a stationery company

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Network Administrator 17 October 2007
Fantastic opportunity awaits an experienced and focused Networks administrator to join a great company that is on the rise. Our client is today an internationally respected brand leader in the supply of truly innovative, stylish stationery products. Daily Tasks - Check backup tapes, change over tapes - ADSL monitoring - Maintaining printer toner stock - 1st line user support for PCs, printers, phones and applications - Hardware & Software Inventory control and purchasing - Maintaining and acting on current job list - Liaising with Server Support company re servers issues & new projects - Assisting Systems Manager with project work etc Essential expertise in - Microsoft SBS 2003 [active directory, setting up users, security, sharing, permissions etc.] - Microsoft Exchange 2003 [creating accounts, forwarding, mail limits etc.] - Microsoft Office 2000 - Microsoft Outlook 2003 - Windows 2000 and XP - Print server administration and drivers - PC building [DVD/CD-ROMS, memory upgrades, HDD swap outs etc] Useful experience of - Printer maintenance [maintenance kits, fuser units etc] - Trend Antivirus - Watchguard Firewall & VPN software - IP telephony - BCM for ISDN30 phone system - BCM add-on for Microsoft Outlook 2003 - Visual Basic for Microsoft Excel - SCO Unix - Strategix [SCO Unix ERP application] - Crystal Reporting - Terminal Services Other tasks - Occasional out of hours work for essential maintenance/upgrades - User training - Moving/Disposing of redundant hardware and keeping IT equipment in Server Room, IT office and other areas of building tidy If this sounds like you please forward a copy of your CV to jmoles@abraxas.com Abraxas plc acts as an employment agency/business. No terminology in this advert is intended to discriminate on the grounds of age, and we confirm that we will gladly accept applications from persons of any age for this role.
 
Senior Sales Executive/ Business Development Manager 01 January 0001
Position: Senior Sales Executive/ Business Development Manager Â? Design, Print and Commercial Stationery Location: South West, Torbay & Newton Abbot, Devon, TQ1 3AW Salary: 15000 to 20000 Basic OTE 30000, Plus Company Car, Pension, ........... more
 
Quick, need a corporate gift 01 January 0001
Ordering and waiting for items, be it stationery or corporate gifts, can be a costly and time consuming exercise. Nick Palmer, sales director at Silver Cube Promotions – a Cape Town-based promotional items company, claims to have come up with a quick, simple solution.
 
Ghana to host international children exposition 12 June 2007
... equipment, books and stationery, health and drugs, clothes and other products. In an interview with ... EXPO and its collaborators including; Ghana Leasing Company, Africaonline, Nestle Ghana limited, Unimax Macmillian, Coca Cola, ...
 
Herbalife Family Foundation Establishes Casa Herbalife Program in Russia 16 May 2007
... Establishes Casa Herbalife Program in Russia LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Through a grant from The Herbalife Family ... raised funds to provide the school with clothes, stationery, books, handicraft materials, furniture and basic ... the company s Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region. The Casa Herbalife program was ...
 
300 new jobs at aerospace firm 28 November 2007
Aerospace company Shorts Bombardier says it is create 330 new jobs at its Belfast plant.
 
Dell's plan for Zing 28 November 2007
The PC maker bought the small audio streaming company in August and recently applied to trademark the name of an online portal. What does Dell have up its sleeve?
 
Google: Jolly green giant? 28 November 2007
The search and advertising company is a force to be reckoned with across the Web. Now it's looking to do the same in alternative energy (along with many others, large and small).
 
Intel upgrades tools for Apple Leopard developers 29 November 2007
Intel upgraded its software development tools for Apple's Mac OS X Leopard operating system, keeping a promise to Apple and pushing Mac applications to its brand new Penryn chips.Intel announced on Wednesday that the Intel Software Development Products for Mac OS X includes Version 10.1 of its C++ Compiler and Fortran Compiler. The tools have been optimized for Apple's Leopard and Xcode 3.0 development environment, which was launched last month, said James Reinders, a product evangelist at Intel. The tools, which also include libraries, have been upgraded to use features in Intel's latest 45-nanometer Penryn microprocessor, he added."We had the opportunity to update with some new enhancements to take better advantage of multicore, but the other big thing is Leopard," said Reinders. "We've got full support for 64 bit because Leopard added 64 bit top to bottom. We've had pretty good support before, but the release of Leopard and the update to our tools completes that picture, giving them an easier way to write programs."He also noted that when Apple started using Intel chips, the company looked to Intel to provide software developers with the tools they would need to make writing Mac applications easier."When Intel and Apple got together, they were very specific in their interest in our tools. At that time, we did promise that we would have a C++ and a Fortran compiler in our libraries," said Reinders. "We made good on that promise. In this day and age, software developers have come to believe that some of the most basic tools -- compilers and libraries -- just need to be there. The more sophisticated microprocessors get, the more people look to Intel to supply these basic tools like compilers and libraries to take advantage of these processors."Intel said that its new SSE4 instruction set is designed to increase multimedia performance. The set first came out with the launch of the Penryn chip family earlier this month.Reinders noted that many of the upgrades to the tool set focus on optimizing applications for dual- and quad-core systems. He noted that Intel's compilers have autoparallelizing capabilities and libraries for Mac OS X."This is a significant step in that it brings full Intel support to the Mac operating environment," said Dan Olds, an analyst at Gabriel Consulting. "It will help application developers modernize their applications with multithreading so their applications can take better advantage of current and future multicore Intel processors. This is very important, as applications that can't use multicore processors won't be able to provide better performance in the future."Computerworld is an InfoWorld affiliate
 
Verizon Wireless' open network earns praise 28 November 2007
Verizon Wireless' decision to open its network to outside mobile devices and applications has won praise from several groups, including past critics.Verizon Wireless officials announced Tuesday they would open up their network to any devices and software customers want to use by the second half of 2008. Any device that passes a minimal connectivity test will be allowed on the Verizon Wireless network, officials said.That announcement drew applause from a wide variety of groups. Public Knowledge, a consumer rights group that has pushed for open network regulations from the U.S. Congress or the Federal Communications Commission, said it was "cautiously optimistic" about Verizon's decision.Verizon's decision could lead to "a more open network in the wireless industry at large," said Gigi Sohn, Public Knowledge's president. Wireless carriers have fought an FCC decision to require open access on a portion of spectrum in the 700MHz band to be auctioned starting in January, she noted."The Verizon announcement, however, is very limited," Sohn added. "If other carriers don't follow the same model, then consumers will still find their phones tied to a specific technology or wireless company. In order for an open network to become a reality, all carriers will have to participate."Verizon will still decide what phones can operate on its network, she said. Public Knowledge would prefer to have a third party decide what phones can operate on the Verizon network, she said.She also has continuing questions about prices. If Verizon continues to offer its preferred mobile phones at a discount, "then the adoption of the open model will be minimal, absent a rapid decline in cell phone prices," Sohn said. "We need to know whether the rates for Verizon service plans will vary for those with subsidized phones and for those customers with a phone bought elsewhere."Others were less guarded with their praise.Verizon's announcement, combined with the Google-led Open Handset Alliance, is a "significant" step toward the goal of more open wireless networks, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, said in a statement."As I noted when we adopted open network rules for our upcoming spectrum auction, wireless customers should be able to use the wireless device of their choice and download whatever software they want onto it," Martin added. "I continue to believe that more openness -- at the network, device, and application level -- helps foster innovation and enhances consumers' freedom and choice in purchasing wireless service. I am optimistic that Verizon Wireless's commitment along with the upcoming spectrum auction will ensure an exciting new era in wireless technology for the benefit of all consumers."Solveig Singleton, an adjunct senior fellow with Maryland think tank the Free State Foundation, said Verizon's voluntary decision makes more sense than open network regulations, such as net-neutrality rules pushed by Public Knowledge and other groups."Requiring openness or neutrality beyond the basics now supported by demand would needlessly make development far more costly and slow," she said. "A company that wants to invent a new type of phone with cutting-edge features already has a good bit to think about without having to worry about new phones and networks being simultaneously built by everyone else."Many proposed net-neutrality rules would require wireless and broadband providers to treat all network traffic equally, she said."Mandate 'open' and 'neutral' everywhere all the time for everything, and innovation will slow to a snail's pace and network traffic will jam," she added. "Competition between operators to offer innovative combinations of services at special prices would become almost impossible. In this fast-changing context, a regulatory command to treat all traffic all the same is just a bad idea."Also praising Verizon's decision were Funambol, a developer of open-source calendar and messaging tools for mobile phones, and the New America Foundation, a think tank that has pushed for open access rules on the 700MHz spectrumThe FCC and Google deserve credit for pushing the issue forward, said Michael Calabrese, director of New America's Wireless Future Program."This appears to be a move to head off market entry and new wireless competition from Google and other Internet companies that would result if the incumbent carriers were unwilling to meet minimal FCC consumer choice requirements," he said in an e-mail.
 

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