR&ED support).

In fact there are a lot of public info sessions coming up in the near future: http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/txcrdt/sred-rsde/smnr-eng.html


Great thanks. What deters me is R&D, if someone wants to make a Saas web application, say something like basecamp, to me there isn't really much research required other than what is already publicly available in books/tutorials.

How can someone receive a grant for something like that? (Or do you have to fudge the truth?)


Agreed. You have all these great ideas on how to do things better, but along the way you inevitably forget all the work it took just to ship version 1 (let alone v2 with all this improvements both feature and design wise).


I can't imagine this was because Textmate isn't selling well enough. I could be wrong but I always looked at Textmate as an example of an app that must be making a killing.


Your web design looks VERY similar to: http://www.olark.com/


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