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MercuryTechnologies in United States

20 jobs at MercuryTechnologies in United States


  • MercuryTechnologies San Francisco, United States

    In 1923, Claude Hopkins published · Scientific Advertising · which many say has the first descriptions of A/B testing and using coupons for attribution. Behind the book was a team that meticulously designed, executed, and measured these campaigns that helped set the standard fo ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Our ancestors chased the seasons with nomadic grace and derived value from that movement, while modern humans find adventure in errands and deadlines that take us outside our cozy homes. Nowadays, our pockets contain glowing oracles – phones transmuting mere light into financial ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Senior Frontend Engineer - Design System · As long as there have been buildings, there has been scaffolding. In the caves of Lascaux, sockets in the cave wall were used to build scaffolds, allowing its Paleolithic inhabitants to craft their majestic cave-paintings, which survive ...

  • MercuryTechnologies

    Full-Stack Engineer

    2 weeks ago


    MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Mercury is building the banking* stack for startups. We launched about four years ago with basic functionality, and now we're refining our product and building out new features. · Thankfully, our customers seem to like what we've built so far: · As a part of the Growth team, you' ...

  • MercuryTechnologies

    Engineering Manager

    3 weeks ago


    MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    In the not-so-distant past, a visit to your local bank was not just a transaction; it was a connection. Picture the warmth of being greeted by name as you entered, the familiarity in the exchange of pleasantries, and the confidence in knowing your financial well-being was in the ...

  • MercuryTechnologies

    Senior Data Engineer

    2 weeks ago


    MercuryTechnologies San Francisco, United States

    In the 1880s, Herman Hollerith noticed the US Census was taking over 8 years to calculate. To solve this, he invented a tabulating machine using punch cards that dramatically sped up the process and served as the foundation for innovation in high-quality data gathering. · We're ...


  • MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    There's a guideline in medicine called "Sutton's Law": first consider the obvious. The law gets its name from an apocryphal interview with Willie Sutton, an infamous bank robber, who was asked "Why do you rob banks?" and replied simply "Because that's where the money is." · Merc ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Heimdall could hear the grass grow. He could see for hundreds of miles. These keen senses made him an excellent guardian of Bifrost and Asgard. He was also known to be a fair and just god, both wise and rational amidst the chaotic world of Norse mythology. It makes sense, then, t ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    It's 1813 and Humphrey Davy is dazzling London with scientific demonstrations and lectures. Soon enters the young bookbinder, Michael Faraday, dissatisfied with his own prospects and enamored by the mysteries of electricity. Faraday gets a break and gains apprenticeship with Davy ...

  • MercuryTechnologies

    Full-Stack Engineer

    2 weeks ago


    MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Mercury is building the banking* stack for startups. We launched about four years ago with basic functionality, and now we're refining our product and building out new features. · Thankfully, our customers seem to like what we've built so far: · As a part of the Growth team, yo ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    There's a guideline in medicine called "Sutton's Law": first consider the obvious. The law gets its name from an apocryphal interview with Willie Sutton, an infamous bank robber, who was asked "Why do you rob banks?" and replied simply "Because that's where the money is." · Mercu ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    In the 1840s, Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace worked on an early version of the computer known as the "Analytics Engine". In the words of computing historian Doron Swade, "What Lovelace that numbers could represent entities other than quantity" and together they laid the founda ...


  • MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    Since the dawn of aviation, pilots have faced the constant challenge of air resistance, much like sailors navigating the friction of water. Amidst this relentless struggle, the trim tab emerges as an ingenious yet understated marvel. Just as the wheel revolutionized transportatio ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Our ancestors chased the seasons with nomadic grace and derived value from that movement, while modern humans find adventure in errands and deadlines that take us outside our cozy homes. Nowadays, our pockets contain glowing oracles – phones transmuting mere light into financial ...


  • MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    Since the dawn of aviation, pilots have faced the constant challenge of air resistance, much like sailors navigating the friction of water. Amidst this relentless struggle, the trim tab emerges as an ingenious yet understated marvel. Just as the wheel revolutionized transportatio ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    Heimdall could hear the grass grow. He could see for hundreds of miles. These keen senses made him an excellent guardian of Bifrost and Asgard. He was also known to be a fair and just god, both wise and rational amidst the chaotic world of Norse mythology. It makes sense, then, t ...


  • MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    Since the dawn of aviation, pilots have faced the constant challenge of air resistance, much like sailors navigating the friction of water. Amidst this relentless struggle, the trim tab emerges as an ingenious yet understated marvel. Just as the wheel revolutionized transportatio ...


  • MercuryTechnologies New York, United States

    Its 1813 and Humphrey Davy is dazzling London with scientific demonstrations and lectures. Soon enters the young bookbinder, Michael Faraday, dissatisfied with his own prospects and enamored by the mysteries of electricity. Faraday gets a break and gains apprenticeship with Davy, ...


  • MercuryTechnologies Portland, United States

    In the 1840s, Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace worked on an early version of the computer known as the "Analytics Engine". In the words of computing historian Doron Swade, "What Lovelace that numbers could represent entities other than quantity" and together they laid the founda ...

  • MercuryTechnologies

    VP of Engineering

    1 week ago


    MercuryTechnologies San Francisco, United States

    In his essay "You weren't meant to have a boss," Paul Graham argues that humans evolved for hunter-gatherer-sized groups—eight being the ideal number. This implies that startups are the ideal place for programmers—the structure of large companies just prevents you from getting mu ...