Fullstack Engineer

Salary

₹40 - 70 LPA

Min Experience

5 years

Location

India

JobType

full-time

About the role

Overview

Company name: Adaline | HQ Location: San Francisco, CA | Website | LinkedIn

Role: Fullstack Engineer

  • Salary: Rs. 40-70 lakhs per year
  • Experience: 5-8 years
  • Location: Remote
  • Type: Full-time

Position Overview:
As a Fullstack Engineer at Adaline AI, you will play a crucial role in designing and developing our innovative AI solutions. You will work collaboratively with cross-functional teams to create seamless user experiences and robust backend systems.

Key Responsibilities:

  1. Develop and maintain web applications using modern frontend and backend technologies.
  2. Collaborate with designers and product managers to implement intuitive user interfaces.
  3. Build and optimize RESTful APIs and microservices for scalability and performance.
  4. Participate in code reviews and contribute to team knowledge sharing.
  5. Stay updated on industry trends and best practices to drive continuous improvement.

Qualifications:

  1. Proven experience as a Fullstack Engineer or similar role.
  2. Proficiency in frontend technologies (e.g., React, Angular, or Vue) and backend frameworks (e.g., Node.js, Django, or Ruby on Rails).
  3. Strong understanding of databases (SQL and NoSQL) and cloud services.
  4. Excellent problem-solving skills and attention to detail.
  5. Passion for AI and a desire to create impactful solutions.

About the company

About us
We’re working to increase the number of magical and safe AI experiences in the world.

Adaline is the single collaborative platform for product and engineering teams to iterate, evaluate, and monitor prompts for LLMs. Imagine saving costs and painful hours on testing the prompts, boosting customer confidence with continuous evals for those prompts, and shipping faster than your competitors. AI teams at McKinsey, HubSpot, Discord, YC startups, AI Grant startups, and others use Adaline to iterate quickly and ship confidently.

Skills

Fullstack