Development on a Shoestring

Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Why you should have your resume on your site

WillworkI have my resume on this site.   It’s in plain HTML, marked up with the hresume microformat.  A number of people have asked me why I’ve done this, whether it is not just a waste of space.  The fact is that even though I have no email address or phone number on this site, just the contact form, I get at least 2-3 messages a month from recruitment headhunters with job opportunities.  Quite a lot of these are decent roles, they may not be exactly what I’m looking for, but it’s a good thing to get your name & resume out there.

One of the main reasons for this is that if you type “.net resume Sydney” into Google, my resume usually turns up on the first or second page.  I know some people have a resume linked to on their site in Word or PDF format.  Now this is fine, and Google can index both formats, but it is far easier for the recruiters to scan HTML quickly and there’s no need to load other applications.  They go through a lot of resumes every day, so anything you can do to make yours more visible is going to help you out. 

Now make it a cut-down version, don’t give them everything, and I really don’t suggest putting your address, phone number or email address on there.  As I said, as long as you have a contact form of some sort, you’ll still get contacted.  Also I suggest leading with a summary, sort of a mini-cover letter.  Outline what you do now, briefly what you have done & what you’re looking for in your next job.

Also, keep an up-to-date version of your resume in Word or PDF format that you can send back to recruiters when they contact you.  I keep a copy on a USB thumbdrive that I carry everywhere.  Once a recruiter contacts you, they’re going to want a file that they can print out & send to the prospective employers.

One more thing I’d mention is this: if you’re not interested in a new job, still put your resume up.  You may not need a job now, but odds are that you will within the next year or two.  By putting your details out there you increase your visibility and increase the likelihood of getting a job when you need it.

Never turn down an opportunity.

How To Grow Grass in Someone’s Keyboard

<p><em>There is embedded content here that you cannot see. Please <a href="http://blog.slaven.net.au/archives/2008/04/11/how-to-grow-grass-in-someones-keyboard/">open the post in a web browser</a> to see this.</em></p>

[via Sarah In Tampa]

Google’s moving in next door

image Google really is busy here in Australia.  First they announce Transit for Perth (and other states to come soon), and now I hear they’re building their new headquarters next door to my office.  They’re currently across Darling Harbour from us over in Darling Park here, but they’re moving here. It looks like a big block of concrete there, but it’s actually a construction site now.  Pyrmont is turning into a media hub, with Channel 7 next door too, and a whole bunch of other small media agencies near by.  Channel 10 is just up the road too.

The new Google building is been billed as a new ‘green’ style of building, apparentlyWorkplace6, a joint venture between site owners GPT and builder Citta Property Group, will generate one-quarter of its own power supply, take in harbour water to release heat and recycle sewage to flush toilets and irrigate nearby parks”.  Makes sense, sounds like Google is expanding its solar power scheme. Wonder if we’ll get a monitoring page like that for Sydney.

 This Lifehacker article has an image of what it’s going to look like.

Sydney’s Googlers will move into the new building in 2009. The press release was long on “dull but worthy” details such as “Workplace6 is NSW’s first 6 Star Green Star building, going above and beyond green office standards for Australia.”
We can only assume from the brevity of the press release that Google Australia has conceded that Google Zurich - which features a fireman’s pole or a slide to get you down to the  ground floor in a quick and  fun fashion - reigns supreme as the “cool” Google office. Aww.

Everything old is new again

What with all the, um, unpleasantness around FriendFeed this week, it reminded me about something that I’ve been thinking on for a while now. There have been a lot of new sites starting up in the last couple of years that are primarily focused on social communication over the web. Facebook, FriendFeed, Tumblr, Pownce, Twitter, Orkut, Jaiku, about a billion blogs, and so on. The social web it’s being called.

The idea is that the new web, ‘Web 2.0′, is introducing the concept of social networks to the internet as opposed to the ‘old’ web which was just corporate marketing.  Of course this is ridiculous.  If the internet has ever had a single defining feature, it is its social nature.  The internet was originally nothing but interpersonal communication. Anyone remember bulletin boards, Usenet?  Even with the advent of html and the font tag we had newsgroups and forums.  Myspace? It’s just Geocities with music. It was only in the very late 90s that the internet started turning into the corporate marketing platform that people seem to think it is.  The new social platforms are just newer, shiner versions of newsgroups.  Bulletin boards with animated emoticons and super poke.

image So why does everyone think that the internet is just one giant marketing tool? And if social isn’t new, what is it that the new “Web 2.0” brings that is actually, well, new?  The simplistic answer to both questions is this: volume

The sheer volume of people using the internet now on a daily basis is enormous.  The advent of broadband and its relative cheapness (unless you’re in Australia that is) means that pretty much anyone can load up a page within seconds.  I’m old enough to remember waiting minutes for things to load.  Minutes!  And I’m not really that old (don’t ask my kids).  Now, if your website takes more than 5 seconds to load, people from above start asking questions.  Your average office worker now has super high-speed access to the internet. And while offices often block non-work related sites, they can’t block them all, and there are always ways around the blocks if you know what you’re doing.  The fact is that a lot of people are spending a lot of time online, and they’re bored.  Why bother with solitaire when you can load up Kongregate?  Not only do you get more entertaining games, you get to broadcast your l33t skillz through the high score lists (and parade your achievements on your Facebook account with their app).

But it’s not so much the number of people online that led to the idea that corporations own the net.  It’s the rate of growth …

(more…)

Google Transit is coming to Australia

Google Transit will provide directions for travelling to and from locations using local public transport.

Its Australian launch, in Perth using data from the Western Australian transport authority’s online service Transperth, will be the first in the southern hemisphere.  Mr Noble said the company would seek to work with authorities in other states to launch Google Transit across Australian cities.

Google to launch transport tool in Australia: News.com.au

Nice, I wondered when they’d roll this out to us.  Google has a history of not abandoning us here in Aus like some other IT companies do.

image(via Simon Job) Google Maps now has maximum resolution images for Sydney.  Not just Sydney actually, here’s the Penrith Regatta Centre.  How about the Three Sisters at KatoombaNewcastle’s covered too, and it looks like everywhere in between is covered too!  This is a huge update.  Doesn’t goes so far south though, the high res layers seem to stop at Waterfall.

Cool things we can now see:

Oh and sorry, but Melbourne doesn’t have this yet.