Software Development

On the Market: 8 tech jobs available in Baltimore right now

Whether just getting started or longtime players, these Baltimore companies are looking to add talent.

A yoga class on BurnAlong. (Still via BurnAlong)

On the Market is a Technical.ly column where we highlight noteworthy job openings and the people who are lookin’. Got a submission? Email us and tell us why it belongs in the roundup.


BurnAlong is hiring for a full stack developer.

The Owings Mills-based company’s platform helps connect via video to take classes from pros, and work out with friends. The company is adding new features like wearables integration in recent months.

eOriginal is hiring for a front end UX/UI developer.

The 20-year-old fintech company is growing for the future after a $26.5 million funding round last year and the introduction of a new CEO in May. It’s based out of the warehouse at Camden Yards.

The Baltimore Sun has an opening for a newsroom product engineer.

Bring your dev skills to the newsroom, working with a range of departments including editorial, marketing, advertising and sales.

Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health is hiring for a front-end web developer.

It’s the number one school in the nation for public health, and has an award-winning communications and marketing team.

More postings from our jobs board:

Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Donate to the Journalism Fund

Your support powers our independent journalism. Unlike most business-media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational contributions.

Trending

When global tech association CompTIA spun off its nonprofit arm, the TechGirlz curriculum went dark

The fall of giants: How technical leadership gaps broke three once-mighty tech companies

Hey Baltimore: How well do you know local tech news? 

He watched his tech specialties grow obsolete. But he’s still optimistic about the next frontiers.

Technically Media