Tuesday, January 8, 2008

8 Ways to Boost Your Career in 2008

Within the technology industry, companies are looking for IT workers who possess highly-developed technical know-how, in addition to more general business knowledge and enhanced analytical skills. In 2008, recruiters are advising IT workers to take a number of proactive steps in order to update their skills and experiences to help employers fill these needs. In particular, IT workers should become more aware of trends within their respective industries, work to develop intangible skills and focus on new responsibilities that may be far removed from IT.

Security issues, especially those related to business continuity and disaster-recovery planning, are permeating all levels of the organization. As a result, it is important for IT workers to understand how business processes, technical requirements and security needs intersect. Secondly, IT workers need to learn how to re-engineer business processes and workflow, not just technical processes. The conventional wisdom is that IT is somehow responsible for keeping everything running and developing new systems, and this now applies to business processes.

Understanding how analytics can be used to guide business decisions is another way to boost your career. For example, organizations collect and analyze detailed data on their customers and then rely on IT staff members to analyze those findings. You can also make yourself more valuable by becoming more versatile, working with teams of workers from diverse departments and multidisciplinary teams, and becoming more adept at using data to evaluate performance. At the end of the day, you must learn to manage your own career, evaluate your skills and fill in what’s missing through certification, education and on-the-job experience.

Click Here to View Full Article : 8 Ways to Boost Your Career in 2008

Sunday, December 16, 2007

The Rise of Parallelism (and Other Computing Challenges)

International Science Grid This Week (12/12/07) El Baz, Didier Parallelism is no longer restricted to high-performance or high-speed computing, as it is used in PCs, cellular phones, and numerous other electronic devices, writes Didier El Baz, head of the Distributed Computing and Asynchronism team, LAAS-CNRS. El Baz says the arrival of grid computing and parallelism have raised numerous questions in computer science and numerical computing. The combination of parallel and distributed computing could potentially change the nature of computer science and numerical computing. To ensure efficient use of new parallel and distributed architectures, new concepts on communication, synchronization, fault tolerance, and auto-organization are needed and must be widely accepted. Manufacturers agree that future supercomputers will have massively parallel architectures that will need to be fault tolerant and well suited to dynamicity, which will require some type of auto-organization as controlling these large systems efficiently will not be possible entirely from the outside. Parallel and distributed algorithms will also have to be more adapt at coping with the asynchronous nature of communication networks and the faults in the system. These problems are attracting more and more attention, particularly from scientists working on communication libraries, and will need to be addressed to find solutions and drive the evolution of computing.
Click Here to View Full Articlehttp: http://www.isgtw.org/?pid=1000812

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Amazon Launches the Kindle – A New way to read books


For more details click on the picture.