Sep 26, 2008

Jobs at telCade

telCade offers exciting opportunities to people interested in working in a self-paced environment. Our multi-cultural group is entrepreneurial and your innovations and results are encouraged and rewarded.

telCade is an equal opportunities employer.

Please mail to telHR at telCade.com for further information.

Current Openings

Software Developer

The Software Developer will: 

  • Analyze requirements and design applications 
  • Provide accurate estimates and timings to project managers 
  • Deliver applications using standard web methodologies
  • Write accurate documentation and process to meet QA standards. 

Skills/Experience: 

  • 3+ years commercial development experience in ASP.Net and Javascript
  • Development experience with Web 2.0 standards
  • Knowledge of Web Services, ADO.NET, custom control development 
  • Solid Microsoft SQL Server experience including stored procedures 
  • Solid analysis & design skills with Microsoft n-tier solutions
  • Excellent written and verbal English skills 

Client Director

Purpose: Develop partnerships with clients

Key Responsibilities 

  • Manage the client experience 
  • Maintain profitability 
  • Communicate client requirements to the team, and the team’s requirements to the client 
  • Escalate and prioritize client issues and complaints 
  • Generate new business – with new and existing clients 
  • Execute sales strategy 
  • Provide updates on all pricing and contract agreements

Required Skills 

  • Communication 
  • Negotiation 
  • Financial management/pricing 
  • Networking 
  • Problem solving 
  • Project management
  • Presentation skills 
  • Business development 
  • Product knowledge 
  • Knowledge of web-based tools 

Sep 24, 2008

Blogs can establish expertise to new clients

(Full)

Jacksonville Business Journal - 2008-09-24 


Bybcase InsertUse your blog as a way to reach out to sales prospects.

Blogs have been around for a few years, and more and more business owners are finding that starting a blog can be an excellent way to connect with potential customers.

“In terms of blogging for businesses, it’s phenomenal for building a brand. It creates exposure” to potential customers who find the business through online subject searches and “it’s great for customer service,” said Rhea Drysdale, a search engine optimization consultant and blogger.

But don’t just tap out any random thoughts for the blog. There is an art to blogging to leverage the Web as a way to increase sales.

To do that, good blogs and their bloggers must be seen as a trusted source of information.

“Blogs allow you to begin a conversation with a client before they need you or are even ready to decide to work with anyone,” said Michelle Chance-Sangthong, president of Red Hawk Strategies Inc., a Web marketing consulting company. “But you’re in their stream of consciousness as an expert on that product or service.”

The goal, then, is to be recognized as an expert. “While I serve all parts of Jacksonville, I focus [my blog] on Jacksonville Beach because I live at the beach,” said Carol Zingone, broker associate at Vanguard GMAC Real Estate. “It allows you to show your expertise. I blog about stats, how long homes are on the market, about listings we have, what’s going on in the market and it allows you to be in a community. It’s networking; I have gotten prospects and referrals from people in other parts of the country” via the blog.

Showing that deep industry knowledge is a great way to earn business without overtly selling to someone.

“I’m very resistant to strong sales messages,” Zingone said. “I hate it. I want to know who I’m dealing with and if I have something in common [with them] before I’m going to buy something from them. It’s so difficult to reach people one-to-one, and traditional advertising — that was my background before I became a real estate agent — isn’t as effective as it used to be. This is another way to be out there in front” of the target market.

Blogging not only helps identify potential business, it adds content on the business’ site and can be used for everything from announcing and reviewing products and services to updating employees and clients on everyday company news.

“It provides fresh content and that’s something that search engines consider,” Drysdale said. “You can blog a couple of times a day, or a week, or a month, but by continually adding new content that is hopefully keyword-rich, it will likely improve your ranking. [Content can] react to things happening in your industry or on the news. The more you post, the more people see you as being astute on a particular subject as you establish your reputation, and over time that really adds up.”

The main idea, of course, is to draw traffic to the site. “You’re most likely going to blog about topics being searched,” pertaining to your industry, Chance-Sangthong said. “So, I’m coining a new phrase, ‘human search optimizations,’ which means optimizing the site and content for what humans are looking for. We [worry] about what search engines are looking for, but that doesn’t matter if you don’t bring the humans.”

And while the information presented in a blog should be accurate, the writing doesn’t have to be perfect. A good blog just needs to be easy to read and engaging.

“People fear their blogs have to be journalism-quality writing,” Chance-Sangthong said. “Really, it just needs to be sincere. Make the grammar as good as possible and use spell check. It’s doesn’t have to be editorially perfect content. You get away with a little more than with a marketing piece, because it is more like a diary. Also, don’t put anything in there unless you’d be OK if it were going to be scrutinized on the front of the JBJ. People wonder how personal they should be. There is still a level of professionalism. And it’s permanent. It’s there forever, sometimes even if you delete.”

Sep 18, 2008

USB 3.0 brings optical connection in 2008

September 18, 2007 2:25 PM PDT

USB 3.0 brings optical connection in 2008 

Posted by Stephen Shankland

Update: I added some details about USB 3.0 device availability and performance.

Intel showed off prototype USB 3.0 connectors and an add-in card at Intel Developer Forum Tuesday.

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET Networks)

SAN FRANCISCO--Intel and others plan to release a new version of the ubiquitous Universal Serial Bus technology in the first half of 2008, a revamp the chipmaker said will make data transfer rates more than 10 times as fast by adding fiber-optic links alongside the traditional copper wires.

Intel is working fellow USB 3.0 Promoters Group members Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, Texas Instruments, NEC and NXP Semiconductors to release the USB 3.0 specification in the first half of 2008, said Pat Gelsinger, general manager of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group, in a speech here at the Intel Developer Forum.

In an interview after the speech, Gelsinger said there's typically a one- to two-year lag between the release of the specification and the availability of the technology, so USB 3.0 products should likely arrive in 2009 or 2010. A prototype shown at the speech is working now, and USB 3.0 will have optical and copper connections "from day one," he added.

The current USB 2.0 version has a top data-transfer rate of 480 megabits per second, so a tenfold increase would be 4.8 gigabits per second. Many devices don't need that much capacity, but some can use more, including hard drives, flash card readers and optical drives such as DVD, Blu-ray and HD DVD. The fastest flash card readers today use IEEE 1394 "FireWire" connections that top out at 800 megabits per second.

In addition, USB 3.0 will offer greater energy efficiency, Gelsinger said. It will be backward compatible, so current USB 2.0 devices will be able to plug into USB 3.0 ports.



Get Ready For SuperSpeed USB 3.0 ... and a New Version of FireWire Too

If you think that USB 2.0 is fast compared to earlier USB 1.1 standards, you're right. At 480 megabits per second, the current 2.0 version of USB operates at speeds up to 14 times faster than the older version. But by next year that will be, well... last year's news. Or something like that. This week Intel released the controller specifications for "SuperSpeed" USB 3.0 that will run up to 10 times faster still    up to 4.8 gigabits per second. And for fans of FireWire, last month the IEEE approved specs for the upcoming IEEE 1394-2008 that will run at up to 3.2 gigabits per second.

USB (short for "Universal Serial Bus") started out life as version 1.0 at the beginning of 1996. Two and a half years later, version 1.1 came out to address a few bugs that had been reported in the initial release. Once this happened, things took off quickly. By the time USB 2.0 came out in 2000, many of those big, fat serial (COM-port) and parallel (PRT-port) cables had already started disappearing from behind desktop computers. But what really made USB catch on was the convenience of hot-swapping devices. From portable hard drives to the now ubiquitous "thumb drive," from printers to scanners and other peripherals, USB is everywhere.

And now comes USB 3.0.

Although it was first demonstrated a the Intel Developer Forum in 2007, work on devices that work on this new standard was pretty much on hold pending standardization on the controller interface. The controller is the thing that manages traffic on the system. Most vendors have traditionally followed Intel's controller standard. This not only means they don't have design their own, it means everything works the same way, making USB much more worry free than standards such as SCSI that came before it. Initially, it seemed as if Intel wasn't going to share this time though, forcing AMD, NVidia and other to begin work on competing controller designs. Fortunately, Intel seems to have had a change of heart this week by deciding to release their "Extensible Host Controller Interface" (xHCI) standard royalty free (technically the licensing terms are known as RAND-Z, or "Reasonable And Non Discriminatory" with zero royalty) to all companies who signs the xHCI contributor agreement.

That's good news for photographers who rely on USB. By this time next year, USB 3.0 devices should start showing up in the marketplace. 4.8 gigabits per second is 600 megabytes per second meaning you will eventually be able to copy up to thirty 20 MB raw files in one second.

USB 3.0 cables will have some extra contacts in them but should be backward compatible with USB2.0 devices. To take advantage of the faster USB 3.0 speeds though, you'll need new devices and a new controller for your computer.

Even as USB has become increasingly common, some folks still prefer FireWire, technically known as IEEE 1394. Most FireWire right now runs at 400 megabits per second, but there are FireWire 800 devices that can double that. If you're a FireWire fan, there's good news for you too. In a likely effort to keep up with USB development, the IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) announced a speed upgrade they dubbed IEEE 1394-2008 last month. The IEEE has never been big on catchy names. When compliant devices start showing up by late next year, they will operate at FireWire 1600 speeds (1.6 gigabits per second) with 3200 (3.2 gigabits per second) to follow by 2010.

Thankfully, as file sizes get bigger, transfer speeds do to.