Archive for the 'Software Info' Category

Looking for a Job Using the Web to Win

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

A modern job search campaign is by nature pretty complex. While the net has offered a variety of new channels, it also creates increased competition for choice jobs and potential challenges for job hunters.

Job search needs to be thought of as a personalized, highly targeted marketing process where you are the product. Your resume is an ad. Your extended network of associates is your source for information.

So where does the web fit in? At AA-Careers, we just posted a job on a popular job board and got 600+ applications in a calendar week. For a single position. That’s increased job hunting competition.

Had a suitable candidate contacted us ahead of our posting that ad, they could have gotten the position prior to getting all that competition. How? By knowing someone at our office who became aware of the job prior to posting. Everyone knew about of the job for at least 9 days before it was posted. Who in your network might know of a job that’s coming available soon?

Be careful to check your application materials thoroughly before submitting them. When we did an analysis of the 650 resumes, we found a large number of errors. 63% of the applicants were easily eliminated with a fast triage process. How? The same way any HR professional would. By passing over resumes where the objective didn’t match our job. By eliminating candidates whose cover letters gave us reasons not to employ them, like "I know I’m overqualified but I really need a job". By eliminating job hunters whose documents that didn’t open properly. And by passing over prospects who didn’t bother to spell check their cover letter and/or resume.

So the good news is that job sites give you a feel of who is hiring, and for what kinds of jobs. But once those jobs are posted, the competition is intense. You can still compete, if you have a well honed resume, designed to appeal directly and clearly to the recruiter. And if you have practiced interviewing – so you don’t stumble at a critical point.

Another downside to be aware of is how quickly and easily you can be looked up on the net. As we Googled several candidates, we ran into some personal web pages that were in questionable taste. Nothing insane, but enough to sway our thinking about who to hire.

AA-Careers provides a all-inclusive set of services for Bay Area job seekers, providing our clients a personal career consultant, a managed job hunting campaign, modern tools like a personal website, video, highly targeted resume, and much more. Let us know if we can help you.

Be careful out there, and good hunting!

Cedar Hill Law Firm, Work Out Clothes, Reverse Craigslist Software

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

The Hale Law Firm, P.C. serves a wide range of businesses and individuals with a base of our home offices in Waxahachie, Texas, Cedar Hill Law Firm The Hale Law Firm work with clients throughout Dallas and Ellis County, including but not limited to: Ovilla, Waxahachie, Midlothian, Red Oak, Glenn Heights, Ferris, Ennis, DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Lancaster, Duncanville, Mansfield, Dallas, Grand Prairie.
MMA sparring gear, mma gear online, mma gear, mixed martial arts wear, mma workout clothes, and mma gear are just a couple of of the specializations of HouseOfPain Iron Wear. http://www.houseofpain.com features the best and the best mma gear, mma clothing, as well as all of the gear and apparel that you will need on the street, in the ring, or in the gym. The House of Pain website not only features the finnest in clothing, workout apparel, and gear, you can go to our fighting and lifting news segments, our in the gym section, events, links, and other information and news pertaining to the mma and weightlifting. The House of Pain website sport articles of hard core gyms accross the US, a mixed martial arts news blog, weightlifting and strongman news blog, workout information, training information, a body fat calculator, powerlifting federations, mma videos, a kg conversion chart, not to mention a department on what is allowable by federation. Visit www.houseofpain.com for all of your weightlifting and mixed martial arts news, gear, and clothing requirements.
Reverse Craigstlist software can produce incredible results. You can have power to quite literally pull possibly up to hundreds of thousands of potential leads in as little as a few minutes by parsing through information from ads on craigslist. This easy reverse craigslist software can offer a chance to literally drive you company to the next higer level. You may choose which industry you are aiming at as well as specific geo areas, push a button, sit back, and watch the leads roll in. Then you can make direct contact to these leads or save, export, manage them, and more. There are many companies now developing versions of reverse craigs list software as well as data mining software nowadays.


Firefox versus Internet Explorer in a Corporate Network

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Two years ago I blogged about a similar subject. I discussed the advantages of Internet Explorer (IE) over Mozilla and other web browsers in a corporate environment. I concluded that IE is by far the better choice. Recently we deployed about 250 new computers and so I considered this question again. Now, Firefox is the main rival of IE. The decision was not so easy this time, but IE won again in the end.

I am using Firefox myself for a quite while and I really like this web browser. However, when it comes to the question of switching to a new web browser in a corporate network, other arguments have to be considered.

Let’s discuss them step by step:

1. IE is a part of the operating system

This basically means that the administrators don’t have much further work after Windows is installed. If you have hundreds or even thousands computers to manage, this is already a very big advantage of the IE. You need some good arguments for deploying an extra browser, if there is already one installed on your machines. Some nice plugins are certainly not enough. One often-mentioned argument is security. I don’t want to discuss this issue here, but if you are really convinced that Firefox is more secure than IE, this might be such an argument.

2. Roaming Profiles

I mention this point here because I discussed it in my German blog two years ago. Firefox, like IE, does store its user-settings, bookmarks, etc., in the user profile, which means that one can now work with roaming profiles. Thus, users can logon on different machines in the network and will always find their own bookmarks. This is a major improvement compared to the rivals of IE two years ago.

3. Central Management

Probably the most significant advantage of IE is that you can centrally manage it using Group Policies. You always want to configure all applications as homogenous as possible in a big network. Sometimes it is necessary to change the settings of all web browsers in your company. For example you might want to change the start page of all browsers or enable/disable certain functions or add new bookmarks, etc.

There is an Open Source Project called Firefox ADM working on this feature for Firefox. They started a year ago and reached version 0.4 now. As long as there is no version 1.0, I would be cautious in using this feature in a productive environment. I had a quick look at the ADM files. It has fewer possibilities in comparison to IE, that’s my first impression. I plan to have a closer look at Firefox ADM again in the near future and will post my findings in my weblog.

4. Patch Management

I have already mentioned the security issue before. We all know that not only Microsoft programmers but also Open Source coders make mistakes. No web browser will ever exist without security holes. Some Firefox advocates say that security patches are supplied at faster pace than in IE. It is a difficult question to answer, and I don’t want to discuss this topic here.

However, when it comes to security in a corporate network, the main question should be how fast and how easy you can patch all your computers. The larger your network is, the more important this point gets. Firefox has an integrated update mechanism which is quite useful for private users, but doesn’t help much in a corporate environment. Because of security issues, normal users are usually not allowed to install software on their computers which also means that they can’t install patches.

If you are a Windows administrator, you probably know that Microsoft offers a free patch management solution. WSUS (Windows Software Update Services) certainly is a great tool. Of course, you can patch IE using WSUS. There are third party patch management solutions which also support Firefox though. If you are already using such a program, patch management might not be something that troubles you too much when you have to decide which web browser to use in your network. However, if you are also using WSUS, patching IE might be less time consuming than patching Firefox with a third party solution. At least, this is true for patch management solutions I’ve seen.

5. Many applications are dependent on the IE

There are many desktop applications which use the rendering engine of IE to display HTML files. There also server-based applications which need an IE and won’t work with just another browser. With the success of Firefox at least the latter’s argument doesn’t hold much anymore since many webmasters don’t want to lock out this large clientele.

However, there are still many desktop apps which are IE dependent. Some of them aren’t dependent on the rendering engine of IE, but integrate themselves in the user interface of IE. Adobe Arcobat is such an application for example. Even if you don’t have one of them in your company now, you’ll never know if this might not change in the future. The point is that if you need IE anyway, why you should deploy and support another browser in your network?

Conclusion

The advantages of the IE are mainly founded in its tight integration with Windows. Firefox has to run on other operating systems, too. Hence, all features should work on all systems not only on Windows boxes. That’s why I’m not expecting too many improvements in this field in the near future. Although projects like Firefox ADM show that better integration is doable and that some Open Source programmers recognized this problem.

All in all, I’m still a Firefox fan, but wouldn’t recommend it for corporate use in larger networks. There are exceptions of course: If all your desktops use Linux or Mac OS. But if you have Windows desktops, the only reason I could think of, is that you really need a certain feature of Firefox which you is not available in IE.

Michael Pietroforte is working as a system administrator for more than 15 years. For several years he is now leading an IT department. He also published articles on several computer journals. His weblog http://4sysops.com/ discusses useful tools for Windows and Linux system administrators.