I know there are many great devs in the world, but sometimes I think these bullet points are a little too narrow. Full stack from CSS to server admin? An extrovert on social media? Also has time to keep up with 20 projects on GitHub?<p>I know these people exist but most of them devote a significant share of their time (work and free) to the craft to be able to say they qualify for these points. Furthermore, they balance between these activities such that they are learning new tech constantly only to be applying them to someone else's project and then hyping it up on Twitter.<p>Given the rare combination of talent, passion, and generosity these people engender, 12k is a joke. It's more than a joke, it's a disgrace. I'm paying 12k for a black belt, but I'm paying a million for the guy who trained from an early age in a monastery and has a lifelong dedication to his art.<p>I don't know, I think all the superlatives I'm seeing in job posts recently is making me a little nuts (to be fair, this one isn't the worst by a long shot). How about "generalist experience in n-tier web apps, likes to learn new things, and is active in the development community." Maybe employers think we're all too vain for such a nonchalant statement to appeal to us.