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There's tons of advice out there about how exactly to answer interview questions, what to wear to that interview and how to follow-up afterwards, but what if you're having trouble even getting your foot in the door? For many people, it isn't a lack of experience, education or training that is keeping them from getting a call back — or these days, an e-mail back. Instead, it often comes down to how you're presenting yourself via your resume. That "40 years experience with MUMPS". Likely not going to help much.
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Microsoft recently announced it plans to consolidate the Windows and Windows Phone stores, and some leaks have hinted that the company will slowly combine the two operating systems. The only thing Microsoft hasn’t tipped its hat about is exactly how its convergence between platforms will take place. "Storm'd at with shot and shell, boldly they rode and well"
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Microsoft is actively looking for a new CEO to replace Steve Ballmer, and one of the potential candidates is Stephen Elop. In an interesting story published earlier today, Bloomberg, citing several unnamed sources, claims that the former boss of Nokia would introduce sweeping changes to Microsoft should he get picked for the top job. Bouncy castles for everyone!
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I think they really need the "ever shifting maze garden".
For those not familiar with the idea: his is basically a complicated set of paths in a densely grown garden and you hire gardeners full time to constantly change everything all the time to make it as confusing as possible for everyone.
Employees who are brave enough to venture in this garden to have lunch and are noted to find shortcuts and navigate the garden more easily will get automatically recommended for a promotion.
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0bx wrote: For those not familiar with the idea: his is basically a complicated set of paths in a densely grown garden and you hire gardeners full time to constantly change everything all the time to make it as confusing as possible for everyone.
That is a lovely, evil plan. I have to start work on one next year.
Could we put a few grizzlies and mountain lions in there as well to cull the herd?
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TTFN - Kent
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The Holy “Scrum” War blog by Brian de Haaff argues that those who claim Scrum will save your company are wrong. Scrum is good and/or bad for you!
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"Scrum does not explain the “why”"
Exactly. While it's nice to have the developers agree with the "why", it's not necessary and they don't always agree anyway.
There was a project I worked on in which I disagreed with a feature I was supposed to implement (it was needlessly customer-hostile) and the "why" wasn't very convincing (that's the way the legacy system does it). I held off implementing that feature for about six months.
Think of developers as galley slaves on a ship; you just want them to row, they don't need to know where you are going and why.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: I held off implementing that feature for about six months.
Was the feature every missed?
I always suspect that these types of features are best ignored until someone notices the need, then they might end up with a better "how" to go with a real "why".
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TTFN - Kent
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They kept asking when I'd have it done. I implemented it eventually. Then I had to create a report that would show management exactly how much money they were stealing from their customers each month.
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Apple’s history with Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn and its sprawling network of suppliers in Southeast Asia is checkered with stories concerning the human rights abuses rampant in the region, and the company has made much progress in the effort to resolve them. Today, a Bloomberg Businessweek report reveals how, following last year’s iPhone 5 announcement, the pressure to produce components for the new Apple smartphone resulted in workers on factory lines being forced into debt and indentured servitude. But it's shiny, artfully designed indentured servitude
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Oracle will no longer be supporting Glassfish Java Enterprise Edition Server business users. Well, it is open source, isn't it?
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Millions of documents stored at the World War II code-breaking centre, Bletchley Park, are set to be digitised and made available online. "They've given me a number, but they've taken away my name"
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Where's Office for the iPad? Maybe you're looking in the wrong place. Today, Microsoft released its latest batch of Office Web App updates, pushing its free offering well past the feature set offered by its rivals. Now with Find and Replace!
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Let the search engine do the dirty work with carefully crafted links. Do no code review
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Click. Code. Create.
Everything you need to build great software. IBM wants to help you make beautiful music (and code)
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Bug bounty program rewards security researchers for finding flaws in widely used software that can affect a lot of Internet users. Wanted, dead
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If you're reading this at work in between things you should be doing, or if you like to kill time at the office by heading over to Facebook, Twitter, or one of your favorite blogs, good news: That idle time—in moderation—actually makes you more productive by giving your brain a chance to reset. I am going to be so productive today
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Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) is available worldwide in 95 languages for download today. We will begin automatically updating Windows 7 customers to IE11 in the weeks ahead, starting today with customers running the IE11 Developer and Release Previews. With this final release, IE11 brings the same leading standards support--with improved performance, security, privacy, and reliability that consumers enjoy on Windows 8.1—to Windows 7 customers. Get your better browser (on the better OS)
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Thank you for informing Kent, upgraded almost everywhere.
Nice changes in terms of speed!
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NSA had reverse-engineered many of Google's and Yahoo's inner workings. Only they're allowed to spy on everyone! (caution for kid sister: article contains that real scary 'f' word hinted in the title)
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So their internal network was unencrypted the entire time?
I get it now.
This stormtrooper[^] was an NSA agent all along.
Probably has an USB stick hidden in his codpiece or something.
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modified 7-Nov-13 16:06pm.
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0bx wrote: So their internal network was unencrypted the entire time?
Yup, and still is, except for between data centers. Seems a bit of a half-fix, but what do I know about running a network of that size.
Never trust the stormtroopers. They can't aim, and as they're all clones, they die together.
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TTFN - Kent
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when you're running millions of servers even increasing power consumption by 1% for encryption costs real money.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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There you go - one of many things I wouldn't have thought of.
Which makes me again wish those barges were going to be floating data centers. Having their butts sitting on ocean water may have been a nice passive cooling strategy. Of course, you'd still have to get the fibre over to the mainland.
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TTFN - Kent
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Combining all these technology advances means that for the first time, Amazon Web Services (AWS) customers will be able to use the power of graphics processing in the Cloud and OTOY’s ORBX.js streaming technology to deliver high performance games and desktop applications to the Web – using only HTML5 and JavaScript. Bandwidth for high performance sold separately
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