Tag: Tech Life

How to get hired… in Second Life

July 7th, 2007

Cory Edo of Electric Sheep company tells us how an artist should go about getting hired (if they wish) full-time in Second Life, the raging virtual world becoming quickly part of our own world.

“You’re ready to make the jump. You want to work in SL full time doing what you love – building, texturing, scripting, creating. How do you get your foot in the door? How do you make the transition? What awaits you? Here’s the lowdown…”

This whole concept SERIOUSLY redefines working from home, telecommuting or virtual officing.   Bring it on!

Popularity: 16% [?]

Finalizing Edits to Word Documents

July 6th, 2007

One great feature of Microsoft Word and other word processors is the ability for multiple authors to make changes while tracking them all. In Word, this is called “Track Changes” and is turned on by clicking the command under the Tools menu.

BUT, once you’ve finished making changes, it is confusing how to make the edits go away so the edits don’t show anymore.

This is especially important in a resume… you don’t want the edits showing up somehow when you email your resume over to that great new opportunity!

To Finalize or Finish your document after editing, you want to find the “Accept Change” button on the “Track Changes” toolbar that pops up when you enable edit tracking (see picture)

Accept Changes button in Microsoft Word(click to enlarge)

Then, when you click the small down arrow to the right of the button, the hover menu will show up. You want to choose “Accept All Changes” (see picture)

Accept ALL Changes in Document button in Microsoft Word(click to enlarge)

Once you’ve done that, SAVE the file to make sure the edits are fixed. Better yet, save the document as an Adobe PDF file. Personally, I use the free, open source PDF Creator program (passed along to me by the Software For Starving Students organization)

Good luck!

Popularity: 18% [?]

LinkedIn Listening?

June 28th, 2007

Look, I am not saying I started this, but according to what Mashable’s saying, the marketplace is moving fast enough away from LinkedIn and closed-wall applications in-general, that it appears they may be actually implementing some of the stuff I complained about 18 months ago.

(Via Mashable): LinkedIn is feeling the heat from Facebook’s platform strategy: realizing it could lose its dominant position in business networking if it doesn’t act, founder and Chairman Reid Hoffman said on Friday that LinkedIn will provide open APIs “within 9 monthsâ€?. Most likely, it’ll be much sooner (and it’ll need to be – 9 months is a long, long time on the web).


Find San Francisco jobs at San Fran Jobs.

Popularity: 16% [?]

Calendar: CTO Breakfast Thursday in Provo

June 26th, 2007

Come join us Thursday morning for the monthly CTO Forum/Breakfast in Provo, hosted by Phil Windley.

The next CTO Breakfast will happen on June 29, 2007 from 8:00 until 10:00 at the Novell Cafeteria, Building G, Provo Campus. You’re invited! You don’t have to be a CTO—just interested in products and technology.

Note: You also don’t have to buy breakfast!

Popularity: 7% [?]

My First iMix: Summertime Mix July 2007

June 19th, 2007

  Summertime Mix July 2007 Playlist Notes: I don’t think you can find a set of songs so perfect for top-down cruisin’Well, iTunes version 6 or greater lets you click a playlist in your iTunes program and submit an iMix of the songs in there to be contained in the iTunes store.

Here’s my first compilation. Right now, get within earshot of me and one of the following songs is playing!

Click to see this iMix in the iTunes store

Bubbly   Colbie Caillat
Points of Authority   Linkin Park
The Reason   Hoobastank
Upside Down   Jack Johnson
Small Town   John Mellencamp
Remind Me (Radio Edit)   Royksopp
Galvanize   The Chemical Brothers
American Woman   Lenny Kravitz
Ooh La La   Goldfrapp
What Heaven Sees In You   Mindy Gledhill
Remember the Promise   Brett Raymond
Live Like You Believe   Jenny Phillips
God Don’t Give Up On Us   Becky Garrett

Popularity: 11% [?]

Yawn. You’re Still Stuck On That Web 2.0 Thing?

May 14th, 2007

It’s funny how we’re all so bored these days. We can’t settle down long enough for changes to actually occur. We’re already on to the next thing like crazed paparazzi looking for the next head-shorn celebrity to hassle and prod.

It seemed like only a few hours ago that “Web 2.0″ was hotter than Paris Hilton on the blogs, search engines, and the whole world. Now, even though the reality is that much of the business world is still operating on Web .02 (“uh…, helpdesk? How do you attach a spreadsheet to an email?”) some of the Web 2.0 demigods are already bored to tears with the ho-hum web 2.0 movement.

To them, everyone’s saying “Blah, blah, blah, Ajax, blah, blah, blah, twitter, blah, blah, blah, social media, blah, blah…”

Alan Graham of ZDNET says the following, approximately 11,760 seconds ago:

It is hard to become inspired in the world of web 2.0 these days. There seems to be so many copycat, cookie cutter business out there, that it is getting harder and harder to find the brilliant idea amongst the din of the social networking crowd.

I am not disagreeing with Alan. I want to see the next cool thing, too. But how many years did it take before we got bored with Assembly Lines as a powerful force for change in business? But, this global community collaboration thing? It’s so outdated.

But, please, will the next actually interesting idea raise it’s hand? I am too busy to pay-attention to anything that’s not actually revolutionary because I am blogging from my blackberry and juggling my hyper-synchronized online team, client and vendor calendars, while holding a conference on second-life as our global supply chain updates are sent to me by SMS, while I am holding an asynchronous “team meeting” with my geo-dispersed staff on twitter.

Next thing you know I’ll be on geico.com saving 15% or more on my car-insurance in just 15 minutes.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Calendar: April Tech Spotlight Today 3-4pm

April 20th, 2007

OK, I missed this:

April event: Bohemian Rhapsody

The April Utah Tech Spotlight event location has been chosen. We will be meeting at 3:00-4:00 on Friday, April 20th…. [in] the upper floor of the Bohemian Brewery And Grill at 94 East and 7200 South, right off of State Street (In SALT Lake CITY), on the south side of the road.

Popularity: 6% [?]

Now Hiring… Right Now!… Now! Now!

April 19th, 2007

Had your “Now Hiring” sign up for a while? You’re not the only one…

Utah‘s job growth rate stays ahead of nation

State is pulling in workers from around the country

By Lesley Mitchell
The Salt Lake Tribune

Article Last Updated: 04/17/2007 11:35:32 PM MDT

Utah‘s economy clearly was supposed to be slowing down in 2007 after years of unparalleled prosperity.
Instead, job growth registered 4.5 percent for the year that ended in March, the Utah Department of Workforce Services reported Tuesday. Although that rate is down significantly from a peak of 5.4 percent last June, it remains one of the highest in the country – much higher than the national rate of 1.5 percent.
With the job-creation rate going against form and remaining steady in recent months, “Utah’s economy is definitely not following the script,” said Mark Knold, chief economist for the Department of Workforce Services. “It’s impressive that our economy is holding this high rate of growth. I certainly didn’t think it would.”
Knold said the tight labor market and shortage of workers was supposed to curb job creation because employers should have reached a point where they simply couldn’t find more workers.
“But the weak national economy is actually working to our advantage. It provides an incentive for workers elsewhere to come here.”
Because of layoffs and poor economies elsewhere, many employers in Utah who have exhausted the local labor pool are having success recruiting out-of-state workers instead of being hamstrung by positions they cannot fill.
Recruiters at the Intel-Micron joint venture, IM Flash Technologies in Lehi, are recruiting workers from around the country. They are settling not only in Lehi but through- out the Salt Lake Valley.
Mark Cornelius came from Virginia to work at IM Flash. He and wife Heather are building a home in Draper they hope to move into later this month.
Even though home prices in the state have jumped in recent years, the couple consider the relative affordability of Utah real estate to be one of the key reasons they decided to take the job offer.
“Homes are still more affordable here than in Virginia,” Heather Cornelius said. “You can’t buy any type of house under $400,000 in much of Virginia. Here you can still buy a really nice house.”
John Wallace, an associate broker specializing in relocations for Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Orem, said many people who visit the state on a job interview find Utah appealing.
“I’ve done more relocations in the last three months than I usually do in a year,” he said, adding that he has assisted people moving from Albuquerque, Phoenix, Portland, Ore., and Las Vegas – all with jobs before they came to Utah.
Companies statewide are adding jobs, although much of the hiring activity is focused along the Wasatch Front. All industries seem to be in on the action, with construction leading the way.
With job growth so high, the state’s unemployment rate remains very low. The jobless rate was 2.4 percent at the end of March, down from 3.1 percent in March 2006 and significantly lower than the national average of 4.4 percent.
With such a low unemployment rate, Utah is technically in a state of full employment – meaning almost everyone who wants a job can find one.
The current up-cycle for Utah’s economy and job market began in late 2003. By 2004, job growth climbed to 2.4 percent. By 2005, it was 4 percent. Job growth in 2006 ranged from 4.6 percent in January to the high of 5.4 percent in June.
In all, the Utah economy has created about 53,500 jobs over the past year, raising total wage and salary employment in Utah to 1.23 million. This increase translates to an average monthly job gain of about 4,400 jobs.
Only about 31,500 Utahns were unemployed in March 2007, down from 40,500 in March 2006.
lesley@sltrib.com

Popularity: 20% [?]

Calendar: CTO Breakfast Friday 8am

April 19th, 2007

Other than my three daughters, this crew of business-savvy g33ks and hax0rs are the best to laugh with over a breakfast burrito:

Our monthly CTO breakfast will be held this Friday at 8am in the Novell Cafeteria, Building G, Provo Campus. Check the CTO Breakfast page for directions and future dates.

http://www.windley.com/cto_forum

Whats been on my mind lately is Seth Godins hopeful visit to Utah in May, virtualization, and Twitter. Bring whatever topics been gnawing at you and well have a god conversation. We always do.

Remember, the event is free (you pay for your own breakfast) and anyone interested in high-tech companies and products is invited. You dont have to be a CTO.

If youre hesitant to drive all the way down to Novells Provo campus, Ive been told that the drive actually takes less time that leaving the freeway and driving into Canyon Park.

See you there!

Popularity: 5% [?]

Calendar: Tech@Breakfast April 20th

April 6th, 2007

I just met Jeremy Neilson, Venture Manager of the Utah Fund of Funds. If you’re a Utah entrepreneur or a VC/Private Equity Investor, I suggest you contact him right away, if you don’t know him.

Utah Fund of Funds
On the Fund of Funds Website, I noticed that there will be a Tech@Breakfast on April 20th that may be interesting:

The Utah Fund of Funds: Benefits and Progress
Friday, April 20, 2007, 7:30 a.m.-9 a.m.
Venezia Garden Room, Grand America Hotel, 555 South Main Street, Salt Lake City

Free Event, Registration Requested

The Utah Fund of Funds, one of Utahs most significant ongoing economic development programs, was created in 2003 to foster economic development by increasing the amount and diversity of capital available to the states entrepreneurs and growth companies.

At the event, entitled The Utah Fund of Funds: Benefits and Progress, a panel of leading investors and entrepreneurs will explore the progress of the Utah Fund of Funds and the benefits it is providing for Utah entrepreneurs and the states economic development.

Panelists include:

  • Jeremy Neilson: Director, Utah Fund of Funds
  • Peter Jarman: Vice President, Fort Washington Capital (the Utah Fund of Funds investment advisor)
  • Mark Foley: Managing Director, RWI Ventures
  • Andrew Schwab: Managing Director, 5AM Ventures
  • Tim Hunt: CEO, Lingotek

Popularity: 7% [?]