The company I'm presently working for is looking to hire another Sr. Delphi Developer to work out of their Phoenix office on a project wtih me. It's a fairly traditional Delphi app built in D7 that connects to an Oracle back-end DB. Hopefully we'll be migrating to the latest version of Delphi later this year. (I was told it's scheduled for Q3, but it's unclear that this decision has actually been made.)

The company I'm presently working for is looking to hire another Sr. Delphi Developer to work out of their Phoenix office on a project wtih me. It's a fairly traditional Delphi app built in D7 that connects to an Oracle back-end DB. Hopefully we'll be migrating to the latest version of Delphi later this year. (I was told it's scheduled for Q3, but it's unclear that this decision has actually been made.)

The product is a medical practice management app that's targeted at small medical practices and billing agencies that serve them. It handles most PM activities other than EHR. There's a pent-up demand for new features and I guess they decided to expand the team to move things along a little quicker. Some of the work involves enhancements to existing forms and units, and some of it involves new development.

For example, I'm just wrapping up the development of a new feature that will allow us to scan in any PDF form file and make it available it to be populated with data from a given patient or medical visit, then attach it to bills that are submitted for payment.

This is a full-time permanent position with competitive pay (really!) and all the stuff you'd expect from a large, profitable company with a healthy portfolio of software products.

The environment is fairly laid-back and easy-going. We're the only Delphi app they've got in their portfolio; everything else is java-based, except a couple of C# apps. This one is likely to get migrated over to a new java-based platform, but the customers like it and it's doing quite well for the company, so it may be around for a while. That said, there will likely be opportunities to move over to another project that's using java at some point of you want to go that way.

Contact me if this sounds interesting to you.

Comments

  1. To paraphrase a well-known hockey quote, "100% of the jobs you disqualify yourself for don't result in offers."

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  2. I think not reading the first sentence of the job listing is a pretty effective method of self-disqualification. :)

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  3. About as efficient as living halfway around the world from "out of our office". :-)

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