Archive

Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Sniff, and you want to make babies too

February 12th, 2005 No comments

FORGET flowers, chocolate and musky colognes. For revving up a woman’s sex drive, breast milk is best.

Find out what these crazy scientists are up to at newscientist.com.

Categories: News Tags:

F/X Gods

February 2nd, 2005 No comments

Are you a movie freak who loves F/X? Wired has a special on the 10 Hollywood F/X gods and insight into how some of the clips like ‘The Day After Tomorrow’, ‘I Robot’ and even the infamous Kate and Kate on the Titanic.

Would you ever think that the Titanic shot with Kate and Leo took a year to perfect? [Read here]

Categories: News Tags:

The eighth wonder!

August 16th, 2004 No comments



One of my friends forwarded this to me. Would you risk entering this place?



Categories: News Tags:

IceRocket.com Search Engine

August 15th, 2004 1 comment

www.icerocket.com Yet
another search engine, the search results seem to be accurate (my ego test
search for ‘merill’ brings up my site).

I like their Quick View feature which shows you the site
within the search page on a frame. I would have liked it much better if their
Maximize button opened the site to the full window, that way I wouldn’t
need to reload the site if I really wanted to open it to the full window. Give
it a spin…

style='color:windowtext;text-decoration:none'> height=99 id=" x0000 i1025" src="http://www.merill.net/wp-content/uploads/contentbinary/image0011.gif" vspace=2
alt="Go Icerocket Home">

 

Categories: News Tags:

DNGSL

August 13th, 2004 6 comments

href="http://manzis.blogspot.com/">Manoj came up with these great looking logos
for our user group. Which one do you prefer?

border=0 width=164 height=80 src="http://www.merill.net/wp-content/uploads/contentbinary/image0031.jpg">

 

border=0 width=185 height=125 src="http://www.merill.net/wp-content/uploads/contentbinary/image004.jpg">

Categories: News Tags:

Sweet Revenge: Sri Lanka takes the Cup

August 2nd, 2004 1 comment
style='border-collapse:collapse;border:none'>

width=150 height=202 src="http://www.merill.net/wp-content/uploads/contentbinary/image0011.jpg"
alt="Was this a decisive moment? Tillakaratne Dilshan celebrates his spectacular catch of Rahul Dravid in the Asia Cup final © AFP"
border=0>

Way to
go Sri Lanka! I wasn’t able to make it to watch the match but watched
it on a large projection screen at the Fingara club with some friends. Man
did the Indian’s self-destruct, Sachin couldn’t have played any
worse than yesterday even if he had tried.

 

All
credit to the Sri Lankan’s for playing positively even though they didn’t
have a large score to defend. Let’s hope our guys can be on top of
South Africa as well in the coming weeks.

 

Categories: News Tags:

What Anyone works in IT should remember every day

April 29th, 2004 No comments

Dhammika from EuroCenter mailed this to me, a very interesting read:


The IT industry looks much different from the outside than it does from the inside. There are secrets and tricks about how it operates that nobody knows except those who are in the industry. Kind of like a weird cult. That is, until now. Here’s my list of what everyone who wants to enter the IT industry should know.

Once you’re pigeon-holed, it’s extremely hard to break out
Lots of graduates and IT hopefuls take the first job they are offered, thinking they can upgrade to the perfect job later. This can be a big mistake. Once you’re known to have experience in a particular area, it can be extremely difficult to break out of it. If you spend a year on the helpdesk, you will become known as the “helpdesk-girl”. A year spent on Oracle can will quickly convert you into “Mr Oracle”.

IT workers are terrible snobs. Java developers think nobody from the helpdesk will ever be able to do what they do, and network-monkeys see developers as nothing but prima-donnas. It’s quite a tribal industry.

Agencies, always looking for the easiest way to make a dollar, will only forward you for jobs where you have experience. Once you get used to the dollars rolling in, a job in the hand will seem better than the prospect of learning new skills with a pay-cut. Before you know it, you’ve spent the past five years working in a job you didn’t want.

My advice is hang out for the job that you want. If you want to move into J2EE development, insist on working at that.

Technical Skills are hard currency
It is possible to thrive in the IT industry with limited or out-of-date technical skills, but it’s more difficult. During a bust, middle-managers and project managers are often the first to go. Those with up-to-date technical skills can also struggle, but not to the same extent. It’s possible to build and maintain IT systems without management skills, but not without technical skills.

Vow to always keep your technical skills up to date. Even if you move into management and find your time being taken up by “soft-skills” keep training yourself in the important “hard-skills”.

Your whole career in IT will be spent updating your skills
This follows on from the last point. If your skills become out of date, you will become vulnerable to losing your career. Because of this, IT is a career where it is difficult to thrive without having a real passion for it. Your employer may send you on expensive training courses, but unless you read up and experiment in your own time, you’re going to fall behind.

Despite the vendor rhetoric, IT systems are becoming ever more complex. This requires IT workers to add a growing list of skills to their CVs. This trend looks like continuing with the introduction of web services, which require more complex skills than web development.

When I started my Lotus Notes development career, all you had to know to enter the field was basic Notes development. One year later you had to know LotusScript and ODBC to get a job. The year after that, Domino and HTML were added to that list. The year after that, every job wanted Javascript. Then they wanted Java. Now increasing numbers of jobs are asking for J2EE and XML. If I don’t continue to add new skills to my repertoire, I’m likely to be struggling to find work.

IT is a volatile industry
If you want a nice cushy gig working for the same company doing the same job for twenty years, then IT is not the industry for you. IT workplaces are in a constant state of flux; with workers being retrenched, then re-hired, then retrenched again. You have to be prepared to change jobs every two or three years, and sometimes watch your income go up and down like a yo-yo. Periods spent out of work are not unusual. I predict a big boom in IT in the coming years, likely sparked by something that most aren’t even anticipating. This boom will be followed by a bust and so on. I can’t see the pace of technical change slowing down anytime soon, and as long as that continues IT will remain volatile.

You should get experience by working at bargain-basement prices
If you want to move into J2EE development, don’t expect to go straight onto $80 hour. That is, unless you’re very lucky or in the middle of a boom. Offer your services at below-market rates when you first move into the industry. You will be much more attractive to employers and will have more choice of jobs. Commercial experience counts in IT and you want to get some as soon as you can. Once you’ve got a year’s experience under your belt, you can look to increase your income.

Get your vendor certifications
These aren’t entirely necessary, but can give you the edge when looking for a job. If you haven’t got much experience, vendor certifications can compensate to some extent. Look on the job boards to see which certifications employers are asking for in the area you want to move into.

Paul Knapp 

Categories: News Tags:

Google launches free email service

April 2nd, 2004 No comments

Google has announced a free email service that is fully searchable and offers 500-times
the storage capacity of Hotmail’s free service.

A trial of the Gmail service kicks off today with testers hand-picked by Google. The
web-based service will display text adverts alongside emails that are relevant to
keywords in the user’s emails.

Google announced the service in a cheekily written press release, dated 1 April, with
its too-good-be-true tone suggesting April foolery, but with no obvious indication
that the announcement was anything other than genuine (apart from claiming the service
can search in Klingon!).

A Google spokeswoman said the announcement was not an April fool.

Key features of Gmail are the ability to search all emails sent and received; 1GB
of storage, equivalent to 500,000 pages of email; and automatic grouping of email
into “conversations”, so related received and replied-to email would appear together,
eliminating the need for folders.

Google said the inspiration for the service came from a Google user complaining about
the poor quality of existing webmail services. “She kvetched [Yiddish for complained]
about spending all her time filing messages or trying to find them. So she asked ‘Can’t
you people fix this?’” said Google co-founder Larry Page. 

http://gmail.google.com/

Categories: News Tags:

Good News and Bad

April 1st, 2004 2 comments

I got both good news and bad today. The good news is that I got my MSc results at
last, but the bad news I can’t tell right now.

Categories: News Tags:

Israel unveils tiny drones

March 27th, 2004 No comments

The Israeli military is equipping its forces with a new range of spy drones small
enough to fit in a soldier’s backpack, the army said on Thursday.

The small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and micro UAVs were unveiled at a conference
on low intensity conflict.

The Israeli air force has often used larger unmanned spy planes to target Palestinian
militants in air strikes.  The new baby drones would give army forces in the
field near instant access to aerial intelligence.  The planes have already been
supplied to some ground units. “We use them to take aerial photographs of the (Palestinian)
territories,” a military official told Associated Press news agency.

Categories: News Tags: