Archive for the ‘Job Searching’ category

Offline Networking with a Direction

May 4th, 2009

smokey_bar

So you’ve probably gotten the message by now that job searchers are best served by networking. Advice like this has sent most of us job-seekers to LinkedIn, Facebook and probably a few in-person gatherings.  A recent NY Times article spends a little bit of time talking about ad-hoc networking meetings, which are also an interesting twist.

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Need a Job? Get Lunch

April 28th, 2009

woman-grocery-shopping

Recently my friends at OCM/Lee Hect Harrison (LHH) introduced me to the concept of the informational interview.  Now we’ve all had these at some point or another.  Informational Interviews are conversations with a person that either has more market visibility, experience or has done something we might want to do. What the LHH system points out is these kinds of informational interviews are the most productive type of networking we can do during a job search. So instead of combing dice.com for the 50th time, go get lunch.

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You Are Not A Statistic

April 24th, 2009

pouting_toddler

I often speak about the weakness of using numbers to manage software, or rather, the inappropriate use of numbers for the management of design processes. There are some other inappropriate uses of numbers around these days, and that includes job loss hysteria. Economic numbers are complicated, and journalists like Jack Gannsle that use summary numbers to stir fear and dread should be called drivel-ists not journalists.

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Apple Needs XFS for Flash Drives (SSDs)

April 23rd, 2009

fujitsu_160gb_300mbs_hard_disk

Apple recently introduced optional flash hard drives for its Macbooks. Flash drives, called Solid State Drives (SSDs) these days, are silent and energy saving, but expensive and not very big by today’s standards. However, these drives are the future…

I don’t know much about these drives (from Samsung). But my previous experience with big flash drives makes me think that we may have a way yet to go with this new technology.  One thing that I suspect would help today’s operating systems would be a good filesystem like XFS along with some nice features from the drive vendors (by the way Samsung has got a good start on some of the features required by modern laptops by putting encryption onboard as a drive option).

Since the slow demise of Moore’s Law, architecture has become the important force in hardware design.  The same is becoming true of OS design.  For decades software vendors have been building under the assumption that more CPU, disk and network power was just over the horizon.  Not so much anymore.

So now, if you want to edit High Definition (HD) video you just deal with bad performance, or spend a bunch of cash getting a huge desktop system.  Those big systems are unnecessary, if notebooks were designed a little more carefully.  With a good file system you could inform the disk of your intention to use a hoard of HD video data, much like QofS does for networks.  The disk could reserve its cache to provide the correct buffer size, the operating system could arrange to then deliver the data direct to your editing program, instead of first storing the data boatload of little Jane’s first birthday party in expensive kernel memory.

So as I often rant, design and architecture are important parts of future technology.  It was reasonable when industry was chasing the greased pig of Moore’s law to run quickly, don’t worry about the details and ship it quick!  However, those days are drawing to a close. Tech companies are going to need to look at how to construct their systems to work better by design.  Apple could get a nice head start by simply licensing XFS, I suspect.

Update on MacOS X Filesystems (July 8, 2009)

I recently found out that Apple had been interested in another high performance file system that would have likely included flash-drive specific features: ZFS.  Snow Leopard Server is due out in September of 2009.  From the web it looks like ZFS didn’t make the cut.  Here are some links that I found documenting Apples apparent lack of effort (but possibly, you know, they have secret plans, we hope).

Look Out For Number One: Give Thank You’s

April 20th, 2009

dog-kissing-fireman

I have to be honest. I have an advantage over many experiencing the full unpleasantness of this economic downturn. In my past I have always come out much better from every downturn. Not that I haven’t experienced the fear and uncertainty of having my safety net ripped off (and sometimes shoved up my nose). However, in the end, the removal of my comfort zone led me to opportunities and happiness I could not have imagined prior. Even though I was damn scared most of the time.

» Read more: Look Out For Number One: Give Thank You’s