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As a student, how should programming language familiarity be described on a CV/Resume
I have just finished my Advanced Diploma in Computing, and I am currently looking for a job as a junior .NET Developer.
There are few Languages/Technologies that I’ve used in real...
Yeah, I'm trying to update my old word doc resume right now so I can send it out to a few places, but I'd be interested in checking out Latex later
@enderland haha funny thing is, I've been considering quitting for a few months now, and only haven't because it was a good job and I thought they'd have major problems without me :)
>.< the downsides of working at home... sitting around in my underwear writing my resume with the front door open for the cats to go on the porch, and some dude comes knocking on the (open) front door.... (ps, can't get to my clothes without passing the open front door)
@enderland i dunno, was next door neighbours daughter, i would say that atleast bring it up to par as the chances of meeting them agin are pretty high!
Possible Duplicate:
As a student, how should programming language familiarity be described on a CV/Resume
I have just finished my Advanced Diploma in Computing, and I am currently looking for a job as a junior .NET Developer.
There are few Languages/Technologies that I’ve used in real...
Would you include design patterns you are familiar with on your resume, and if so where? (and would that be a good question for the site? It's rather specific to the software industry)
Same question for software tools (Visual Studio, SQL Server Management Studio and Profiler, Office products (listed because I've used the "Developer" tab in both Word and Excel to make some fancy reports or macros), Crystal Reports, etc
I'm not sure on those, stuff like that always bothers me -- how do you include the "I know what I'm talking about" information on a resume (you can normally communicate this very clearly in an interview)
dangit, I want to (and normally have) a policy of "no agenda I don't go to meetings" or at least request an agenda - but an intern just scheduled one, and I'm torn how I shoudl respond :P
Anyone have a suggestion for looking for employment in a country from a distance (I don't even know anyone in the country, and some web sites I checked looked sad). And, HI!
I am wanting to learn Spanish, but am not interested in Mexico or SA. I would like to do it in Spain. I like the idea of being on the Continent too for when the travel bug hits.
I'm a working student in a software department and currently working on a project, which was a final paper from another student. The given requirements for further development are hard for me to implement because of poor documentation and code. Furthermore the student, who worked this out, isn't ...
@enderland That's actually regular practice in Japan. Retirement age is 60, and employees will get their pension (lump-sum here) and be hired back as advisers. It's an odd system, since they receive something like 1/3rd of their pre-retirement pay when they come back (though the amount of work they are expected to do is far less. Or zero. Or less than zero.)
@enderland That's actually regular practice in Japan. Retirement age is 60, and employees will get their pension (lump-sum here) and be hired back as advisers. It's an odd system, since they receive something like 1/3rd of their pre-retirement pay when they come back (though the amount of work they are expected to do is far less. Or zero. Or less than zero.)