[Pc_Support] We're hiring: LAN Admin, (2) C/GUI Coders,
(x) Field Engineers
Bryan J. Smith
b.j.smith at ieee.org
Tue Jan 17 16:46:13 EST 2006
Our website won't be updated for awhile, and I'd rather you
contact me directly so I can pass you on with a thumbs up
(no, there is no referral bonus ... at least not yet ;-).
We're looking for a number of people, so please let me know
if you are looking.
These are with my company in the Orlando (Lake Mary) area.
o LAN Administrator
Attitude on this is MCSE+CCNA minimum, so if you have the
paper, great, if you don't, please have the experience (on
2003 products no less). Microsoft Windows Server 2003,
Exchange Server, MS SQL Server 2000, SharePoint, Office,
etc... administrative environment. Cisco 5500 series core,
various networking technologies, you need to have an basic
grasp of switching and routing for a SMB (small-to-medium
business) network, DNS, ActiveDirectory. Linux and Open
Source technologies are definitely a major plus because we
not only have Linux capabilities, but our products utilize
Linux too.
[ INSIGHT NOTE/WARNING: Must work well with non-technical,
executive management. Although we are a major R&D firm (our
end won't give you too much trouble), we also a product and
services company and filled with a sales and management team
that will make a lot of IT requests. Feel free to e-mail me
back and inquire more about what I mean by this. ]
o C/GUI Developers (2)
We're looking for C developers with GUI experience,
preferably cross-platform GUI development and not just
WinForms or .NET. Yes, that's C, not C++, although knowing
C++ is not going to hurt you (as long as you have real
experience in C projects). We're trying to avoid
pigeon-hole'ing our newer codebases and work, especially with
the great amount of embedded system development we do (raw
GUI objects on framebuffer, etc...). Knowing Delphi is a
major plus because we have some existing Delphi code that
needs to be re-written in C for portability.
o Field Engineers (x) [ travel: 50+% ]
We can always use more field engineers, especially creative
field engineers. When we deploy in disaster areas there is
virtually NO INFRASTRUCTURE to speak of, and we're it. That
occasionally means you often are tasked by the clients to do
all sorts of IT work, which we've made a great name for
ourselves with the US Coast Guard. That means you need to be
strong in all disciplines, including basic networking and
various OSes (especially our Linux-based command center). We
pay extra when you are deployed to disaster areas (although
you'll eat well, have all the Internet you want, etc...).
--
Bryan J. Smith Professional, Technical Annoyance b.j.smith at ieee.org http://thebs413.blogspot.com
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*** Speed doesn't kill, difference in speed does ***
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