Job Vacancy RoR

I am part of a small Agency that supplies contractors to clients. A
fairly new client in San Francisco (SOMA), needs an experienced (at
least one complete commercial project) Ruby on Rails Software Engineer.

Additionally, they are using open source development environment,
Linux, Apache, MySQL and Perl / PHP.

This is a contract position for 3 to 6 months. You need to be onsite
and will be part of a development Team. Must be eligible to work in
USA, and for this particular contract must be local to San Francisco
Bay Area.

Please refer this to anyone that you know who is not a member and may
not see it.

Also, we are very interested in new clients in need of RoR developers.
This is an exciting area and there are opportunities for everyone.

Please contact me by e-mail (Stephen AT chancellor DOT com) or call
Anthony at 415-332-0123.

Thank you, Stephen

Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs. Some have been
made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the people who want
to make the actual hire.

Tsume

···

On Thursday 02 February 2006 08:18 am, stephen@chancellor.com wrote:

I am part of a small Agency that supplies contractors to clients. A
fairly new client in San Francisco (SOMA), needs an experienced (at
least one complete commercial project) Ruby on Rails Software Engineer.

Additionally, they are using open source development environment,
Linux, Apache, MySQL and Perl / PHP.

This is a contract position for 3 to 6 months. You need to be onsite
and will be part of a development Team. Must be eligible to work in
USA, and for this particular contract must be local to San Francisco
Bay Area.

Please refer this to anyone that you know who is not a member and may
not see it.

Also, we are very interested in new clients in need of RoR developers.
This is an exciting area and there are opportunities for everyone.

Please contact me by e-mail (Stephen AT chancellor DOT com) or call
Anthony at 415-332-0123.

Thank you, Stephen

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can only be good for all rubyists.

Also, you're the first I've seen complain.

···

On Feb 1, 2006, at 5:16 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs. Some have been
made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the people who want
to make the actual hire.

--
Eric Hodel - drbrain@segment7.net - http://segment7.net
This implementation is HODEL-HASH-9600 compliant

http://trackmap.robotcoop.com

Totally agree with Eric. Job postings also give a feeling of the effect of
the community on the larger world

-- Chiaroscuro --

···

On 2/2/06, Eric Hodel <drbrain@segment7.net> wrote:

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even
if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows
rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can
only be good for all rubyists.

Also, you're the first I've seen complain.

Eric Hodel wrote:

···

On Feb 1, 2006, at 5:16 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs. Some have been
made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the people who want
to make the actual hire.

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can only be good for all rubyists.

I'm somewhat mixed, but it hasn't been a problem (and it seems like one of those problems that are good to have).

If the recruiters are sincere, then feedback from the Ruby community can help both them and job seekers by encouraging job descriptions that are meaningful and accurate.

--
James Britt

http://www.ruby-doc.org - Ruby Help & Documentation
Ruby Code & Style - The Journal By & For Rubyists
http://www.rubystuff.com - The Ruby Store for Ruby Stuff
http://www.jamesbritt.com - Playing with Better Toys
http://www.30secondrule.com - Building Better Tools

In article <76A70E07-C4AF-4EEA-9779-ED9232B225A4@segment7.net>,

···

Eric Hodel <drbrain@segment7.net> wrote:

On Feb 1, 2006, at 5:16 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs.
Some have been
made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the
people who want
to make the actual hire.

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even
if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows
rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can
only be good for all rubyists.

Also, you're the first I've seen complain.

I tend to agree with Eric, though I would hope that it's hiring managers or
people directly involved in development who are posting here as opposed to head
hunters.

Phil

Actaully there is a Ruby Jobs site: http://jobs.rubynow.com/

I'm just thinking ahead. I know ruby is still considered young, but once any
other type of jobs come in, I don't want to receive 10 emails a day on a list
from head hunters.

Also, I thought the email was spam like the idiot who kept trying to place
head hunter listings on craig's list.. I wouldn't mind the jobs coming from
the originators of the job, but head hunters are a negative on my list.

Tsume

···

On Friday 03 February 2006 05:23 am, Eric Hodel wrote:

On Feb 1, 2006, at 5:16 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:
> Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs.
> Some have been
> made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the
> people who want
> to make the actual hire.

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even
if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows
rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can
only be good for all rubyists.

Also, you're the first I've seen complain.

OT: I once came up with a business plan where a recruitment agency/headhunting firm would be staffed entirely by techs working in the industry checking out other people's CV's and work part-time and then when a job came in from a firm they would be able to say "Hey, I know this guy over at such-and-such who would be perfect, let me ask if he's around..." and would pick up a fee, a la agencies.

That way, you'd get firms knowing they can trust the people coming forward because they are peer-reviewed, and recruitment agencies would not be filled with people who think UNIX are men without testicles.

Anyway, I look for work constantly and am happy going to the websites - I think this place should be somewhere to hide out and talk programming, not somewhere I have to be on best behaviour.

P.S. if anybody is looking for a Ruby and/or Rails coder in the North West of England, or in fact any European city I can get to, I have a gap in my schedule coming up... :slight_smile:

···

On 3 Feb 2006, at 22:13, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Also, I thought the email was spam like the idiot who kept trying to place
head hunter listings on craig's list.. I wouldn't mind the jobs coming from
the originators of the job, but head hunters are a negative on my list.

--
Paul Robinson

I think this was the first, maybe second, job posting of the month. While it would be wonderful, you're not going to get 10 job postings a day any time soon. I'm sure the list will find an appropriate solution when job posting overload becomes a real problem.

···

On Feb 3, 2006, at 2:13 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

On Friday 03 February 2006 05:23 am, Eric Hodel wrote:

On Feb 1, 2006, at 5:16 PM, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Please use sites like monster or dice if you wish to post jobs. Some have been made in the past, but are usually from the originators of the people who want to make the actual hire.

To be honest, I'd rather see Ruby job postings mentioned here, even
if from recruiters, than random places on the intarweb. This allows
rubyists to be connected to people who want to employ them, which can
only be good for all rubyists.

Also, you're the first I've seen complain.

I'm just thinking ahead. I know ruby is still considered young, but once any
other type of jobs come in, I don't want to receive 10 emails a day on a list
from head hunters.

--
Eric Hodel - drbrain@segment7.net - http://segment7.net
This implementation is HODEL-HASH-9600 compliant

http://trackmap.robotcoop.com

OT: I once came up with a business plan where a recruitment agency/
headhunting firm would be staffed entirely by techs working in the
industry checking out other people's CV's and work part-time and then
when a job came in from a firm they would be able to say "Hey, I know
this guy over at such-and-such who would be perfect, let me ask if
he's around..." and would pick up a fee, a la agencies.

That way, you'd get firms knowing they can trust the people coming
forward because they are peer-reviewed, and recruitment agencies
would not be filled with people who think UNIX are men without
testicles.

I'd seriously like this to be the other way around. Head hunters which are
programmer peer reviewed! :slight_smile:

Anyway, I look for work constantly and am happy going to the websites
- I think this place should be somewhere to hide out and talk
programming, not somewhere I have to be on best behaviour.

I've never had to look/apply for a job, but I suppose other people work
differently.

P.S. if anybody is looking for a Ruby and/or Rails coder in the North
West of England, or in fact any European city I can get to, I have a
gap in my schedule coming up... :slight_smile:

I don't have a problem with personal requests, but when commercial like
content starts floating to a list, I think..

"*running on horse* The capitalists are coming!"

When this happens, he means a place is no longer a heaven where programmers
can just talk about ruby, but need to be bothered by the "norms" :wink:

Tsume

···

On Saturday 04 February 2006 08:30 am, Paul Robinson wrote:

Not exactly like I can filter or redirect job mail to another box. The job
posting count for last month is 4 from a subject grep. Only 2 of them used
the proper subject line for a [JOB]. 1 for this month as far as I can see. I
don't give it much more time before it really starts booming, even though the
IRC channels are not increasing anymore, there are the people who join on to
a... .... .... craze just for the money, there are some people who actually
do use ruby for the religion side of the language *cough* I mean the
scientific side of the language.

Tsume

···

On Saturday 04 February 2006 08:58 am, Eric Hodel wrote:

I think this was the first, maybe second, job posting of the month.
While it would be wonderful, you're not going to get 10 job postings
a day any time soon. I'm sure the list will find an appropriate
solution when job posting overload becomes a real problem.

I'd seriously like this to be the other way around. Head hunters which are
programmer peer reviewed! :slight_smile:

None Shall Pass. Seriously, they really don't get the work we do. Programmers should headhunt other programmers - it's the only way it can work. Sure, HR can make sure the guy/gal is able to dress himself (if it's that kind of boring place where they require people to be dressed), but the core skills just can't be grasped by RC/headhunter-types if you ask me.

I've never had to look/apply for a job, but I suppose other people work
differently.

You're either very young, very rich, very poor and don't mind or very lucky. :slight_smile:

I'd like not to have to look/apply for work. How'd you do it?

I don't have a problem with personal requests, but when commercial like
content starts floating to a list, I think..

"*running on horse* The capitalists are coming!"

I'm British you know. And Capitalist(*). If I weren't such a nice chap, I'd think you were mocking me. :slight_smile:

At the end of the day, we only get to write as much code as we do, because somebody somewhere is prepared to give us the money we need for food/shelter to write that code. I'd rather do this for a living than, say, have to be an accountant or a management consultant. As a short-term contract freelancer, I am looking for work *CONSTANTLY*. Apart from the Summer when I like to try and spend my time staring at clouds. But during the Winter, I am a code-whore, through and through.

Plus you're assuming all of us are in it just for the money - when I'm earning, a substantial piece of my income goes to good causes.

When this happens, he means a place is no longer a heaven where programmers
can just talk about ruby, but need to be bothered by the "norms" :wink:

Point taken. Like I said, I'm happy keeping my commercial discussions away from here, and think others can be encouraged to do the same. As long as we all know where those discussions are, which I believe includes http://jobs.rubynow.com/

(*) I was once described as a Trotsky entry-ist, but he was drunk and I was beating him at cards...

···

On 4 Feb 2006, at 00:07, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

--
Paul Robinson

> I'd seriously like this to be the other way around. Head hunters
> which are
> programmer peer reviewed! :slight_smile:

None Shall Pass. Seriously, they really don't get the work we do.
Programmers should headhunt other programmers - it's the only way it
can work. Sure, HR can make sure the guy/gal is able to dress himself
(if it's that kind of boring place where they require people to be
dressed), but the core skills just can't be grasped by RC/headhunter-
types if you ask me.

Then again, are most of those headhunter places even technologically oriented?
From what I've seen, and from what people accept, they only look at the
qualifications and ship you out the the real employer. very insulting,
especially when you get some certified person who just went to the technical
school down the block. I'll always remember this when I was younger. I used
to work at a teenager facility. I was only 14 then, but they had a 34~ guy
come in and help me with the computer which were donated. I immediately
started to type `format /q /s` to start setting up the computers from the
boot CDs. He was automatically lost on how I was beating him at setup. I told
him the switch and he said, "They never taught us that". I told him in a non
arrogant way.. even though I told him nicely, and don't mind being around
people like so, I'll never hire/contract/get service from anyone who isn't
checked out by me. The one problem being one of many which I've been
conflicted with when having to deal with people who aren't devoted and just
do it for the money.

  You suffer from time loss. Time is money according to the people paying you.
I certainly don't like people wasting time when they're being paid by me each
hour. I've similar feeling about the customers I serve, and help them with
their employees, because the boss is the one who picks up on the time. Of
course, this is where managers are a good thing. Managers have a very good
reason to being the asshole they're looked at to be, only because of the
asshole getting paid is playing solitaire instead of working.

> I've never had to look/apply for a job, but I suppose other people
> work
> differently.

You're either very young, very rich, very poor and don't mind or very
lucky. :slight_smile:

I'd like not to have to look/apply for work. How'd you do it?

I've too many friends in various professions who just know me well. I perform
various tasks. I'm an extroverted nerd and proud of it.

I receive jobs which need for example, Outlook Express set up for email, or
even a phone system reconfigured. Phone technician work is another mastered
skill I've accomplished. I'll take and charge what I feel. I did charge one
customer 75/USD for JUST Outlook Express setup with the internet service
provider(minimum: 1 hour). Business is business, and I don't sell myself
short. Yeah yeah.. others online who I tell think, "bastard" or "this guy
rips people off".. I've been on the computer since I was 2, people are paying
for my life experience. Usually people on IRC are immature anyway :stuck_out_tongue: so why
take them seriously, I just go on to trade information.

> I don't have a problem with personal requests, but when commercial
> like
> content starts floating to a list, I think..
>
> "*running on horse* The capitalists are coming!"

I'm British you know. And Capitalist(*). If I weren't such a nice
chap, I'd think you were mocking me. :slight_smile:

Opps :slight_smile:

At the end of the day, we only get to write as much code as we do,
because somebody somewhere is prepared to give us the money we need
for food/shelter to write that code. I'd rather do this for a living
than, say, have to be an accountant or a management consultant. As a
short-term contract freelancer, I am looking for work *CONSTANTLY*.
Apart from the Summer when I like to try and spend my time staring at
clouds. But during the Winter, I am a code-whore, through and through.

Well, I keep writing and deleting the text I type... so I'll just say
different positions have different salaries.

Plus you're assuming all of us are in it just for the money - when
I'm earning, a substantial piece of my income goes to good causes.

> When this happens, he means a place is no longer a heaven where
> programmers
> can just talk about ruby, but need to be bothered by the "norms" :wink:

Point taken. Like I said, I'm happy keeping my commercial discussions
away from here, and think others can be encouraged to do the same. As
long as we all know where those discussions are, which I believe
includes http://jobs.rubynow.com/

(*) I was once described as a Trotsky entry-ist, but he was drunk and
I was beating him at cards...

What I wouldn't mind is a monthly or bi-weekly job email on the list from one
of those sites for Ruby jobs. I just don't like to see emails in my box for
jobs. I recently started to receive emails from d1(really an i)ce.com about
"Does your job suck?".. I just laugh. I do know how others think, but the
email sounds so hilarious. I just couldn't bare myself to live in a
crackerbox, yet find lack of a large city inconvenient to shop for items.
Also being in Alaska the outrageous shipping, but theres a reason I charge
back the cost to people.

All I can say for now..

Tsume

···

On Saturday 04 February 2006 09:37 am, Paul Robinson wrote:

On 4 Feb 2006, at 00:07, tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

what part? i'm a fourth generation alaskan - but in boulder, colorado now.

regards.

-a

···

On Wed, 8 Feb 2006 tsumeruby@tsumelabs.com wrote:

Also being in Alaska the outrageous shipping, but theres a reason I charge
back the cost to people.

--
happiness is not something ready-made. it comes from your own actions.
- h.h. the 14th dali lama