I informally checked on this and the pay is a lot higher, but the hours are probably somewhere between normal and what you said. I also found out that the
stock options are pretty good. I also did some background work and found they are pretty well financed.
Maybe the reason this company (Mahalo) appeals to me is because it reminds me of a place I worked at a long time ago. It was a large toy company that had a mix
of creative designers vs engineers and was a really good eye-opening experience for me. Most of the employees at Mahalo are not engineers, but are liberal arts
types doing web research and creating content. It looks like the engineers keep the server going and build specialized web tools for the liberal-arts types.
In contrast, the Google/Yahoo environment started out with an engineer-only gearhead mentality. They sincerely believe that search should be presented to the
end-user from computer algorithms. (And don't get me going on AI and the promises of MIT LISP). My only point here is that the machine-only approach has
serious limits. The Mahalo people are combining the machine with human editing to refine the content. Google and Yahoo used to be pretty good, but now the
algorithms are being "gamed" by SEO companies. Most of people just put up with crap like this because it's all they have. It's the same
reason that your VCR can't remember the time after power loss, or why you have to click "Start" to shut OFF your damn computer.
Typically, engineers have a narrow perspective and never get a chance to work within an environment like this. For that reason, most engineers reading this
won't have a clue what I'm talking about. So yeah, maybe the hours are more than you like and maybe the CEO is an ass and maybe this new place
isn't what I perceive and maybe you have it good where you are. Personally I'm over the hill, on the right coast and don't work with web
technology. But if you are looking for a job and you can take the risk it might be worth it.
Rabid - (earning his name)

