This week's book giveaway is in the Agile and other Processes forum. We're giving away four copies of The Mikado Method and have Ola Ellnestam and Daniel Brolund on-line! See this thread for details.
Salary range: 85k - 110k/base/year Locations: San Jose & Foster City, CA and Santa Fe, NM This Fortune 500 biotech/instrumentation company which recently assisted in the breakthrough mapping of the human genome system is looking for a handful of top-notch software engineers to add to their growing development teams in Foster City, San Jose and Santa Fe, New Mexico. There are multiple openings at many different levels for all 3 facilities. Not only do they offer competitive salaries but they also offer stock options, full benefits and flex schedules for the right candidates. Following is a general description and if you have had at least 2 + years' industrial experience in commercial software development in the United States using these tools - WE WANT YOU!!! Experience/Education: BS/MS CS or equivalent. Three or more years total application development experience using Java and C++ in NT (emphasis) and Unix environments. Experience with any of the following would be a definite plus: distributed computing/EJB, biotech applications, shrink-wrap product development, application security, relational database applications, Oracle, XML. Skills: Fully proficient with Java. Must have demonstrated ability to succeed in a large program, team-oriented, product development environment; familiar with code sharing and source control tools. Excellent written and verbal communication skills. Responsibilities: Design, implement, document, and maintain software products for genetic analysis/drug discovery. Participate in a development team responsible for building a new generation information management system for biotech/pharmaceutical laboratories. Focus on design/development of distributed computing infrastructure. Software to be developed in Java on NT and Unix. Please contact Amy Stewart at headhunter3@netzero.net
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I agree. Here's the link: http://ej-technologies/jprofiler - if it wasn't for jprofiler, we would need to
run our stuff on 16 servers instead of 3.