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Saying no to the low offer is the character test. They want to hire assertive people who can accurately gauge their own value and won't be bullied. Once hired, they'll expect you to try and apply those same principles when dealing with customers. Congratulations!
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# ? Sep 10, 2015 00:47 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:32 |
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Nah this gave me shades of William Erhard seminar training/random creeper with a headset on stage type crap management style. Tried to rope me in with personal poo poo I gave out to see how he'd handle it and also loving negged me with saying I was overvalued and most developers are and that somehow you can have enough cash flow to cover these over-valued devs. Which kind of implies they're not but okay...? I thought culty rear end management was a bygone thing except for Amway. Yeah this is don't touch the poop poo poo dude.
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# ? Sep 10, 2015 01:02 |
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Posted my stuff in the spreadsheet. I hope programmers are allowed and not just pure IT stuff.
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 07:38 |
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Threw my name in the spreadsheet. I'm like one of the Bob's from Office Space, basically.
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 17:39 |
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Neo_Crimson posted:Posted my stuff in the spreadsheet. I hope programmers are allowed and not just pure IT stuff. Here is cool, but there is also a programmer specific thread in Caverns of Cobol
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 18:18 |
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Neo_Crimson posted:Posted my stuff in the spreadsheet. I hope programmers are allowed and not just pure IT stuff. At least in my opinion, "Information Technology" encompasses software development as well as infrastructure support, and all the associated support roles like PM, QA, BA etc.
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 19:20 |
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Job Posting: Location: Washington DC area (Rosslyn / DC) Job Description: Systems Administrator (junior-mid) Note: Requires Secret Clearance or above A bit about it: This is a position I requested created as we've grown a lot in my tenure. We're a Windows shop; and our primary team responsibility is software development to support the congressional budget. However, this role and my position support the IT infrastructure for the developers and our application. That said, this position is supporting the IT infrastructure and supporting my role. We're Windows/IIS/.NET/MS SQL Server across the board, and maintain 3 sites across the USA. I'm in the process of trying to get AWS added to our contracts as well. We're a typical combination of infrastructure that has grown organically from a small group of developers acting as systems administrators (ugh) combined with a properly planned IT infrastructure. The position is being created to help with two issues: myself being a single point of failure in IT infrastructure, and the fact that my workload has grown a huge amount in my tenure. On top of that I'm trying to bring a bit more maturity, automation, and process to our network. Basically - a LOT of things happening, and we have the budget to support it. Good things: I've been here 4 years. It's a good place to be; I genuinely like it most of the time. There is some telework. We generally get very little micro-management from our team leads. Lots of stuff to play with. High availability and clustering, SANs, DR planning. VPNs, network topology redesign in process. We maintain a security accreditation with the CIO office within a government organization; so there's regular security scanning, mitigation, documentation, and testing. Dont be expected to know ALL of that; but be prepared to have a finger in what you want to learn and take off my shoulders and/or get exposure with. There's also a training budget; which I tend take advantage of regularly. It's pretty awesome. Oh and we dont manage email/exchange, or printers. And all our end users are software developers, most of which are exceedingly competent. Bad things: It's government, so there's some red tape. There's a tendency for purchases to fall off the table when going from our office to the purchasing office; so sometimes we'll get exactly what we need when we need it, and sometimes we dont. It's almost a chess game getting what we need purchased before our licenses expire and/or project deadlines are due. But I'm working on managing this process with our project management office. Also this is mainly something I deal with so the position here will mostly deal with the possible fallout, but none of the budget management stuff. Salary range: I'm waiting for confirmation on this from our recruiter. I find this company (we're contractors but very stable for contractors: again - I've been here for 4yrs now) tends to be fairly competitive in the field. Contact: PM me here or post an email. I'll send you the recruiter information and the official job posting. Walked fucked around with this message at 21:00 on Sep 14, 2015 |
# ? Sep 14, 2015 20:49 |
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psydude posted:We're working on putting together a req for another Security Engineer, which we desperately need. See this post for particulars about the company/team in general. Reposting because we finally got the req approved. PM me for more info.
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# ? Sep 16, 2015 21:58 |
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My experience: professional: - 4+ years experience with deb- and rpm-based distributions - some minor ldap and active directory administration - minor solaris experience - webservers, both nginx and apache; some very light iis and weblogic work - deployment planning and release scheduling - mysql server administration - some experience with high availability and ocfs2 - bash shell scripting personal: - over a decade of daily linux use, from ubuntu to gentoo - grsecurity and general server security - freebsd server administration What I'm looking for: a unix sysadmin position that allows me to both exercise my current skillset and also be exposed to new technologies and concepts. What I'm NOT looking for: customer service, helpdesk, an unstable position or one with a company with a poor outlook. Where I live: mid-michigan, east lansing area. Where I'm looking: same area; just moved recently and am not looking to move again. When I can start: more than likely within two weeks of the current date. Requirements: insurance, 401k, competitive pay, a laidback environment (i don't want to have to dress up for work every day, i like being able to dress casually.) Can be reached via: pm, reverie[at]draggi[dot]es, twitter RISCy Business fucked around with this message at 20:06 on Sep 17, 2015 |
# ? Sep 17, 2015 19:58 |
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Space Whale posted:While we're scratching our heads on job apps: Doing sitecore is like doing wordpress without the cache of having something a lot of people actually care about.
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# ? Sep 17, 2015 20:45 |
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I've been decently happy with the company I work for now, but things are changing and not for the better. This place is VERY strict on attendance (as in, us developers have to clock in/out. Even for our lunch breaks), offers no flex time and no sick time. Oh, and do you have a doctor's appointment? Kid in the hospital? Emergency fire at the house or something? Well, we used to be able to come in early or stay late over the week to make up the time if we needed to leave early for a doctor's appointment, etc. Then, HR nixed that! So you gotta take PTO. Oh, used up your PTO? Then if you have a doctor's appointment, you get to take unpaid leave. So far, my manager is okay with me coming in a little later and staying a little later on days I have my son and take him to school. But I gotta worry about just how long HR lets me get away with that. If they nix that, then I'm screwed (anything over ~10 minutes is late and earns you a write up. Get a few of those and you're canned. Even if you tell a manager way ahead of time). I kinda need to find something else before bad poo poo happens. So... Job Seeker Who am I?: A full-stack LAMP developer. I have 5+ years experience developing with PHP, Javascript and I have strong MySQL skills. In addition, I use industry standard tech such as jQuery, SASS, Bootstrap. While not a day-to-day thing, I have written mobile apps for both the iOS and Android platforms (native code - Objective C and Java respectively, not something like Phonegap). I have experience working in many different fields and so I feel I would be able to adapt quickly to any environment. I have worked in the advertising, medical, educational, correctional and non-profit sectors. I enjoy new and varied experiences. Oh, and of course, I'm a tech nerd; So I have taught myself a decent amount of Ruby/RoR, C# and have toyed around with microcontrollers, the Rasbperry Pi and so on. I have experience writing apps with C# so I can come back up to speed with that. What I'm looking for A mid to senior web developer role. Ideally with PHP, but I am more than willing to learn whatever language(s) and tools are used by the company. And in the case of Ruby or C#, I'd be more than happy to refresh myself on those languages, assuming the company won't mind me having to take the time to come up to speed. What I'm not looking for General IT, Sysadmin stuff, technical support, etc. Where I'm Looking For It The Tampa/St. Pete/Clearwater, Florida area. I'm based in St. Petersburg. Requirements Health, dental, 401k, - your typical stuff. Also, as a single parent, FLEX TIME is a must. When I am on the job, I will absolutely give you my 100%. But having to usher an autistic child out the door, to his school and fight nightmarish Tampa traffic means there will be some days where I end up coming in a little later than others. Work from home is a definite plus. If your company is a real stickler for time schedules and reprimands you for being 1 minute late (I got a talking to for being literally 3 minutes "late" when I had to take my son to school in the morning - and I'm not the only dev that has been on the receiving end of these lectures.), we won't be a good match. How to reach me: I don't have plat, so e-mail me at jmgolz AT gmail DOT com
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 03:27 |
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Dolemite posted:This place is VERY strict on attendance (as in, us developers have to clock in/out. Even for our lunch breaks), offers no flex time and no sick time. Sounds like a contractor gig except with salary pay. gently caress all of that.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 04:00 |
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Hadlock posted:Sounds like a contractor gig except with salary pay. gently caress all of that. Hell, it sounds like management thinks they're running a grocery store or some poo poo.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 11:13 |
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Hadlock posted:Sounds like a contractor gig except with salary pay. gently caress all of that. Garrand posted:Hell, it sounds like management thinks they're running a grocery store or some poo poo. The sad thing is, that is just about what one of the other devs likened this company to. This place has some other weird rules. The big one that springs to mind: "business casual" is defined as dress pants, shirt and tie. No khakis or polo shirts. Not even company polo shirts. But for some reason, jeans and regular t-shirts are OK on Fridays. That is, if you pay $2 for the privilege. Yes, that's right. You literally need to PAY to wear jeans. Since I can't stand dress clothes, I make sure to wear cat shirts, death metal tees and beat up Chuck Taylors or Vans. I've never understood why the company has a hard-on for dress clothes during the week, but jeans and t-shirts are suddenly OK on Fridays. What's wrong with the other days? We aren't client facing. No customers will ever, EVER visit this building. They would be going to an entirely different building. In fact, this company takes the business "casual" thing so far that one time, there was a FUN TIME YAY costume contest. This was to be held on Wednesday. After the e-mail from that event organizer went out, HR sent out a follow up to remind us that since it isn't Friday, business professional attire will still apply and anyone wearing jeans will be written up and sent home to change. Another thing is our company's stupid values. Supposedly, you're supposed to memorize them, because the CEO in past has been known to stop the occasional, random employee and ask them to recite the company values (each letter in an acronym stands for a particular value). At least that part went away. Now, we just have a CEO that reminds us to STRIVE FOR THE BEST, STAND TALL, HOLD THE LIIINE (he quotes Gladiator often and even links Youtube clips from the film). --- All that aside, the work is just plain mindnumbing. When I first got there, I actually spent the first few months doing nothing but doing report spreadsheets and content audits for incorrect verbiage. Right now, we're tied up in a project that involves working with...wait for it...Wordpress. We were going to do a mobile app at one point and the entire dev team was super stoked! Then, the higher ups decided to outsource that to a 3rd party that is not in any way experienced writing apps with our industry requirements in mind. (We're healthcare and subject to HIPAA) This was outsourced even after we told our manager that we've all written mobile apps at one time or another. tl;dr Company is crazy, being able to take care of family, freedom to go on doc visits or just have a better work life is non-existent. Totally un-challenging work and no opportunity for advancement. (Although even the advancement sucks. Two devs will be getting "promotions". But, no pay raises. LOL) Dolemite fucked around with this message at 00:48 on Sep 20, 2015 |
# ? Sep 20, 2015 00:45 |
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I worked at a company like that for about six months, tasked with updating their ecommerce website to modern standards. gently caress that. Last year I got an email from the owner begging me to come back saying that everyone had quit. Their website still looks the same way that it did in 2005. Companies like that are just placeholders so you don't have any big gaps on your resume and to feed you until you can find something better. RUN!!
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# ? Sep 20, 2015 01:06 |
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wwb posted:Doing sitecore is like doing wordpress without the cache of having something a lot of people actually care about. The cult leader acted like that's some amazing skills to start a career, maaaaan.
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# ? Sep 20, 2015 09:03 |
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Dolemite posted:
Just emailed you from my work account. I know a couple people from our Tampa office and they are solid. Putting you in touch with one.
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# ? Sep 21, 2015 15:36 |
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Dark Helmut posted:Just emailed you from my work account. I know a couple people from our Tampa office and they are solid. Putting you in touch with one. Awesome - just replied.
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# ? Sep 21, 2015 17:19 |
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Job Posting - Framingham, MA Technology Coordinator Hi all, I just took a new job downtown and I'm looking to fill my current position ~20 miles west of Boston. 12 month position at a school district, work hours are 7-3pm daily. It's a hybrid sysadmin/tech manager position, the workload on both is fairly light. Core network services only in house with SaaS offerings for all email, student productivity, etc. Respond to escalations from a technician, who was a student here and took a job after graduating. Do some basic purchasing, mostly end user hardware. Environment is awesome - gigabit internet, ubiquitous dual band wireless coverage, Hyper-V, iSCSI storage, Server 2012R2, the works. Need to know AD/DNS/DHCP with VOIP phone systems and Google Apps administration as big plusses. Here is the posting: https://www.schoolspring.com/job.cfm?jid=2036514 PM me or reply here if you apply. Hiring very quickly as I'm out of here in less than 2 weeks. Roargasm fucked around with this message at 18:40 on Sep 22, 2015 |
# ? Sep 22, 2015 18:34 |
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jaete posted:Hope this is the right thread for this. So I've looked into this a bit more. It seems that some of the big US software/tech companies are in fact hiring people directly from the EU (and probably other areas of the world as well) into the US. They're working with the two main types of visas mentioned above, and from what I gather the processes are something like the following: a) The H1B visa application period starts on the first of April each year, and folks have at least five business days to apply for an H1B. In practice five days is enough to get enough applications to cover the entire quota several times over. For instance, the official statistics for April 2015 were: 233,000 applicants total, 85,000 total visas granted. The selection method is random, so you'll just have to apply and hope for the best. Note that if you have a master's degree from a proper US university you get better chances but still no certainty. What the big US company will do is, assuming you pass their interviews etc, they will make you an official job offer, then they'll do the paperwork and wait for the next time first of April comes around, and then they can submit your visa application. Then it takes between one and four months to get a reply back saying whether you happened to get a visa or not, and then some more months to actually get your visa and have everything finalised. I think in the meanwhile they will expect you to work in their local side office; which brings me to point b. b) An L1 visa can be granted to someone who has worked in the non-US office of a US company for at least one year. The big US companies will do this for you as well. The L1 is just plain better than an H1B: there's no quota, so you are basically guaranteed to get one as long as you meet all the requirements and the company does the paperwork properly; once in the US you will get a green card much sooner than on an H1B visa; if you're a manager-type person (tech lead is enough - don't need to have direct reports) you can get an L1-A visa, which lets you apply for a green card after only 12 months of working in the US; and while you might get an H1B faster than an L1 (if you get your H1B on the first try), the L1 is just more predictable in how long it will take - probably 3-6 months after the initial 12-month period. c) The H1B and the L1 still seem to be the only viable options if you're not a millionaire and if you want a longer-term visa that leads to a green card. Overall the process is, not surprisingly I guess, pretty long and difficult. As long as you don't have a green card you'll have this sword of Damocles hanging above you; getting a green card will take at least a couple years in the best case (L1-A visa), so you'd better hope you don't get laid off or whatever during that time. (On an H1B you can actually change employers, though that resets (some) of your green card progress; on an L1 I think you're just screwed if you cease working for the sponsoring company for any reason.) So, the best plan for a serious into-US-wanter seems to be to first become a manager or tech lead, then find a nice big cozy US company that is known to treat their employees well, make sure that they will support your L1-A application, work for a side office of said company for a year and a bit while excelling in your performance reviews etc and otherwise complying with company policies, and then you have your (non-horrible) visa. Pretty arduous, but possible. (Edit: clarified some wording) jaete fucked around with this message at 01:44 on Sep 24, 2015 |
# ? Sep 24, 2015 01:22 |
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Can anyone give advice on whether a cover letter is a good idea? Some people say it is, others say it is not. What's the general opinion here?
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# ? Sep 29, 2015 16:13 |
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It shows you're putting effort into the application. At worst, they won't read it. At least, that's my take on it. Most places I have applied have asked for one.
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# ? Sep 29, 2015 16:46 |
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Super Dude posted:Can anyone give advice on whether a cover letter is a good idea? Some people say it is, others say it is not. What's the general opinion here? I personally think it's worth the 30-40 minutes it should take to write, assuming you have ever written one and have done a cursory amount of research on the place you're applying to. Just make sure you at least spell/grammar check it. But yeah, it's not likely to help greatly and may be ignored completely. At best, as 22 Eargesplitten said, it just shows you're putting forth some effort, and I'm constantly surprised at how little effort some folks put into their applications.
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# ? Sep 29, 2015 20:11 |
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No Safe Word posted:I personally think it's worth the 30-40 minutes it should take to write, assuming you have ever written one and have done a cursory amount of research on the place you're applying to. Yeah, I can definitely write one, that's not an issue. I was just hesitant with a few applications because some companies have a separate upload for cover letter and resume.
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# ? Sep 29, 2015 20:18 |
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If an application requires I upload a cover letter I automatically close the tab.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 04:20 |
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Was there a guy that works for Computer Services Inc. in here? I'm probably applying to one of the positions they have open. I remember talking to someone about it years ago.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 05:02 |
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Added myself as a potential job seeker in Louisville ky. Please email pledgeapehouse at Hotmail.
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# ? Oct 3, 2015 13:56 |
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Job Posting Location Boston, MA (Right near Copley Square) Who we are A large e-commerce company for home goods. We sell over seven million items and make several billion dollars a year. What we're looking for In short - Software Engineers. Of nearly all levels. Know Java? Great! We have a place for you. Know Python? Super! We have a place for you. Know Javascript? Tremendous! We have a place for you. Know PHP? Amazing! We have a place for you. We look more for the ability to solve a problem than what programming languages you use. We believe in the right tool for the job. We use tons of technology to do a lot of really cool things! This ranges from gigantic servers to micro-services - From PHP website front ends, to storm topologies, to extensive big data systems. We employ more than three thousand people. We have more than five hundred engineers. We are looking to hire on more than a hundred additional engineers in the next year. We want you to be one of them. The Good * Flexible hours * Great work / life balance * Free snacks in the kitchen * Monthly paid for outings for your team * 3+ weeks of paid vacation * Grants of stock that's worth something! * Work with some really awesome people * Tons of discounts on items off the site * Competitive benefits * Free tickets to tons of local events - See the Base Balls! Watch people dance! * Education Reimbursement * Learn new things all the time! The Bad * You'll probably at some point be working in a codebase written in PHP using an in-house framework. * There's still a small amount of a legacy ASP codebase floating around that you will likely never see. * Some of the practices we use aren't really the best in the world, but they aren't the worst either. How do I apply PM me if you're interested! I'll answer any questions you have, pass your resume along to whoever, all that jazz. Edwardly fucked around with this message at 14:31 on Oct 6, 2015 |
# ? Oct 6, 2015 05:07 |
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Who are we? Xantrion, a 50+ person MSP with clients primarily in the Bay area Where are we? Oakland, CA What are we looking for? Help Desk It is not an entry level position by traditional standards. Need to have a working knowledge of Windows, OSX, networking, and mobile devices. We are looking to hire 3-4 people in the next 6 months for this role. Experience with Connectwise is a plus. How do I apply?: PM Anything else? It is really a great place to work. 17 days of PTO plus holidays, employer paid healthcare, 4% 401k match with no vesting period, close to BART. The company was founded by engineers, and that mindset applies to many things. We have a lot of great clients and the best tools to take care of them. Everyone has a lot of autonomy, and there is always someone to bounce an idea off when you get stuck. Cool company/team trips and dinners. Paid testing and training materials for certs.
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# ? Oct 6, 2015 08:57 |
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Edwardly posted:
I've been hearing from your recruiters But not for a dev role. Ironically you made it sound much more enticing than they did, though they did a decent job by recruiter standards. (just changed jobs, not currently looking)
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# ? Oct 6, 2015 17:53 |
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Docjowles posted:I've been hearing from your recruiters But not for a dev role. Ironically you made it sound much more enticing than they did, though they did a decent job by recruiter standards. If you can PM me who I'll give them a talkin' to!
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# ? Oct 6, 2015 18:43 |
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Job Seeker Who am I?: An aspiring Sys. Admin in need of entry level experience. I'm looking to get a hold of some sort of field technician or tier1/2 help desk post. I have experience working in manufacturing medical supplies, customer service, online-store management, bench tech'ing, ranching and more. I have an extremely varied skill set with my work history which translates well to working with coworkers and clients. I am a proponent of self study. Relevant study objectives I have accomplished/currently working on are HTML/CSS, and A+/NET+ Exams What I'm looking for Entry level work. I am flexible with job objectives but I'm looking for help desk/tech support positions as well as field technician jobs. I am no stranger to working in a cubicle nor hunched over tinkering inside a case or doing manual labor. What I'm not looking for Anything above tier 2 support. Where I'm Looking For It Northern NJ. I reside in Passaic county and I'm willing to travel an hour for work. Requirements Health, dental, 401k. I have no family ties so I am available to work whenever you'd need. I do ask to be lenient with late times. I am very rarely if ever tardy, but I have been reprimanded for being literally 4 minutes late at a manufacturing plant first (and only) offense. How to reach me: email tyler DOT preeve AT gmail DOT com
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# ? Oct 10, 2015 03:21 |
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Job Seeker Who am I?: An IT generalist systems administrator/engineer with 15 years of experience managing Windows environments who enjoys a good challenge. In addition to the normal Windows stuff, I'm well versed in Exchange, SQL, CRM, SharePoint, networking and firewalls, VMware, Hyper-V, EMC VNX and VNXe storage, and have spent the past 8 years or so heavily focused on overhaul and upgrade projects. The past couple years, in addition to handing engineering/admin duties, I took on more managerial/supervisory stuff like hiring/firing, project planning and management, sitting in pointless meetings, and writing policies and procedures. I am also intimately familiar with PCI compliance but have mixed feelings actually typing that. What I'm looking for Ideally, I want to correct course and head back down a technical path that has a focus on virtualization, storage, or possibly compliance/security. VMware is the most interesting to me, and I'm about to sit for the VCP5 exam in the next few weeks. At the end of the day, I am really looking for an environment where I am an expert on a particular discipline and not spread as thin as I have been in recent years. What I'm not looking for Helpdesk, desktop support, junior positions, overly-generalist situations, or MSPs (unless there is a senior/specialist role) Where I'm Looking For It Portland, OR and the surrounding areas. I could probably be convinced to move slightly farther away if the situation was perfect. Requirements Health, dental, 401k, decent PTO. Salary should be in the general range of $100k, give or take How to reach me: Email me at cavepimp AT gmail
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# ? Oct 13, 2015 00:18 |
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Is it worth posting an unpaid internship position in here? I imagine most of us are experienced already and looking for paid work, but if not I have an opening at the ski resort I work for.
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# ? Oct 13, 2015 12:19 |
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Colonial Air Force posted:Is it worth posting an unpaid internship position in here? I imagine most of us are experienced already and looking for paid work, but if not I have an opening at the ski resort I work for. For an unpaid internship in the wide ranging branches of IT, you're generally looking at bottom of the barrel college students, people who love ski resorts, or people with literally no education or training.
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# ? Oct 14, 2015 02:38 |
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baquerd posted:For an unpaid internship in the wide ranging branches of IT, you're generally looking at bottom of the barrel college students, people who love ski resorts, or people with literally no education or training. Yes, exactly.
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# ? Oct 14, 2015 13:08 |
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If anyone has Office365 migration and setup experience it seems my position is still being hired for. Salary around 70k, need firm knowledge in DNS, AD, some exchange and familiar with the ins and outs of O365. Secondary useful knowledge is familiarity with setting up ADFS. It's a v- position so you need to go through a provider. Experis is the one I am currently contracting through.
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# ? Oct 16, 2015 19:06 |
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70k for Office 365 migrations? Goddamn, how many users are we talking about? Anyway, if wasn't already employed I'd definitely apply. My contract still has another year.
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# ? Oct 16, 2015 19:38 |
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Tab8715 posted:70k for Office 365 migrations? 70K is nothing. I've seen O365 consultant salaries in the 140K range. It's hot poo poo right now. For Example: http://www.nigelfrank.com/us/vacancy/118715/office-365-architect-engineer-95-140k-ms-gold-partner
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# ? Oct 16, 2015 22:41 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:32 |
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So it's yet another "Learn Powershell, get paid fat stacks" things?
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# ? Oct 16, 2015 23:50 |