Courtesy: LiveMint
Courtesy: LiveMint
IELO, Mandriva, and Nexedi this week joined forces and formed the Free Cloud Alliance, which will work to push open source products for cloud computing.
Courtesy: Infoworld News
A touchpad manufacturer that last year sued Apple for patent infringement filed a complaint Monday with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), asking it to ban imports of Apple products, including the iPad and iPhone.
Courtesy: Infoworld News
California CIO Teri Takai, who has a wealth of experience consolidating government IT operations, was named to the top Department of Defense IT job today by President Barack Obama.
Courtesy: CIO.in
Google paid $233,542 for CEO Eric Schmidt’s personal security in 2009. The year before, Schmidt’s security costs topped $400,000.
Courtesy: CIO.in
“It just shows what we can do in pushing knowledge forward on where we came from, how the early universe evolved,” CERN director-general Rolf Heuer said.
Courtesy: LiveMint
Of the many things the recession messed up — and I think we can all agree it really ruined a lot — plans were the biggest victim. Once the economy went kaput, your future suddenly became a little less certain. Could you afford to maintain your lifestyle? Was it the best time to switch jobs? Could you save enough for your upcoming wedding after pay cuts? The ramifications were endless.
In Sunday’s New York Times, writer Michael Luo touched on a phenomenon that is occurring throughout the country: overqualified workers who are satisfied just being employed. As Luo points out, many job postings give the basic requirements for candidates, but many applicants have experience and education that theoretically qualifies them for much higher positions. When these job seekers find themselves in these positions, they experience some insecurity but have some satisfaction that at least they’re working.
Academic research on the subject confirms that workers who perceive themselves as overqualified do, in fact, report lower job satisfaction and higher rates of turnover. But the studies also indicate that those workers tend to perform better. Moreover, there is evidence that many of the negatives that come with overqualified hires can be mitigated if they are given autonomy and made to feel valued and respected.
The new variable in all of this is the continuing grim economic climate. Many workers’ ambitions have evolved, after all, from climbing the ladder to simply holding on to a job, any job. Turnover would also seem to be less of a concern amid predictions that it could be years before unemployment returns to pre-recession levels.
As a result, Luo points out, many overqualified workers are struggling to accept their current situation without letting insecurity appear.
For his part, Mr. Carroll admitted that he had caught himself often trying to drop his credentials into conversations at his new workplace.
“Obviously that stems from maybe some embarrassment at the level that I’m at,” he said. “I do want people to know that, to some extent, this isn’t who I am.”
Have you found yourself in this situation in the last couple of years? How have you dealt with being overqualified? Some job seekers have said that “overqualified” is a useless term because all that matters is whether or not a person wants the job and is qualified for it. Do you agree? Let us know your thoughts.
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Courtesy: The Work Buzz
Orthodox server designs are receiving a face-lift with Intel’s Nehalem-EX processor, with vendors implementing new memory features to boost application performance.
Courtesy: Infoworld News
Open-source enterprise software company Red Hat has updated its flagship operating system, RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux), to take full advantage of the latest spoils from the heated microprocessor battle between Advanced Micro Devices and Intel.
RHEL version 5.5, released Wednesday, has been reconfigured for Intel’s just-released eight-core Nehalem-EX and AMD’s almost-as-recently released 12-core “Magny-Cours” Opteron 6100 Series processors, said Tim Burke, Red Hat vice president for platform engineering.
Courtesy: Infoworld News
CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s biggest machine, slammed beams of particles together at a record collision energy of 7 tera-electron volts (TeV), or seven billion billion electron volts—three and a half times faster than previously achieved in a particle accelerator.
Courtesy: LiveMint