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You are here: Home / Archives for Career Advice

Career Advice

Java modular battle heats up as Oracle criticizes Red Hat, IBM

May 6, 2017 by Julie McGrath

Top Java official questions the two companies’ sincerity in their opposition to the planned module system

Amid a budding controversy surrounding the module system planned for Java, Oracle’s chief Java architect, Mark Reinhold, lashed out today at Red Hat and IBM’s opposition, saying the companies are simply guarding their own interests.

In an open letter to the Java Community Process (JCP) Executive Committee published Friday morning, Reinhold was highly critical of the two rival vendors. The current disagreement centers on Java Specification Request 376, which focuses on the module system featured as part of Project Jigsaw. Red Hat Middleware initially agreed to the goals and requirements of the JSR, but then worked consistently to undermine them, Reinhold said.

“They attempted to turn this JSR into something other than it was intended to be. Rather than design one module system that is both approachable and scalable, they instead wanted to design a ‘meta’ module system via which multiple different module systems could interoperate on an intimate basis,” he said. “I can only assume that they pursued this alternate goal in order to preserve and protect their home-grown, non-standard module system, which is little used outside of the JBoss/Wildfly ecosystem.”

Opposition by Red Hat and IBM to the module system could even hold up the upcoming release of Java Development Kit (JDK) 9 in late July; modularity is slated to be the marquee feature, enabling better scalability in Java. Red Hat’s Scott Stark, vice president in the company’s JBoss Java middleware group, has argued that the Java module system presents problems for applications and even sets up two separate worlds for developers: one for modules and one without them.

The JSR is meant to provide a module system approachable by all developers, Reinhold said. It is used in JDK 9 via Java Enhancement Proposal 261. Public review balloting on JSR 376 is scheduled to end on May 8, and IBM and Red Hat are expected to vote no.

Designing a “meta” module system would be an interesting project, but it would be even larger in scope and more difficult than JSR 376, Reinhold said. “By focusing on an audience of module-system experts, it would likely result in a design that is far from approachable by all developers. That is why I repeatedly pointed out to Red Hat Middleware that many of the features they advocated were out of scope, but they chose not to accept those decisions.”

IBM, meanwhile, has said very little during the course of JSR 376, Reinhold said. “After they announced that they would vote against it, they later sent a list of specific issues to the EG (Expert Group)—but only in response to a request from another EG member. None of those issues is new, many of them were discussed long ago, and IBM was silent during most of the discussions.”

Reinhold added that he can only conclude IBM has decided its own interests are served by delaying JSR 376 as well as JSR 379, which pertains to Java Standard Edition 9 and is the basis of JDK 9. This was “regrettable,” Reinhold said.

Reinhold says JSR 376 was not perfect, but it reflects years of development, testing, and refinement with much feedback from developers. The current proposal provides a solid foundation for future work, he said. “It is time to ship what we have, see what we learn, and iteratively improve. Let not the perfect be the enemy of the good.” He stressed his opposition to further delays, which could go on for years and could result in a bloated, complex design that no developer would ever use.

Reinhold noted that just yesterday he proposed a revision to the automatic modules part of the proposal after issues were raised. The revision has been received positively, he said.

Modularity in Java has been such a complex issue that it was pushed out from Java 8, which was released in March 2014, and has delayed the release of Java 9.

Interested in Java related jobs please check out our latest here. Or call us for more information on 0330 2233 047

Info World

Filed Under: Career Advice Tagged With: Developer, developerjobs, Java, java developer, redhat

It’s National Apprenticeship Week – How much do you really know about an apprentices’ employment rights and protections?

March 6, 2017 by Julie McGrath

Apprentices

There are a number of employee/employer relationships which are now different from the traditional 9-5 job. A person’s employment status will determine their rights and their employer’s responsibilities.

Apprentices can be aged 16 and over and will combine work with study for a work-based qualification, from GCSEs or equivalent to degree level.

Key points
  • Apprentices can be anyone over the age of 16 and not in full time education.
  • Apprenticeships can be for school leavers or those who are seeking to start a new career.
  • Many of the special protections for young workers in the working time regulations will apply to apprentices.
  • An apprentice must work with experienced staff.

Apprentices Checklist from Acas Displays a larger version of this image in a new browser window

Apprenticeships are work-based training programmes which will lead to a nationally recognised qualification. Apprentices will normally attend day release at local colleges or specialist training providers as part of their training, which can take between one to four years to complete, depending on the level of apprenticeship.

As employees apprentices would normally be expected to work for at least 30 hours per week, for which employers can receive funding from the National Apprentice Service, however, funding will depend on the sector and the age of the apprentice.

Apprentices and the National Minimum Wage (NMW)

Apprentices under 19 years or 19 years and over and in the first year of their apprenticeship are entitled to £3.40 per hour. However, the employer may choose to pay the apprentice at a higher rate.

Once the apprentice reaches 19 years and has completed the first year of the apprenticeship the employer must pay the full NMW rate.

All other apprentices are eligible for the full National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage for their age.

Apprentices and the working time regulations for young people

Many of the special protections in these regulations for young workers under 18 will apply to apprentices, for example young workers must not exceed the 8 hour a day or 40 hours per week. They are also entitled to paid holidays and rest breaks of at least 30 minutes if their shift lasts more than four and half hours.

The 3 levels of apprenticeship
  1. Intermediate Level Apprenticeships – apprentices work towards work-based learning qualifications such as a Level 2 Competence Qualification, Functional Skills and, in most cases, a relevant knowledge-based qualification.
  2. Advanced Level Apprenticeships – apprentices work towards work-based learning such as a Level 3 Competence Qualification, Functional Skills and, in most cases, a relevant knowledge-based qualification.
  3. Higher Apprenticeships – apprentices undertake a framework at Level 4 and above which will include a competence based qualification, Functional Skills and in some cases a broader vocationally related qualification which could be a Foundation degree.
Apprenticeship levy

From April 2017 the apprenticeship levy will be introduced and will be a levy on UK employers to fund new apprenticeships. The levy will only be paid on annual pay bills in excess of £3 million. Each employer will receive an allowance of £15,000 to offset against their levy payment.

Once an employer has paid the levy to HRMC they will be able to access funding for apprenticeships through a new digital service account. If an employer doesn’t pay the levy they can still employ an apprentice and can choose: the training they would like the apprentice to receive; an approved training provider and an assessment organisation using the registers available.

For more information visit GOV.UK – Apprenticeship funding: how it will work.

.ACAS

Filed Under: Business Updates, Career Advice Tagged With: apprentice, apprenticeship, national apprenticeship week

Happy Valentines Day Geeks!

February 14, 2017 by Julie McGrath

WWW.GRAFFITIRECRUITMENT.CO.UK

Feeling the love today by celebrating some new jobs over lunch, with some truly amazing people. Recruitment is like a workplace dating agency, when you find that perfect match for both the client and candidate it really is a magical feeling, and makes all the late nights and hard work worth while. Wishing you all Happy Valentines Day, whether you are celebrating the love of your perfect job or celebrating with your better half, Have a great day!

Filed Under: Career Advice

If you want to be a millionaire, it’s better to be a software developer than a pro athlete!

February 6, 2017 by Julie McGrath

It’s better to be a software developer than a pro athlete! Find out Why…

So Software developer vs Pro Athlete, lets check out the competition!  In 2016, Cleveland Basketball great LeBron James made over £61 million between his pay (£18 million) and endorsements, Forbes reports. New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning made £36 million, and LA Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw made £25 million.

There’s no question being an elite pro athlete pays very, very well.

But consider this: The career span for an athlete is short and the rank-and-file pros don’t get paid nearly so much as the top players. In the NFL, the average career length is 3.5 years with the lifetime earning potential of £24,010,000, according to tech job site Paysa. In the MLB, the average career length is 5.6 years with the lifetime earning potential of £2.3 Million. None of that is chicken scratch. But if you factor in the number of people who try to become pro sports players and don’t ever get a decent contract at all, the percentages would be far lower.

Now, compare that to becoming a developer, Paysa suggests. If you try to become a software  developer, odds are good that you will succeed. The average acceptance rate at engineering/programming Colleges are 63 out of 100. Plus, 6 out of 10 developer students graduate, and 97 out of 100 find jobs, Paysa says.

And once you’re out in the workforce, the average career span is 40 years with an average annual salary at £60,000 in the UK. The lifetime earnings potential adds up to £2.4 Million.

And that’s enough to stand tall, even against a pro NBA player.

If you want a Slam dunk career in Software development and bag yourself a few million pounds over the next 30/40 or 50 Years then check out our Software Developer jobs right now. There’s no better time than NOW!

 

– Tech Insider

Filed Under: Business Updates, Career Advice Tagged With: PHP developer, Software Developer, software engineer, Web developer

Why Choose PHP For Web Development!

January 16, 2017 by Julie McGrath

Are you looking for ways to create a high-quality yet low cost web based application? Well, then PHP would be the answer to all your prayers. By investing in PHP web development not only can you develop dynamic websites within your budget but also create real time web applications that have a great UI.

Originally designed by Rasmus Lerdorf, Personal Home Pages or PHP is a parsing language that runs on Linux and Unix servers, making it a popular choice for web developers. PHP is in fact, one of the most popularly used languages for web development as well as web application development. Here’s why:

Why choose PHP for Web Development?

Perfect Database Interaction:


PHP 
is an excellent language choice when it comes to building Dynamic Websites that interact with Databases, as it can exchange all sorts of information with ease.

  • Cost:
    Another reason why PHP website development and web development is admired by developers is that PHP programs run on Linux, which is free. Also, the database connectivity is less expensive as compared to that of other programs such as ASP which is based on MS_SQL, a Microsoft product that needs to be purchased. However, web development with PHP through MySQL is free to use.
  • Incredible Speed:
    PHP has an upper hand when it comes to speed. This is mainly because, the PHP code runs faster as it runs in its own memory space.

 

How is PHP used in Web Development?

So, how can be PHP web development or PHP website development be used by you towards an advantageous outcome? Here’s the answer:

  • For starters, the server side scripting programming language of PHP can be used for creating dynamic pages with dynamic content, that are full of flash and animation, enabling you to develop customized web pages that can attract more visitors.
  • Secondly, apart from server side scripting, PHP web development tools can also be used from stand alone client side or command line scripting GUI applications.
  • As PHP website development software is freely available, thus it can easily be embedded into HTML.
  • PHP takes just the code as an input an in return provides you with appropriate web pages as an output.
  • The PHP MYSQL programming enables PHP web developers and programmers to perform script installation, script repair as well as manage every front and back end activity, hassle free.
  • PHP website development programming can be used to make a slew of off-the-shelf applications through software packages like SugarCRM, Typo3, Joomla, osCommerce, C, Simple Machine Forum, phpBB, Eventum, phpAdsNew, vBulletin etc.
  • PHP can be used extensively for developing social media communities, email management, content management software, user polls, chat and forums and online and ecommerce stores.

Based on C++, PHP is considered to be the best programming language for both website development and web development. Both programmers and designers love this language alike, due to the manifolds of advantages it provides. The comfort of working on the PHP web application development syntax makes the job of developers a cake walk!! No wonder PHP is considered to be an all round better choice for web development than other programming languages.

Do you know your way around PHP and consider yourself an experienced Web Developer already? If so, you should check out our latest PHP Web Developer Job now

-contentmanagementsoftwares

Filed Under: Career Advice Tagged With: jobs in shropshire, php, php web development, php website, php website development, Shropshire jobs, web application development, web development, web development with php

Top-15 Most Shocking Recruitment Stories

October 31, 2016 by Julie McGrath

Check out 15 of the most shocking and strange recruitment stories revealed by hiring managers!

Things do not always go to plan during the recruitment process.

This isn’t suggesting bad CVs full of spelling errors or candidates who say the wrong thing.

This is suggesting jaw-dropping, shocking, bizarre, maddeningly frustrating things that would be hard to believe if they weren’t true.

Take a look at these odd stories – and count yourself lucky they didn’t happen to you:

 1. During a phone interview, a recruiting manager heard a candidate’s mother giving the applicant answers to her questions. The interviewer asked him, “Who’s feeding you the answers to my questions?” He said no one. The manager told him she could hear his mother in the background. The applicant got flustered and hung up.

2. At the beginning of an interview, an applicant told an interviewing team that if he should pass out during the interview, his mobile phone was in his pocket and that they should call the emergency number.

3. An applicant showed up for a job interview wearing a noticeably greasy, see-through white dress shirt and bottle-lens eye glasses being held together by tape. He also sported a comb over covering only the front half of his head, so when he turned to the side, there was a large, exposed bald area. The icing on the cake? Severe skin shedding. During the interview, the candidate repeatedly scratched his head and arms, causing large flakes of skin to fall onto the table and onto his clothing. By the end of the interview, the table was covered with a thin layer of skin flakes.

4. A recruiting manager found a candidate he really liked who interviewed well over the phone. He also interviewed well in person, though the candidate did say he had an appointment to run to and asked if he could take the job application with him and return it completed later on along with his references. He returned both the next day, the company checked his references and hired him. On his first day, the company gave the new employee a short telephone script and asked him to make some phone calls. Strangely, when someone would answer his call, he’d ask for a person whose name wasn’t on the script sheets. After a few calls, he stopped asking for anyone by name and just said, “Who’s this?” After a few more of these incidents, the company realised the man couldn’t read. The manager found out later that the handwriting on his job application was that of his girlfriend. The firm felt so bad for him they gave him some phonics books and asked him to study up and come back when he felt he was ready to give it another try. He never returned.

5. After an interview, one candidate asked a recruiting manager if she could borrow some money to get her car out of the car park. She didn’t have any money with her and didn’t know how she was going to be able to get her car through the barrier. (Happy ending: She did end up paying the manager back!)

 6. An applicant showed up late for an interview wearing a long trench coat with his hair slicked back in a pony tail. As the interview progressed, he answered the recruiting manager’s questions, sipped on his Starbucks coffee and tilted the chair on the back legs. When asked the question, “Why should I hire you?” he responded by taking a sip, leaning way back, running his hand along the side of his hair and saying, “Because I’m so good looking.”

7. A recruitment manager hired a woman to help out with typing proposals. The woman said she could type 75 words per minute and, in a crunch, the manager hired her on a trial basis without giving her a test. Rushing past her desk to an important meeting, the manager happened to notice that new hire’s computer screen was completely filled with spelling errors and mistakes. He asked her what she was doing since she seemed to be ignoring the spell check warnings. Very calmly, she replied, “Oh, I do that at the end. How else could I type 75 words per minute if I stopped every time I made a mistake?”

8. A female recruitment manager and her team thought they’d found a great male candidate. The applicant eagerly accepted the offer – and began emailing and calling the recruiting manager every day for two weeks until the first day of work. Then came the cards, unsolicited breakfasts, joke emails and statements of “being friends forever” – all within the first two weeks. Management eventually had to counsel the employee about appropriate behavior in the workplace.

9. A Human Resources manager worked with an outside agency to place job adverts in the local newspaper. The agency got the job adverts in the newspaper without a problem – except they went in newspapers 30 miles from the store. Potential candidates began calling to enquire about train schedules and which part of town the store was in. Worst of all: This happened twice – to the tune of a huge financial loss each time.

10. A recruiting manager hired a receptionist who during her employment used the emergency room as her primary care physician and ran an escort service on the side.

11. A recruitment agency helped a company hire a new IT technician based on his CV alone. The new employee arrived on the job the very first day, looked at the company-issued laptop and said, “What is this?” Needless to say, the company promptly and respectfully returned the new employee to the Recruitment agency.

12. One applicant for an attorney position giggled the entire time during the phone interview. The manager thought it was probably nerves, so he asked her for a writing sample. She submitted a detailed legal brief that used the names of characters from the cartoon “The Family Guy” and placed them into horribly violent situations.

13. A recruiting manager hired a promising candidate with two master’s degrees. Upon being hired, however, she shooed people away from her desk when they tried to train her. (She said she knew how to do the job better by herself.) She also spoke over everyone else in the office when they tried to talk to her, frequently screaming, “What?!” Finally, she sent strange Youtube videos to other staff members about race horses for no apparent reason.

14. One company hired what they thought was a qualified, excited applicant. But 10 days after the employee started, he resigned – and moved to a larger company. Turned out he’d used the company’s salary as leverage.

15. A police department hired a new recruit who successfully made it through the academy and field training. A few weeks later, though, he quit. Why? He had to touch a dead body and said he didn’t think he could do that ever again. The icing on the cake: The recruit’s family’s business was the community’s only funeral home and mortuary.

Well there you have it! 15 of the most shocking recruitment stories. If you’d like to elimate the chance of you experiencing any of these scenarios, check us out to see how we can help you by clicking here!

 

– ProgressiveBusinessPublications

Filed Under: Career Advice Tagged With: agency, applicants, business, candidates, companies, employees, employers, recruitment, shocking, strange, tales

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