Sep 28

Traditionally it was employers who had to make themselves visible when looking to fill vacancies – posting adverts in the press, then choosing a pool of candidates from a veritable tsunami of applicants. But not any more. There’s mounting evidence that personnel specialists are now scouring social media sites and job boards for potential employees.

“Recruitment departments are starting to dabble with professional networking and other forms of social media to head- hunt potential candidates,” says Teresa Sperti of The IT Job Board. Microsoft recruiter Declan Fitzgerald claims that he saved £60,000 in recruitment fees by sourcing nine programming posts through professional networking site LinkedIn instead of using traditional channels.

That’s all good news if you’re currently looking for a job in IT. What better way to ply your wares than on the web, where you can track down the right people and demonstrate your expertise direct? Consider this your ten step guide.

Step 1: Set up multiple accounts

The first rule of successful professional networking is to keep business and pleasure strictly separate. Multiple social networking accounts will help you to present your best face to recruiters. A good first step is to use business-oriented networks like MySpace and LiveJournalfor mates. However, with Facebook and Twitter accounting for the lion’s share of media attention and internet traffic, that approach will exclude access to a lot of influential contacts. Setting up two separate accounts for friends and business on these networks will enable you to compartmentalise your image.

To stop all these accounts getting out of control, use tools that are capable of managing more than one account. Both TweetDeck and Twhirl let you post to more than one Twitter account without the need to continuously log in and out. Seesmic Desktop does the same job, and it handily also allows you to update your Facebook status at the same time.

Step 2: Use Facebook’s privacy settings

While it’s good practice to create business profiles on business-oriented social networks, Facebook is the undisputed hub of the net’s social activity. So, here’s an alternative to multiple profiles: tweak Facebook’s privacy settings so that work contacts aren’t able to see any of your friends’ pictures of your latest debauched night on the town.

Click ‘Friends’ on the main menu bar in Facebook and then click ‘+Create’ in the Lists section of the sidebar. Call this list ‘Work’. You’ll be given the option to add existing friends to this list. Create a second list called ‘Mates’. Once created, you can add anyone who requests friendship to either list.

To make people on your Work list see a professional-looking profile, go to ‘Settings | Privacy | Profile’. The options here allow you to choose exactly who sees what. As an example, let’s say you only want people on your Mates list to see your photos. Click on ‘Edit photo album settings’, choose an album and make sure only your friends can see it. Then, in the ‘Except these people’ box, type in ‘Work’. Now you’ll be able to share all the amusing photos you want to with your mates, safe in the knowledge that the people on your ‘Work’ list can’t see what you get up to after hours.

Step 3: Be careful what you say

Separating your work and personal lives is only one part of the process of creating a professional image for yourself online – a technique named ‘personal branding’. You need to present a ‘best version’ of yourself using the whole range of social-media tools available.

“My key Twitter advice to BBC colleagues (is) don’t say anything you wouldn’t say on air,” BBC Technology Correspondent Rory Cellan Jones recently tweeted. That advice holds true whether you’re blogging, tweeting or changing a public Facebook status update.

“It is very easy to build your reputation and credibility using social media. Unfortunately, it’s just as easy to damage it irrevocably by being careless and whimsical in its use,” says Judith Germain, Managing Director of leadership consultancy Dynamic Transitions. “One thing to remember is that everything that you do on the web is permanent, even in ‘closed’ networks.”

The website Tweleted and the Google cache mean that even deleted posts can be easily found. So think for a second before pressing that ‘Update’ button. And if you do find yourself participating in an argument, make sure you’re polite – or just anonymous.

Step 4: Promote your expertise

Establish yourself as an expert in a particular field or subject. Social-media sites offer plenty of opportunities to promote yourself as a leading light in your area. LinkedIn’s Answers application is a great place to put this into practice. Browse through questions that other LinkedIn members have posted in your area of expertise or search by keyword. The more good-quality answers you provide, the more visible you become.

If you’re willing to invest more time, consider joining Experts Exchange, a site where people post IT related queries. Join as a volunteer and accrue points towards ‘expert’ status through providing solutions.

Blogging is another possibility, but be careful. Post expert advice and considered opinion rather than your opinion on Alton Towers or the prices at Starbucks if you want to draw a returning crowd. A post called ‘10 Things To Do If Your PC Crashes’ is worth much more than a whining rant about Windows being buggy.

Step 5: Don’t be a spammer

Blog articles with titles like ‘10 Reasons I’ll Un-follow You on Twitter’ cite aggressive self-promotion as the fastest route to lose friends and alienate people, so avoid things like pushing your website with every status update or spamming hashtags with inappropriate information just to get yourself noticed.

The key to keeping followers and impressing recruiters is to balance your activity. “Engage with your network,” says www.mashable.com contributor Atherton Bartleby. “Genuine engagement with your followers will ultimately ensure that your mobile number is retained and not ‘lost’ at the end of that fabulous party, and it will ensure that you don’t (too often) commit any serious faux pas.”

Step 6: Follow the right folks

Here’s a great tactic to ensure you make the right contacts: put together a list of companies you’ve got in your sights, find out who works there and, if possible, who’s in charge of hiring. Then make friends with or follow them on social-networking sites. Some corporate sites list personnel in their ‘About Us’ section – so try that avenue first. Search LinkedIn for company names if you hit a brick wall with the first method, and back that up with a search of PeekYou, Plaxo and Spoke. These are all social media directories aimed at business users. A multipronged approach like this should yield a lot of names – and you can make friends with people on all these networks.

Once you have concrete names, search for them on Twitter and Facebook. Click ‘Find People’ in Twitter, then enter first name and last name as keywords to find everyone registered under that name. Facebook is trickier – a name search may pop up a bigger list of false positives – so search by email address instead.

If you haven’t found anyone in your initial search, try a people directory like Pipl – a search engine that specialises in digging up data from ‘the deep web’, including social network profiles and blogs. This will also reveal other social-media sites your target is signed up with. Finally, use Google Blog Search to track down your target’s blogs – and when you can comment on a post, do it.

Step 7: Join specialist groups

Don’t just rely on your virtual friends for leads – join specialist groups and communities online to get an inside track and promote your expertise. Even mainstream social-networking sites have a lot to offer.

“Look to existing networks, such as Facebook and LinkedIn, where there will be groups that discuss the industry and specific technologies and practices within it as well as dedicated forums and communities for the sector,” says Rachel Hawkes, one of the brains behind Social Media Portal. “The IT specialist should look to become engaged with the communities and establish a presence that adds value to the other community members by offering opinion, advice and leadership.”

Doing this properly requires some commitment, though. To get the best from specialist groups, you should check in and post regularly. It’s sensible to follow the old school rules of ‘netiquette’ when joining any new group. Lurk for a while and get a feel for the tone of conversation before you join in with a comment. Some groups may require you to post an introductory note, for example. Others may frown on long, self-promotional signatures.

It’s worth searching out specialist communities that match your expertise outside of the obvious choices, too. As an IT specialist, you’ll find social networks running on message boards, mailing lists, Yahoo Groups and Google Groups.

Step 8: Do a job search

Once you’re hanging out in the right online neighbourhood, you’ll hear about some of the best jobs going. That doesn’t mean you have to stop being proactive, though.

“In a recent survey we conducted, when asked which tools they considered most important when applying for jobs, 40 per cent of IT candidates referred to using skills-specific job boards and 32 per cent said they would make direct contact with a company,” says Teresa Sperti of The IT Job Board. ”Seasoned or specialist IT professionals candidates often favour skills-specific job boards, with only four per cent of candidates seeing generic job boards as very important to their job search.”

In other words, using sites that cater specifically to your area of expertise pays dividends. At The IT Job Board – and most other sites – you can sign up for an email summary matching a keyword search. A great way to keep tabs on job sites is an RSS feed, which is easy to add to your iGoogle front page or check in your favourite feed reader. For example, search by keyword at job site Computing Careers and you’ll find an RSS feed link at the bottom of your returned results.

Step 9: Make a video resume

Hopefully your efforts at making yourself visible in a good way to the right people will not have gone unnoticed, and your name will start to surface when positions need to be filled. If that’s the case, you need something more than your various social-network profiles to surface when somebody Googles your name. Owning a website is an obvious first step, but another idea that is gaining momentum at the moment is the video resume.

Thousands of people have posted CVs on YouTube, although the quality is highly variable. If you can’t afford professional production costs, keep things simple. Use the best quality camcorder you can, and make sure the lighting’s natural. Record sound separately, using a decent condenser microphone if possible. You can do the latter directly into Audacity, an open-source sound-editing tool. Many of the best video resumes feature a fixed shot of the subject talking about themselves to camera, but it’s still fine to use software like Windows Movie Maker to add photos and clips too.

Though making a video resume is still a fairly new idea, it’s catching on as a trend – so you’ll have to work a little bit harder to come up with something that stands out. Mike Anderson’s produced his CV in graph form – and got to the front page of Digg and almost 200,000 hits on Flickr. Then there’s Australian games designer Jarrard Woods, who launched his freelance career by building his Super Mario Bros resignation.

Just remember: this clip from the comedy series How I Met Your Mother is intended as a parody (specifically of this infamous disaster), not an inspiration. But you can try this style too if you like.

Step 10: Measure your impact

Keeping up a presence on lots of sites can be a drain on your time – so measure your success with people by measuring traffic from each site, then ditch the ones that don’t work. You can use web analytics tools like Webalizer and AWStats to see where hits to your blog or online CV are coming from. Both programs summarise referrer sites in tables for you – but there’s a lot of static to work through.

A more effective method is to encode URLs you tweet or place in social profiles with a shortening service like Bit.ly. Every time you post a shortened URL, Bit.ly will track how many clicks it generates. Create a different version of the URL for each of your social networks and you can instantly see which work best.

Tags: After Hours, application, blog, business, camera, cell, Computing, crash, desktop, directory, email, facebook, google, hash, ims, information, Internet, lighting, linkedin, microsoft, myspace, network, Networking, queries, rms, social networking, social networks, Software, space, Spam, Technology, tools, unix, web, Windows, XP, youtube
Sep 15


gt5 is a graphical alternative for command line Disk usage utility “du”. It is very useful for finding the size of each folders in your system.

$ sudo apt-get install gt5

  • displays the diskspace used by files and directories within a directory
  • optionally provides links to the files, so you can also browse them
  • displays entries with their size and the percentage of their parent

More details and usage see here

Tags: blog, directory, google, linux, space, system
Sep 06

Howto Create Bootable Ubuntu USB Pendrive : An Easy Method

Power users of Ubunto knows howto create a Bootable Ubuntu USB PenDrive. But Newbies have some confusions. From Ubuntu 8.10 onwords Ubuntu included a tool for making usb bootable. It is very simple.
USB Startup Disk creator tool

Requiremets:

1. A USB Pendrive with Minimum 700 MB

2. An Ubuntu CD or Ubuntu CD iso file.

Howto make Bootable USB


Start USB Startup Disk creator tool from System->Administration->Create a USB startup disk.


Either insert your Ubuntu CD, or click Other and browse to your ISO file. Plug in your USB drive. (You can plug USB and Put CD before running program). The software should recognize the pendrive immediately and check that there is enough free space.

Finally, you can choose whether you want your USB system to be persistent between boots( this option is good because your PenDrive will keep Your Documents and Settings in a reserved extra Space ) , or static like a live CD. By Adjusting the slider you can choose how much space Ubuntu will have on the disk to reserve, or select the Discarded on shutdown option for work like a live CD.

Now click on Make Startup Disk. and wait while the USB boot disk is created.

Now Your USB Pendrive is bootable.

Tags: blog, google, Software, space, system
Aug 04

Word processing India’s experts use Computer and special software to write, edit, print, format, and save text. In addition to these basic abilities, the latest word processors enable users to perform a variety of superior functions. Although the superior features vary among many word processing applications, most of the latest software facilitates the exchange of information between different computer applications, allows easy access to the World Wide Web for page editing and linking, and enables group of writers to work together on a common project for word processing.

Writing is talented by using the computer’s typewriter, Keyboard. Characters appear on the computer screen as they are typed. A finite number of characters can be typed across the computer screen. The word processor “knows” when the user has reached this limit and automatically moves the cursor to the next line for uninterrupted typing. The position on the computer screen where a character can be typed is marked by a blinking cursor. The cursor can be positioned anywhere on the screen by using the mouse, or the keys marked with arrows on the keyboard.

In addition to writing, the latest word processors provide tools to create and insert drawings anywhere in the document. Typical features allow users to draw lines, rectangles, circles, and arrowheads, and to add text.

Editing allows users to correct typographical errors, add new sentences or paragraphs, move entire blocks of text to a different location, delete portions of the document, copy text and paste it somewhere else in the document, or insert text or graphics from an entirely different document. Most word processing programs can automatically correct many basic typographical errors, such as misspelled words, two successive capital letters in a word, and failure to capitalize the first letter of the names of days and of the first word in a sentence. Some other helpful editing tools commonly found in word processors include an automatic spelling checker, a thesaurus, and a grammar checker.

Formatting enables users to define the appearance of the elements in a document, such as the font and type size of all headings and text, the left, right, top, and bottom margins of each page, and the space before and after sentences and paragraphs. Most word processors allow all the elements in a document to be formatted at once. This is accomplished by applying a “style.”

Word processors are approaching the formatting power of full-featured desktop publishing applications. The formatted page can be viewed on the computer screen exactly as it will be printed.

The latest word processors have many features that allow group of people to work together on the same document. For instance, multiple versions of a document can be saved to a single file for version control. Access levels can be assigned so that only a select group of people can make changes to a document. Edits can be marked with the date, time, and editor’s name; and text colors can be assigned to differentiate editors. In addition, some word processors have editing features that include highlighting text, drawing lines through text to represent deleted text, and using red underscoring to identify changed text.

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Tags: API, application, blog, Computer, desktop, information, iss, lighting, processor, Software, space, tools, web, World Wide Web, XP
Jul 23

Windows will overwrite the grub boot loader , So You cannot access Linux partition after Windows Installation.
Tools Required : Ubuntu LiveCD

First you have to boot your system with a ununtu LIVECD

Then Open a terminal ( Applications –> Accessories –> Terminal)

($sudo -i Will give # Prompt then you can avoid sudo in every command)

Now you can start
$ sudo grub this will give you a new prompt

Type the command
> find /boot/grub/stage1 This will give you a output like (hd0,2) in this case it will vary depends on your system

> root(hd0,2) ( use your hd number and there is no space between root and (hd0,2)

now type
> setup (hd0,2)

then
> quit
Now you can restart your system

Tags: application, blog, linux, partition, space, system, tools, Windows