Sunday, November 16, 2008

About Business Objects

About Business Objects



Business Objects is recognized as one of the most influential companies in IT. We're innovators, so our products and services are in sync with the needs of business today and tomorrow.


Our History


"Business Objects was born out of an idea, out of hope, and out of great motivation."

Bernard Liautaud

chairman of the board and chief strategy officer, Business Objects








Transforming Business Intelligence

Our mission is to transform the way the world works. We are not just a business intelligence company. We are in the business of helping companies become more intelligent. This is our story. (WMV, 2 min 20 sec)

Sunday, October 12, 2008

DBA Job Descriptions

 clipped from www.bestjobsca.com
Teamrecruiter.com Inc.   Database Administrator  

Job Description:

SQL SERVER Database Administrator (DBA)

Looking for a strong SQL server (2000/2005) Database Administrator (DBA). Knowledge on Analysis Server, Reporting Services and Crystal Reports.

In order to apply for this job please copy and paste the below link in address bar of you browser
https://www.stafftrak.net/ApplyOnline/teamrecruiter.web?tt=JD&jobid=000354


High Level Responsibilities:

• Assume a technical leadership role for SQL server 2000 and 2005. This is a highly visible position and a person with strong knowledge of SQL Server 2000/2005 administration and support would be a right fit.
• This role will help to define internal release and testing process and be proactively involved in the future changes made to database, hardware, availability, replication and backup strategies.
• This person would be leading the SQL server replication and backup and on-going maintenance.
• Optimize and review existing schemas and stored procedures and recommend optimizations for enhancing performance of existing platform.
• Take leadership role in monitoring available disk space and plan for the future.
• Monitor all SQL jobs and DTS package execution.
• Create and Run scripts in production environments.
• Create Reports using Reporting Services and Crystal Reports
• Monitor and support a data warehouse application running on Analysis Server.
• Manage all aspects of incident response related to internal threats
• Design, document, and promote security "best practices", policies, standards and protocols
• Provide guidance and consultation on database related questions from management, technical teams or users as required
• Maintain and increase knowledge and skills pertaining to field through training and study
• Perform projects and other duties as assigned


Experience:
• 5+ years of SQL server DBA experience preferred with at least 1 year on SQL server 2005.
• Ability to develop and modify SQL Server DTS/SSIS packages to extract, transform and load data from various sources on an on-going basis.
• Expert knowledge of Analysis server, Reporting Services, replication, log shipping, backups (local and off-site).
• Solid understanding of SQL server security administration.
• Expert performance tuning/MS SQL server development skills - SQL Profiler and Performance Monitor, SQL scripts, stored procedures, triggers, functions and transactions analysis, thorough understanding of indices and statistics (Query Optimizer).
• Comfortable working in multiple simultaneous implementations.
• Requires strong communication skills, both verbal and written, and organizational skills.
• Demonstrated aptitude towards problem root cause identification and resolutions.
• Knowledge of .NET development, XML, T-SQL Development is desirable.
• Knowledge of Microsoft SharePoint Office 2007 Administration is desirable.

  Date: October 7, 2008 City/Town:Toronto Location:ON/Toronto/GTA Wage/Salary: To be negotiated Start: 13/10/2008 Duration: Permenant Type: Full Time How to apply:through the website Company: Teamrecruiter.com Inc. Contact: Recruitment Specialist Phone: Fax:
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DBA Duties-- a job Post

Data Base Administrator and Technical Support Analyst for SQL Server 2000/2005 data base manager reporting to the Manager – Enterprise Data Management.
Responsibilities include:
• Installation, configuration and maintenance of SQL Server data base software
• Protection of the corporate data resources
- Physical and logical backup and recovery
- Access control and security administration
• Logical data base design for RDBMS in conjunction with development teams
• Physical database design, implementation and change management
• Development and production support, disaster recovery
• Application and server performance monitoring and tuning
• Storage and server capacity planning
• Interact with technical administration and application development management and staff as an expert-level client problem solver
• Develop, document and adhere to design and naming standards
• Assist application developers throughout the development life cycle
• Assist in the training of development, systems and operations personnel with database server technologies
Position Requirements
A minimum of 3 years work experience with:
• SQL Server 2000/2005 in a Data Base Administrator role
• Windows Server 2000/2003 and command scripting
• Database implementations in a SAN environment
• Data base administration, application development and design tools
- SQL Server Management Studio
- DBArtisan, ER/Win or similar
- Visual Studio, SQL, T-SQL, SQL procedures
Qualified individual must possess:
• Problem diagnosis and problem solving skills;
• Effective English language communication skills (both verbal and written);
• Good interpersonal and communication skills;
• A keen interest in learning the company's other data base technology platforms;
• An understanding of the role of technology in a business environment;
• The ability to perform as a team member and with minimal supervision;
• Experience with Information Engineering disciplines;
• Willingness to work outside business hours including weekends as required

Nice to have experience:
• Windows 2000/2003 server clusters and virtualization
• VMWare Server
• Application Developer or Data Base Administrator experience with any of:
- SQL Server 2008
- DB2 UDB V8 for Linux-UNIX-Windows
- DB2 Content Manager
- DB2 Connect EE
- DB2 for OS/390 and z/OS
- Oracle 8 or above
• Windows Server 2008
• UNIX (AIX, HP/UX, or Sun Solaris) and UNIX shell programming
• Automated backup and recovery software for data base environments:
- Tivoli Storage Manager
- SQL Backtrack
- Or similar
• Business Intelligence and Enterprise Data Warehouse applications with:
- SQL Server Analysis Services
- DB2 Data Warehouse
- Or similar
• Insurance or financial applications
• High level language application development using PL/SQL, .net, SQLJ, Java, C/C++/C#; SAS, COBOL
• CICS, Tuxedo, IIS, Websphere or similar application servers
• IBM System-i or AS/400
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Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Present Like Steve Jobs

 clipped from www.bnet.com

Present Like Steve Jobs

Apple CEO Steve Jobs is well known for his electrifying presentations. Communications coach Carmine Gallo discusses the various techniques Jobs uses to captivate and inspire his audience — techniques that can easily be applied to your next presentation. For more tips on presenting like Jobs, read our Crash Course.

Speaker: Carmine Gallo, communications skills coach and author

Length: 06:54


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Sunday, October 05, 2008

Watch out how your java program is executing

Jeliot 3 is a Program Visualization application. It visualizes how a Java program is interpreted. Method calls, variables, operation are displayed on a screen as the animation goes on, allowing the student to follow step by step the execution of a program. Programs can be created from scratch or they can be modifyed from previously stored code examples. Download Jeliot 3 for free (http://cs.joensuu.fi/jeliot ) and visualize your own Java programs.

watch the video:

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Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Internet Explorer Page Setup

 clipped from www.howtogeek.com

Print Pages in Internet Explorer 7 Without Headers or Footers

The headers and footers that always print along with the page when printing a page can be irritating. I know very well what page it was I printed, so it's not useful to me to show the URL at the bottom of the page.

If you want to turn the headers off just for a one-time print, you can use the Print Preview window, and then click the button to "Turn headers and footers on or off", shown below.

If you want to permanently turn these options off, you can use the Page Setup option instead.

Just click on Page Setup, and then you should see this dialog.

You can just remove the text in the textboxes completely in order to get rid of the headers and footers, or you can change the options to display page numbers at the bottom, or really any combination you want.

Here's a full list of the options that you can use (You could also find these in the Vista help files, or possibly the IE7 ones)

&w - Window Title

&u - Page URL

&d - Date in short format

&D - Date in long format

&t - Time in regular format as shown on the clock

&T - Time in 24-hour format

&p - Current page number

&P - Total number of pages

&b - right align the next text. (You can see it in the default header, where &b is placed before the Page text)

&b[TEXT]&b - If you surround the text in &b on either side, it will center the text.

&& - A single ampersand (&)

You can combine these in any format you want. For instance you could do this:

I printed these &P pages on &d at &t

Which would give you something like this:

I printed these 23 pages on 10/1/2007 at 2:05AM

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Mandela: His 8 Lessons of Leadership

Mandela: His 8 Lessons of Leadership

By Richard Stengel Wednesday, Jul. 09, 2008


Though Mandela has retreated from the public stage, the 90-year-old still speaks out, as he did in condemning Zimbabwe's Mugabe.

Hans Gedda / Sygma / Corbis

Nelson Mandela has always felt most at ease around children, and in some ways his greatest deprivation was that he spent 27 years without hearing a baby cry or holding a child's hand. Last month, when I visited Mandela in Johannesburg — a frailer, foggier Mandela than the one I used to know — his first instinct was to spread his arms to my two boys. Within seconds they were hugging the friendly old man who asked them what sports they liked to play and what they'd had for breakfast. While we talked, he held my son Gabriel, whose complicated middle name is Rolihlahla, Nelson Mandela's real first name. He told Gabriel the story of that name, how in Xhosa it translates as "pulling down the branch of a tree" but that its real meaning is "troublemaker."


 

Top of Form


 

Bottom of Form

As he celebrates his 90th birthday next week, Nelson Mandela has made enough trouble for several lifetimes. He liberated a country from a system of violent prejudice and helped unite white and black, oppressor and oppressed, in a way that had never been done before. In the 1990s I worked with Mandela for almost two years on his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom. After all that time spent in his company, I felt a terrible sense of withdrawal when the book was done; it was like the sun going out of one's life. We have seen each other occasionally over the years, but I wanted to make what might be a final visit and have my sons meet him one more time.

I also wanted to talk to him about leadership. Mandela is the closest thing the world has to a secular saint, but he would be the first to admit that he is something far more pedestrian: a politician. He overthrew apartheid and created a nonracial democratic South Africa by knowing precisely when and how to transition between his roles as warrior, martyr, diplomat and statesman. Uncomfortable with abstract philosophical concepts, he would often say to me that an issue "was not a question of principle; it was a question of tactics." He is a master tactician.

Mandela is no longer comfortable with inquiries or favors. He's fearful that he may not be able to summon what people expect when they visit a living deity, and vain enough to care that they not think him diminished. But the world has never needed Mandela's gifts — as a tactician, as an activist and, yes, as a politician — more, as he showed again in London on June 25, when he rose to condemn the savagery of Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe. As we enter the main stretch of a historic presidential campaign in America, there is much that he can teach the two candidates. I've always thought of what you are about to read as Madiba's Rules (Madiba, his clan name, is what everyone close to him calls him), and they are cobbled together from our conversations old and new and from observing him up close and from afar. They are mostly practical. Many of them stem directly from his personal experience. All of them are calibrated to cause the best kind of trouble: the trouble that forces us to ask how we can make the world a better place.

No. 1
Courage is not the absence of fear — it's inspiring others to move beyond it
In 1994, during the presidential-election campaign, Mandela got on a tiny propeller plane to fly down to the killing fields of Natal and give a speech to his Zulu supporters. I agreed to meet him at the airport, where we would continue our work after his speech. When the plane was 20 minutes from landing, one of its engines failed. Some on the plane began to panic. The only thing that calmed them was looking at Mandela, who quietly read his newspaper as if he were a commuter on his morning train to the office. The airport prepared for an emergency landing, and the pilot managed to land the plane safely. When Mandela and I got in the backseat of his bulletproof BMW that would take us to the rally, he turned to me and said, "Man, I was terrified up there!"

Mandela was often afraid during his time underground, during the Rivonia trial that led to his imprisonment, during his time on Robben Island. "Of course I was afraid!" he would tell me later. It would have been irrational, he suggested, not to be. "I can't pretend that I'm brave and that I can beat the whole world." But as a leader, you cannot let people know. "You must put up a front."

And that's precisely what he learned to do: pretend and, through the act of appearing fearless, inspire others. It was a pantomime Mandela perfected on Robben Island, where there was much to fear. Prisoners who were with him said watching Mandela walk across the courtyard, upright and proud, was enough to keep them going for days. He knew that he was a model for others, and that gave him the strength to triumph over his own fear.

No. 2
Lead from the front — but don't leave your base behind
Mandela is cagey. in 1985 he was operated on for an enlarged prostate. When he was returned to prison, he was separated from his colleagues and friends for the first time in 21 years. They protested. But as his longtime friend Ahmed Kathrada recalls, he said to them, "Wait a minute, chaps. Some good may come of this."

The good that came of it was that Mandela on his own launched negotiations with the apartheid government. This was anathema to the African National Congress (ANC). After decades of saying "prisoners cannot negotiate" and after advocating an armed struggle that would bring the government to its knees, he decided that the time was right to begin to talk to his oppressors.

When he initiated his negotiations with the government in 1985, there were many who thought he had lost it. "We thought he was selling out," says Cyril Ramaphosa, then the powerful and fiery leader of the National Union of Mineworkers. "I went to see him to tell him, What are you doing? It was an unbelievable initiative. He took a massive risk."

Mandela launched a campaign to persuade the ANC that his was the correct course. His reputation was on the line. He went to each of his comrades in prison, Kathrada remembers, and explained what he was doing. Slowly and deliberately, he brought them along. "You take your support base along with you," says Ramaphosa, who was secretary-general of the ANC and is now a business mogul. "Once you arrive at the beachhead, then you allow the people to move on. He's not a bubble-gum leader — chew it now and throw it away."

For Mandela, refusing to negotiate was about tactics, not principles. Throughout his life, he has always made that distinction. His unwavering principle — the overthrow of apartheid and the achievement of one man, one vote — was immutable, but almost anything that helped him get to that goal he regarded as a tactic. He is the most pragmatic of idealists.

"He's a historical man," says Ramaphosa. "He was thinking way ahead of us. He has posterity in mind: How will they view what we've done?" Prison gave him the ability to take the long view. It had to; there was no other view possible. He was thinking in terms of not days and weeks but decades. He knew history was on his side, that the result was inevitable; it was just a question of how soon and how it would be achieved. "Things will be better in the long run," he sometimes said. He always played for the long run.

No. 3
Lead from the back — and let others believe they are in front
Mandela loved to reminisce about his boyhood and his lazy afternoons herding cattle. "You know," he would say, "you can only lead them from behind." He would then raise his eyebrows to make sure I got the analogy.

As a boy, Mandela was greatly influenced by Jongintaba, the tribal king who raised him. When Jongintaba had meetings of his court, the men gathered in a circle, and only after all had spoken did the king begin to speak. The chief's job, Mandela said, was not to tell people what to do but to form a consensus. "Don't enter the debate too early," he used to say.

During the time I worked with Mandela, he often called meetings of his kitchen cabinet at his home in Houghton, a lovely old suburb of Johannesburg. He would gather half a dozen men, Ramaphosa, Thabo Mbeki (who is now the South African President) and others around the dining-room table or sometimes in a circle in his driveway. Some of his colleagues would shout at him — to move faster, to be more radical — and Mandela would simply listen. When he finally did speak at those meetings, he slowly and methodically summarized everyone's points of view and then unfurled his own thoughts, subtly steering the decision in the direction he wanted without imposing it. The trick of leadership is allowing yourself to be led too. "It is wise," he said, "to persuade people to do things and make them think it was their own idea."

No. 4
Know your enemy — and learn about his favorite sport
As far back as the 1960s, Mandela began studying Afrikaans, the language of the white South Africans who created apartheid. His comrades in the ANC teased him about it, but he wanted to understand the Afrikaner's worldview; he knew that one day he would be fighting them or negotiating with them, and either way, his destiny was tied to theirs.

This was strategic in two senses: by speaking his opponents' language, he might understand their strengths and weaknesses and formulate tactics accordingly. But he would also be ingratiating himself with his enemy. Everyone from ordinary jailers to P.W. Botha was impressed by Mandela's willingness to speak Afrikaans and his knowledge of Afrikaner history. He even brushed up on his knowledge of rugby, the Afrikaners' beloved sport, so he would be able to compare notes on teams and players.

Mandela understood that blacks and Afrikaners had something fundamental in common: Afrikaners believed themselves to be Africans as deeply as blacks did. He knew, too, that Afrikaners had been the victims of prejudice themselves: the British government and the white English settlers looked down on them. Afrikaners suffered from a cultural inferiority complex almost as much as blacks did.

Mandela was a lawyer, and in prison he helped the warders with their legal problems. They were far less educated and worldly than he, and it was extraordinary to them that a black man was willing and able to help them. These were "the most ruthless and brutal of the apartheid regime's characters," says Allister Sparks, the great South African historian, and he "realized that even the worst and crudest could be negotiated with."

No. 5
Keep your friends close — and your rivals even closer
Many of the guests Mandela invited to the house he built in Qunu were people whom, he intimated to me, he did not wholly trust. He had them to dinner; he called to consult with them; he flattered them and gave them gifts. Mandela is a man of invincible charm — and he has often used that charm to even greater effect on his rivals than on his allies.

On Robben Island, Mandela would always include in his brain trust men he neither liked nor relied on. One person he became close to was Chris Hani, the fiery chief of staff of the ANC's military wing. There were some who thought Hani was conspiring against Mandela, but Mandela cozied up to him. "It wasn't just Hani," says Ramaphosa. "It was also the big industrialists, the mining families, the opposition. He would pick up the phone and call them on their birthdays. He would go to family funerals. He saw it as an opportunity." When Mandela emerged from prison, he famously included his jailers among his friends and put leaders who had kept him in prison in his first Cabinet. Yet I well knew that he despised some of these men.

There were times he washed his hands of people — and times when, like so many people of great charm, he allowed himself to be charmed. Mandela initially developed a quick rapport with South African President F.W. de Klerk, which is why he later felt so betrayed when De Klerk attacked him in public.

Mandela believed that embracing his rivals was a way of controlling them: they were more dangerous on their own than within his circle of influence. He cherished loyalty, but he was never obsessed by it. After all, he used to say, "people act in their own interest." It was simply a fact of human nature, not a flaw or a defect. The flip side of being an optimist — and he is one — is trusting people too much. But Mandela recognized that the way to deal with those he didn't trust was to neutralize them with charm.

No. 6
Appearances matter — and remember to smile
When Mandela was a poor law student in Johannesburg wearing his one threadbare suit, he was taken to see Walter Sisulu. Sisulu was a real estate agent and a young leader of the ANC. Mandela saw a sophisticated and successful black man whom he could emulate. Sisulu saw the future.

Sisulu once told me that his great quest in the 1950s was to turn the ANC into a mass movement; and then one day, he recalled with a smile, "a mass leader walked into my office." Mandela was tall and handsome, an amateur boxer who carried himself with the regal air of a chief's son. And he had a smile that was like the sun coming out on a cloudy day.

We sometimes forget the historical correlation between leadership and physicality. George Washington was the tallest and probably the strongest man in every room he entered. Size and strength have more to do with DNA than with leadership manuals, but Mandela understood how his appearance could advance his cause. As leader of the ANC's underground military wing, he insisted that he be photographed in the proper fatigues and with a beard, and throughout his career he has been concerned about dressing appropriately for his position. George Bizos, his lawyer, remembers that he first met Mandela at an Indian tailor's shop in the 1950s and that Mandela was the first black South African he had ever seen being fitted for a suit. Now Mandela's uniform is a series of exuberant-print shirts that declare him the joyous grandfather of modern Africa.

When Mandela was running for the presidency in 1994, he knew that symbols mattered as much as substance. He was never a great public speaker, and people often tuned out what he was saying after the first few minutes. But it was the iconography that people understood. When he was on a platform, he would always do the toyi-toyi, the township dance that was an emblem of the struggle. But more important was that dazzling, beatific, all-inclusive smile. For white South Africans, the smile symbolized Mandela's lack of bitterness and suggested that he was sympathetic to them. To black voters, it said, I am the happy warrior, and we will triumph. The ubiquitous ANC election poster was simply his smiling face. "The smile," says Ramaphosa, "was the message."

After he emerged from prison, people would say, over and over, It is amazing that he is not bitter. There are a thousand things Nelson Mandela was bitter about, but he knew that more than anything else, he had to project the exact opposite emotion. He always said, "Forget the past" — but I knew he never did.

No. 7
Nothing is black or white
When we began our series of interviews, I would often ask Mandela questions like this one: When you decided to suspend the armed struggle, was it because you realized you did not have the strength to overthrow the government or because you knew you could win over international opinion by choosing nonviolence? He would then give me a curious glance and say, "Why not both?"

I did start asking smarter questions, but the message was clear: Life is never either/or. Decisions are complex, and there are always competing factors. To look for simple explanations is the bias of the human brain, but it doesn't correspond to reality. Nothing is ever as straightforward as it appears.

Mandela is comfortable with contradiction. As a politician, he was a pragmatist who saw the world as infinitely nuanced. Much of this, I believe, came from living as a black man under an apartheid system that offered a daily regimen of excruciating and debilitating moral choices: Do I defer to the white boss to get the job I want and avoid a punishment? Do I carry my pass?

As a statesman, Mandela was uncommonly loyal to Muammar Gaddafi and Fidel Castro. They had helped the ANC when the U.S. still branded Mandela as a terrorist. When I asked him about Gaddafi and Castro, he suggested that Americans tend to see things in black and white, and he would upbraid me for my lack of nuance. Every problem has many causes. While he was indisputably and clearly against apartheid, the causes of apartheid were complex. They were historical, sociological and psychological. Mandela's calculus was always, What is the end that I seek, and what is the most practical way to get there?

No. 8
Quitting is leading too
In 1993, Mandela asked me if I knew of any countries where the minimum voting age was under 18. I did some research and presented him with a rather undistinguished list: Indonesia, Cuba, Nicaragua, North Korea and Iran. He nodded and uttered his highest praise: "Very good, very good." Two weeks later, Mandela went on South African television and proposed that the voting age be lowered to 14. "He tried to sell us the idea," recalls Ramaphosa, "but he was the only [supporter]. And he had to face the reality that it would not win the day. He accepted it with great humility. He doesn't sulk. That was also a lesson in leadership."

Knowing how to abandon a failed idea, task or relationship is often the most difficult kind of decision a leader has to make. In many ways, Mandela's greatest legacy as President of South Africa is the way he chose to leave it. When he was elected in 1994, Mandela probably could have pressed to be President for life — and there were many who felt that in return for his years in prison, that was the least South Africa could do.

In the history of Africa, there have been only a handful of democratically elected leaders who willingly stood down from office. Mandela was determined to set a precedent for all who followed him — not only in South Africa but across the rest of the continent. He would be the anti-Mugabe, the man who gave birth to his country and refused to hold it hostage. "His job was to set the course," says Ramaphosa, "not to steer the ship." He knows that leaders lead as much by what they choose not to do as what they do.

Ultimately, the key to understanding Mandela is those 27 years in prison. The man who walked onto Robben Island in 1964 was emotional, headstrong, easily stung. The man who emerged was balanced and disciplined. He is not and never has been introspective. I often asked him how the man who emerged from prison differed from the willful young man who had entered it. He hated this question. Finally, in exasperation one day, he said, "I came out mature." There is nothing so rare — or so valuable — as a mature man.

Interview with Enrique Penalosa

Sunday, September 21, 2008

MagicJack VOIP Adapter

 clipped from www.themagicjack.ca






With magicJack™, you can experience calling freedom with unlimited local and long distance calls to anyone in the U.S. and Canada (landline or cell phones). Plus, you can call any magicJack™ enabled phone for free, allowing family or friends outside of North America with a magicJack™ to be able to call you for free. All that is required is the magicJack™ unit, and an internet connection. It also accepts incoming calls! By giving out your personal magicJack™ phone number, your friends and family can all you anytime your magicJack is turned on. The magicJack™ is perfect for travelling or students in college or university. Learn more about the features.


TheMagicJack.ca does not support orders from MagicJack.com: TheMagicJack.ca is a Canadian distributor. We only provide service and support to authorized purchases from customers who have purchased through our THEMAGICJACK.CA store. THEMAGICJACK.CA's affiliation with magicjack.com is limited to Authorization by magicjack.com to resell the Magic Jack product and to manage the magicJack Reseller Agreement Program in Canada. THEMAGICJACK.CA has been directly authorized by Magic Jack LP and YMAX Corporation to provide this Authorization.




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Friday, August 29, 2008

No Job Seeker wants to be asked about...

 clipped from www.kalaajkal.com
 Article Title :: 3 Questions No Job Seeker Ever Wants To Be Asked?  

Employer and interviewers expect you to answer tough question during interviews. Take a few minutes to brainstorm on how you might elaborate on the following answers. The answers you give to these questions that will be asked during your interview will be very important in your career prospects.

Suppose you were asked these questions right now. Could you give a good answer? If not, study, study, study.

1. "Can you explain why you've been out of work so long?"

Mothers usually have an easier time with this one than others do because the reason for long unemployment can almost always be related to raising the family. However, if you were just traveling or not looking for work very much, it's more difficult.

"I felt that before I settled into a career job I had better get some personal travel out of the way. So, I traveled all over the country as a sort of self-education. The travel bug is out of my system and I'm ready to start on that career."

"I held many jobs before this long period of having no job. I decided I didn't want to settle for just any job again, so I pretty much stopped looking while I identified what I really wanted to do as a career. I am convinced working for you fits my career plans very well."

2. "Do you know anything about our company?"

Hopefully, you will have done some homework and will know something about the company, but if you don't, you should be prepared to say something other than "no", and indicate interest in knowing "more". Highlight their services, products and or revenues.

"Not as much as I would like to. I understand that you are a very large firm, which indicates success and advancement potential. Where are your plants located besides here?"

"Well, you certainly have a reputation for being a leading force in the local economy."

3. "I've interviewed several people with more experience than you. Why should I hire you instead of them?"

This question can appear in many different forms (as can most of the others). Beware of passing judgment on others because you don't know them and you might be starting an argument, at least in the employer's mind. Also, steer clear of answering from a selfish point of view. Instead, refer to the job candidate you do know (you), and give some indication of what the employer stands to gain by hiring you.

"I can't speak for the others, but I can for myself. I can assure you that I always learn new assignments very rapidly, and I think that may have the advantage of not having to unlearn someone else's way of doing things before learning how to do them your way."

"I'm sure it would be very hard for you to find someone who could beat my eagerness and capacity for work."

Tip: Don't concern yourself with trying to memorize each answer to every possible interview question. Each answer you give will be unique to you. Use these questions as a guide for your practice sessions with your team members.

Have a family member or close friend sit down with you and "grill" you with each of these questions. You can not simply read these questions to yourself or study them alone. You must participate in multiple mock interview sessions with someone acting as the interviewer.

If possible, have these sessions audio or video taped so that you can hear and/or see answers that you stumble over or questions that you do not clearly respond to. Also, with video, you will notice certain gestures and body language that might be distracting to the interviewer that you might not notice by practicing alone.

REMEMBER: The interviewer is not just listening for how you answer the question but also, how you present your case and the image you project.

Brian Stephenson is the author of, "Job Search Boot Camp", the most hard-hitting, step-by-step job search course that takes each student by the hand and shows them how to beat the odds and have great interviews that lead to job offers. Also, imagine if you could create powerful resumes that get results, stunning cover letters that command interviews, and winning interview thank you letters that get you hired? Consider for a moment what is possible for you if you had access to these forbidden secrets. For more information on the Job Search Boot Camp course, visit http://www.JobSearchBootCamp.com

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How to Remove Vista and install Windows XP

 clipped from www.removevista.com
REMOVE VISTA .com


Remove Vista and install another operating system (e.g. XP)


In this case you only have installed Windows Vista on your computer, or you've bought a new computer with Vista already installed on it. When some of your hardware or software may not function properly under Vista, you might want to remove it, and install e.g. XP instead.

Don't forget to make a backup as there are some risks with removing Vista!

This is what you need:

- Windows XP installation CD
- MS Dos environment boot disk (more info)

This is what you should do:

1. Start your computer with the Windows XP installation CD in your CDROM drive (note: you may have to change your BIOS settings to give priority to loading your CDROM drive instead of your hard drive!)
2. In the setup type R to repair an existing installation
3. Enter "fixboot C:\" (where C:\ is your Vista root, replace C with any other letter if applicable)
4. Enter "fixmbr C:\"
5. Enter "EXIT"
6. Then close the Windows XP setup and restart your computer with the bootable floppy or CD
7. At the command prompt type format C:\ (note: all data on C:\ will be removed, so make sure you've made a backup before doing this!)
8. Now restart your computer with the Windows XP installation CD in your CDROM drive
9. Install Windows XP as usual

This should remove your Windows Vista installation and make XP the default operating system.

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Dealing with Ambiguity

 clipped from www.mftrou.com

Managing Ambiguity - dealing successfully with uncertain situations

By Lyndsay Swinton

Managing ambiguity or uncertainty is a key life skill...

  • Why is it that some of life's challenges make us, while others are destined to break us?

  • Does success depend on the nature of the challenge or is it more related to our personal approach?
  Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

Mftrou recommends the audiobook 'Getting Things Done'

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Our ability to deal effectively with uncertain situations or "managing ambiguity" is a life skill that is gaining recognition, mostly stemming from Daniel Goleman's work on Emotional Intelligence. Let's take a look at what managing ambiguity is all about.

Go Ask A Fortune-Teller

Every second of every day, someone, somewhere will be moving house, switching careers, or dealing with some other significant life change. Even fortune-tellers can't predict how things are going to turn out, so you have to get comfortable with not knowing precisely what is going to happen. That's managing ambiguity!

Handle challenges better by keeping your thinking crystal-clear

The problem is when we get anxious our ability to think clearly gets worse. So the key is to manage anxiety levels and have loads of spare mental capacity to deal with the unexpected.

Take a moment to consider this relationship;

ANXIETY = IMPORTANCE x UNCERTAINTY

If something is very important to us, we will wish dearly for success and have some emotional attachment to the outcome of the challenge.

If something is uncertain and the outcome not guaranteed, we lose sleep worrying about what is going to happen.

Both of these are likely to give us more anxiety.

Here's a table to better explain the relationship between Anxiety, Importance and Uncertainty, or Ambiguity.

A nasty pair

The toughest combination is when something is both important and uncertain. Will I sell my house? Am I going to be made redundant? We need to lower our anxiety levels wherever possible by taking a good hard look at the importance and uncertainty associated with the challenge.

Assessing the challenge

How important is it?

The level of importance is something that you and only you can determine. Take a moment to stop and think – do I really, truly care about this? On a scale of 1-10, is this life threateningly important (10) or something altogether more trivial (1)? Sometimes we lose perspective on what is actually important to us, and inadvertently fuel our own anxiety. What you think may be an 8 is actually a 4 when you take time to think clearly about it.

What's the outcome?

A situation is uncertain when there are a multitude of outcomes, not all of them desirable. Build up your tolerance for ambiguity by remembering that even in the toughest situation, there are always two sound principles you can rely on.

Principle 1 – you can always control your response to a situation. Your reaction is your choice.

Principle 2 – recognising what you can and can't control will increase the likelihood of a successful outcome and lower your anxiety.

Think clearly about each of the possible outcomes? List all of them, even the scary ones that only crop up in the dead of the night. So you are made redundant – there is plenty you can do to make the most of that situation. Maybe the cheque will fund that teaching qualification you've always dreamt of?

Sort it out or fugeddaboudit

Take each outcome in turn and figure out how likely it is to happen, and what you can actively do to influence it. When you're done, you'll have a comprehensive action plan, bettering your chance of success. So even if the worst thing does happen, you've already done something to lessen the impact and know what you can do next.

And for all the things you can't control or influence, forget them. Write them down and then scrunch up the paper and throw it away. At some point you have to let go.

Challengers Ready!

Managing ambiguity can be learned and improved with practice. Be more successful and rise to the challenge by;

• Understanding the relationship between anxiety, importance and uncertainty.

• Managing your anxiety and increasing your spare capacity by learning relaxation techniques.

• Deepening your understanding by using the clear thinking approach with a colleague, partner or friend.

Managed well, uncertainty can be exciting rather than frightening. Keep your thinking clear and ambiguity can be your friend.

By Lyndsay Swinton
Owner, Management for the Rest of Us
www.mftrou.com

  Download 'Managing Ambiguity' in pdf format

Citation Information: Swinton, Lyndsay. "Managing Ambiguity - dealing successfully with uncertain situations." Mftrou.com. 13 September 2005. < http://www.mftrou.com/managing-ambiguity.html >.

Further Resources: Download Motivation At Work Hypnosis mp3

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