Hot  Jobs  08 Oct 2013
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  1.  Java Developer with Drools (Need Guvnor in Resume), Chandler, AZ (contract) 
  2.  Sr. Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX.  (full time)
  3. Test Lead, Seattle WA . (full time)
  4.  Java Developer, Brookfield, WI. (contract)
  5. Sr.Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX. (full time)
  6. Sr Ca Plex Developer, Austin, TX. (full time)
  7. Project Manager (State Govt.) Austin,TX (contract)
  8. Chief Medical Officer, Long Beach, CA (full time)
  9. Senior Oracle Ebs   Applications Administrator, Altanta, GA. (contract)
  10. Java/J2Ee Developer with .Net Mvc (State Client),  Austin, TX. (contract)
  11. .Net Mvc Web Programmer,  Austin, TX. (contract)
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  14. Sap Servigistics,  Austin, TX (contract).
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  20.  People soft Financial Functional Analyst,  Pittsburgh, PA, (contract).
  21. Game Developer/C++ Consultant Remote Opportunity,  Toronto, ON, Canada, (contract).
  22. Bi Developer, Irving, TX, (full time).
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Picture
Ria Warrick has read her friends’ online posts about Americans on food stamps. For instance:

Government irony: They say not to feed the bears at national parks because it makes them dependent.

Or:

Someday I hope to be able to afford a new iPhone ... like the girl in front of me with the food stamps.

Warrick’s friends don’t know they’re griping about her.

The 37-year-old married mom in Medford, Ore., has received food-stamp assistance of some sort for 18 years. “They were real paper stamps back then,” Warrick notes — and she says those comments hurt.

“These people — my friends — who post these have no idea we receive government help every month, and I've been too ashamed to tell them,” Warrick writes in a first-person account published on Yahoo News this week. “It makes me so angry they lump us all together. Yes, there are those taking advantage of benefits, but not everybody does. Some of us really do need the help until we get on our feet.”

That may happen soon. The Warricks’ financial life is on the mend, so their current $340 in benefits will be reduced to $323 next month.

And that’s a good thing, she says.

“I'm really excited we are on our way to self-sufficiency,” Warrick says. “I've taken the class offered by the Job Council about those who become dependent on food stamps, and I've learned ways to help us feel OK about spending cash on food. It's all part of breaking free and becoming independent.”

For now, though, her family’s $1,500 monthly income necessitates aid from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — colloquially called food stamps — and precludes them from shoveling out $600 a month for child care for their 2-year-old daughter, Aleyah, a sum Warrick says “can be a bit steep when trying to balance a budget.” An added difficulty is her husband’s atypical autism, which has made it tough to find and keep a job.

The Warricks’ story isn’t rare. Nearly 48 million Americans, or about 1 in 7 of us, collect SNAP assistance, an increase of about 1 million from June 2012 to June 2013. Shortly after that jump, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to slash $40 billion in food stamps over 10 years, a cut 10 times larger than what the Senate proposed.

Meanwhile, enrollment doubled and costs ($78 billion in 2012) tripled over the last decade, Reuters says. Americans on SNAP receive, on average, $1.47 per meal. (Access to SNAP’s data and website is shutteredduring the government shutdown, but because it has dedicated funding, its payments — like some Social Security and Medicaid — are unaffected. Some state-run sites still operate.)



SNAP’s critics say that when families like the Warricks buy groceries, that assistance doesn’t stimulate the economy because, as the conservative Heritage Foundation argues, $100 of tax-subsidized food stamps pulls money from a private sector that would have better spent those hundred bucks. Other concerns are myriad: Food stamps should be stop-gap assistance, not long-term entitlements. The country is already $17 trillion in debt, so why spend more? And then there’s fraud, notably millionaires on the dole.

Supporters’ rebuttals include: Food purchases provide direct kicks to the economy because the poor spend and don’t save. There are even more hungry Americans than the 1 in 7 on SNAP. And, last year, more than 18 percent in this country said there were days they couldn’t afford the food they needed.

Warrick, one of several food-stamp recipients who shared stories with Yahoo News this week, knows how pricey that food is. Her budget for her family of three is stretched. “Have you noticed food prices lately?” she asks rhetorically. “I mean, really noticed?”

She says preparing a fresh, healthy dinner for her family of three costs $20, four times more than a pizza. So they live on macaroni and cheese, sandwiches, spaghetti and canned vegetables — cheaper but less healthy meals that run about $2 to $3 each. (Her homemade enchilada recipe, at about $15 a meal, is often out of the question.)

“Healthy food is outrageously expensive now,” Warrick says. But tougher are the looks from some checkout clerks at her local Albertson’s: “Some of them understand, some don't care, but there are some who will actually glare at me, their friendly chatter turning to snappy remarks.”

She backs drug-testing for recipients and knows there is fraud. She recently noticed one online post she supports: "If you can afford beer, drugs, cigarettes, manicures and tattoos then you don't need food stamps or welfare."

But for her family, Warrick pleads: “Stop judging those who bring out the SNAP benefit card at checkout, please don't. They may just be one of the good guys.”

Here are more stories from recipients:

‘I would give anything to work’

Six months ago, when Shauna Silva began feeling “excruciating” pain in her lower back, she had to quit her job as a certified nursing assistant. An MRI revealed degenerative disc disorder in her lumber 4 and 5 regions, and she can’t sit, stand or walk for more than 30 minutes at a time.

“On a good day, I am in moderate pain,” Silva, 30, of Waterbury, Conn., writes. “Other days, I am in severe pain. I have sought treatment, but nothing has helped me.”

She turned to Medicaid and food stamps in May and now receives $185 in benefits — a high amount, she says, because her celiac disease requires a gluten-free diet. When she can shop, she buys a standard grocery list: quinoa flakes, coffee, milk, eggs, meat, rice, tea, fruit, frozen vegetables, potatoes, condiments and oil. The gluten-free items — cereal ($4), yogurt ($2), waffle mix ($6) — set her back, though.



SNAP was a last resort, she says, and she’d “give anything to work.” Her relatives can’t help because they’re struggling, too.

“Some constantly judge Americans who rely on SNAP, assuming we ‘chose’ this lifestyle because we do not want to work,” Silva says. “They see us as ‘lazy,’ buying caviar and booze with our food stamps. While there are those who break the rules, for sure, there are honest recipients like me who follow them.”

Don’t cut assistance for the honest, she argues. Rather, cull the bad apples by making rules stricter. She says: “Some Americans actually need temporary assistance and have no other options.”

‘Like a failure and a loser’

At about $1.28 a meal to spend, Tim E. Bush usually opts for microwavable meals or sandwiches, as long as there’s a coupon handy. But, often, it’s ramen noodles again. They’re less than a buck. He prefers fruits and vegetables, but he says eating healthy, while not impossible, isn’t as easy as eating cheaply.

“I'm a health-conscious person, at least I would be,” the 31-year-old Philadelphian says.

An artist, Bush works every day and earns about $900 a month while caring for his 55-year-old mom, who is disabled. He receives $119 a month in food-stamp benefits.

“Some view artists as broke and poor already,” Bush says. “To think that others might also consider me a strain on the system because I am on SNAP makes me even more stressed.”

On stamps for six years, Bush also receives Social Security disability because he’s diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

“Every time I pull out that card to buy food and wait in line for the machine to process, I feel like I stand out as less than an equal. Less than I want to be. Like a failure and a loser,” Bush says. “I don't want to be thought of this way. If I were able to, and it was up to me, I would not be in the system at all.”

‘This is not the way I envisioned my life’

From February 2001 to November 2004, Marie Green earned about $2,400 a month while caring for two kids, including an autistic son. After she lost her job in the medical field, she went on unemployment and now receives $367.40 a month to feed her and her daughter, 21-year-old Jo. (Her son, Quentin, 17, and her mother receive separate disability or retirement benefits.)

It’s difficult to make $367.40 last a month. Green, of Hawthorne, Calif., says they regularly run out of staples like bread, butter and milk, while they save enough to spread their cereal, eggs and meat to the end of the month.

“Everything else goes really quickly,” says Green, 41, who frets that her family’s nutrition suffers. “But I worry most about their going hungry. There have been times I have given one of the kids the rest of my dinner or will just have a bowl of cereal for dinner so they can have whatever is left that I haven't eaten.”

She says she’s “tried like hell” to secure work in the medical billing field, but because she’s not bilingual or because she can’t find scheduling flexibility to help her care for her son, she’s can’t land a job. She’s also applied to stores like Blockbuster, McDonald’s, Kmart and Target but is repeatedly told she has too much education.

“I do want to work,” Green says, “and I know I'm not the only one.”

Original Post:
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Hot  Jobs  03 Oct 2013
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  1.  Java Developer with Drools (Need Guvnor in Resume), Chandler, AZ (contract) 
  2.  Sr. Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX.  (full time)
  3. Test Lead, Seattle WA . (full time)
  4.  Java Developer, Brookfield, WI. (contract)
  5. Sr.Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX. (full time)
  6. Sr Ca Plex Developer, Austin, TX. (full time)
  7. Project Manager (State Govt.) Austin,TX (contract)
  8. Chief Medical Officer, Long Beach, CA (full time)
  9. Senior Oracle Ebs   Applications Administrator, Altanta, GA. (contract)
  10. Java/J2Ee Developer with .Net Mvc (State Client),  Austin, TX. (contract)
  11. .Net Mvc Web Programmer,  Austin, TX. (contract)
  12.  Share Point Developer/Analyst (State Client), Austin, TX (contract)
  13.  Developer Node.Js+Mongo Db + Socket.lo (Salary + Equity) Austin, TX. (full time)
  14. Sap Servigistics,  Austin, TX (contract).
  15. Legacy Systems Analyst (State Govt.)  Austin, TX (contract).
  16. Hp Asset Manager/Hp Service Manager,  Lyndhurst, NJ, (contract).
  17. Java Developer,  Bethesda, MD,  (contract).
  18. V.P. of Sales & Business Development,  Austin, TX. (full time).
  19. People Soft Hrms Consultant (State if Tx Dept.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  20.  People soft Financial Functional Analyst,  Pittsburgh, PA, (contract).
  21. Game Developer/C++ Consultant Remote Opportunity,  Toronto, ON, Canada, (contract).
  22. Bi Developer, Irving, TX, (full time).
  23. Network Administrator, Austin, TX, (full time)
  24. Mdms Functional Lead // Business Analyst (State Govt.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  25. Ms.Sql Server DBA with Oracle DBA Experience,  Austin, TX,  (contract).
  26. Technical Support Specialist (State Client), Austin, TX, (contract).

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If you have an out-of-work friend who's trying to find a job, you probably want to be supportive and say the right thing to make her search easier. But well-intentioned comments can easily make a stressed-out job-searcher feel worse. Here are 10 things you should never say to an out-of-work friend.

1. "It must be nice to have so much time off work." It might look to you like it's nice to have plenty of time to run errands and watch Netflix, but this will make you sound insensitive to the stress and anxiety of unemployment, which your friend is almost certainly dealing with. Being unemployed isn't a vacation. For many people, it's more stressful than going to an office every day.

2. "How many interviews have you had?" There's no way for this question to make your friend feel good. If she hasn't had many, she'll feel awkward explaining that. And if she's had a lot, she'll worry that you'll wonder why none of them have led to an offer. Don't put your friend in the position of explaining how successfully or unsuccessfully her search is going - after all, the only success that really matters is when she gets a job.

3. "Have you tried looking for jobs online?" Unless your friend is unusually inept with technology, she's looking for jobs online. Possibly daily. Suggestions of tried-and-true methods like this one can be aggravating for job-seekers, and can come across as if you don't have faith in her ability to manage her own search.

4. "Why don't you try temping?" While this can be a good suggestion for some people, temping isn't as reliable of an income source as it used to be. With so many people out of work and competing for the same jobs, even temporary ones, many qualified job seekers report that they've registered at multiple temp agencies and never been called.

5. "Did you apply for that job I sent you?" You're probably just asking out of curiosity or to be supportive, but it can put your friend in an awkward spot. She might have determined that job you sent wasn't right for her, or she might have applied and not appreciate your stirring up anxiety about why she hasn't heard back. It's great to pass along job opportunities that you see, but make sure you don't sound like you're nagging about them afterward.

6. "But you're so smart (or accomplished or well educated). You shouldn't have trouble finding a job." You might think you're being supportive, but since your friend apparently has had trouble finding a job, you'll either make her feel bad about herself (why hasn't anyone wanted to hire her if she's so smart?) or make her think that you're naïve about the very tough realities of today's job market.

7. "You hated your old job anyway." Sure, your friend might have hated her boss or not gotten along with her co-worker, but she would probably rather have the income from that job than not have any work at all.

8. "Have you heard back from that interview you had last week?" This is a good way to remind your friend of something she might be trying not to agonize over. When a job-searcher has good news that she wants to share, you'll hear it.

9. "Let's go out to (expensive dinner / concert / trip)." Without any income coming in, your friend is probably watching her budget, so be careful about the cost of any activities you suggest. The exception to this, of course, is if you're treating.

10. "It's taking you so long to find a job!" Don't expect your friend to find a job immediately or express surprise that she's been searching for so long. In this market, job searches take months, and in some cases a year or more. Comments like this can be excruciating for the job searcher, who might be working far harder than you know.


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Hot  Jobs  02 Oct 2013
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  1.  Java Developer with Drools (Need Guvnor in Resume), Chandler, AZ (contract) 
  2.  Sr. Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX.  (full time)
  3. Test Lead, Seattle WA . (full time)
  4.  Java Developer, Brookfield, WI. (contract)
  5. Sr.Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX. (full time)
  6. Sr Ca Plex Developer, Austin, TX. (full time)
  7. Project Manager (State Govt.) Austin,TX (contract)
  8. Chief Medical Officer, Long Beach, CA (full time)
  9. Senior Oracle Ebs   Applications Administrator, Altanta, GA. (contract)
  10. Java/J2Ee Developer with .Net Mvc (State Client),  Austin, TX. (contract)
  11. .Net Mvc Web Programmer,  Austin, TX. (contract)
  12.  Share Point Developer/Analyst (State Client), Austin, TX (contract)
  13.  Developer Node.Js+Mongo Db + Socket.lo (Salary + Equity) Austin, TX. (full time)
  14. Sap Servigistics,  Austin, TX (contract).
  15. Legacy Systems Analyst (State Govt.)  Austin, TX (contract).
  16. Hp Asset Manager/Hp Service Manager,  Lyndhurst, NJ, (contract).
  17. Java Developer,  Bethesda, MD,  (contract).
  18. V.P. of Sales & Business Development,  Austin, TX. (full time).
  19. People Soft Hrms Consultant (State if Tx Dept.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  20.  People soft Financial Functional Analyst,  Pittsburgh, PA, (contract).
  21. Game Developer/C++ Consultant Remote Opportunity,  Toronto, ON, Canada, (contract).
  22. Bi Developer, Irving, TX, (full time).
  23. Network Administrator, Austin, TX, (full time)
  24. Mdms Functional Lead // Business Analyst (State Govt.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  25. Ms.Sql Server DBA with Oracle DBA Experience,  Austin, TX,  (contract).
  26. Technical Support Specialist (State Client), Austin, TX, (contract).

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Bank accounts are short a couple hundred bucks. Federal employees fret about not heading to work. Vacations are delayed, canceled or ruined. Basic everyday services disappear.

Those are some of the effects Americans saw Tuesday morning after the U.S. government staggered to a stop at midnight, and millions, including 800,000 furloughed federal workers, began to cope with the hiccups — some irritating but small and others large and worrisome.

Below are excerpts from some first-person accounts we received Tuesday. If you’re directly and concretely affected by the shutdown, we’re interested in your story.

Savings accounts unfortunately replace income in a shutdown

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Vonda J Sines

Vonda J. Sines, 65, of Herndon, Va., retired in 2004 from a federal government job and thought the shutdowns of 1995 and ‘96 long past. Now, with Congress’ shuttering of the government less than 24 hours old, she and her husband notice an immediate hit: The loss of his income from his federal contractor job means a $174.33 drop from their budget each day the shutdown persists. It’s also put a scare into her as she enters Social Security. Sines writes:

Covered by the newer federal retirement system, I'm eligible for Social Security and signed up for Medicare Parts A and B in 2012. I had decided to apply in October for Social Security payments starting Jan. 1, 2014.

Because I had questions about my benefits, I opted not to apply online, but to schedule an interview. Then I read that a shutdown could mean no processing of Social Security applications. Even imagining the potential backlog triggered a headache.

I scrambled to get an appointment. After 42 minutes on hold, I snagged a telephone appointment at 1:45 p.m. on Sept. 30 — just under the wire. I had to cut an important doctor's appointment short to get home in time for the call. When the phone hadn't rung 10 minutes after the scheduled time, I felt nauseated from stress. It finally did. Had I been unable to sign up before the shutdown, receiving benefits of around $2,000 a month could have been delayed.

Since we were already on a bare-bones budget, we cannot tighten it. Savings must replace lost income. The only relief in sight is what we can create ourselves. However, I have already fired one salvo of emails to all our congressmen to express my disgust over their inability to keep the government afloat.

Read more of Sines’ story.

Shutdown plays politics with national parks


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D.C.Douglass


D.C. Douglass and his wife scrimped pennies, he says, for three years to pay for their twice-a-decade trip to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park where they vacation with his sisters and their families from Texas and Florida. But the government shutdown has closed 401 national parks, including the Smokies. Park roads and service facilities are unavailable, and visitors are being asked to leave immediately, according to ParkAdvocate.org. Renting two cabins for a week set his group back $6,000. Douglass writes:

I understand this is not a situation that is going to elicit much sympathy from government employees who are going to go without paychecks or Americans who are waiting for FHA mortgage approvals. But this ridiculous partisan spat is negatively affecting millions of Americans, and our illustrious Congress does not seem to care a bit. And it is costing me money.

I am writing this while sitting on the deck of a mountainside cabin in Wears Valley, Tenn., just outside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. My family comes from around the country to congregate here in the autumn every five years. My wife and I make the 10-hour drive from the suburbs of Detroit to hike, camp and enjoy the Smokies' magnificent fall color. We made our reservations nearly a year in advance. We saved our pennies for nearly three years.

Again, the cost is really not the object. It is the experience we relish, as I am now approaching 60, and the strenuous uphill hike to the lodge is getting more difficult with each passing year. But I still look forward to making the trip. Perhaps we will not make it this year after all, thanks to our uncompromising legislators. Not that they care.

Let me also say that I am not one of the 1 percent. I am not even close to it. This is a trip we save for all year, often bypassing other pleasures to be certain we the funds are available. I do not expect anyone to feel sorry for us.

Read more of Douglass’ story.

Everyday tasks that much harder



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Robert Clark Young


In San Diego, Robert Clark Young has cared for five years for his infirm father, who needs government-issued IDs for doctor visits, emergency-room care and access to handicapped services. Young mailed off the necessary paperwork for a federal passport card, but with the government shutdown and a local office unfunded and unsupported, there’s no one to process the application. Young writes:

How long will the government be closed for business? Who can say? But I know one thing: Giving my father the daily care that he needs could be complicated if he lacks legal identification.

My father's HMO requires a valid photo ID before providing him with routine medical care. His catheter is changed once a month, for instance, and the scheduling puts him in different facilities with different nurses. What if he has no ID at the time of his appointment?

Over the past five years, my dad has been in the emergency room 12 times. He's always been asked for a photo ID.

Technically, we can't even use a handicapped parking space without my father being able to prove that he's the person the placard is assigned to.

Shutting the government down affects millions of Americans in ways large and small. I hope the Republicans in Congress will compromise on this matter, before the inconvenience to Americans becomes too great.

Meanwhile, we'll be trying to get my dad an ID card issued by the state of California. The Democrats are in charge here, and the state is open for business.

Read more of Young’s story.

Government calls it a furlough; family calls it a major problem



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Kim Jacobs


Kim Jacobs Walker’s husband works in an administrative position for the federal government in Austin, Texas, but as of Monday, he’s furloughed. Walker says a less obvious result of the government shutdown is that federal employees with get fed up and look for work elsewhere.

He works for the federal government and has for more than six years, and for now, he's on vacation without pay.

It isn't like those snow days we had in school as kids. He will likely spend the day worrying about how we're going to pay the bills this month, and how long this will last. I have an eBay business, so I told him he can help me with some listings while he's off. Maybe we can generate a little extra money that way.

The biggest frustration with this situation, aside from the fact that we don't know when it will end, is that a lot of avenues to coping with it are blocked. He can't apply for unemployment unless it lasts for more than a week. He can't get a temporary job lasting more than a day, because Congress could miraculously reach an agreement at any moment, and he would be called back to work. We're in limbo.

I'm encouraging him to spend his free time applying for jobs outside the federal government. The economy here in Austin has remained stronger than most. There are still jobs to be had, though I suspect that this week, there will be a veritable flood of new applicants.

Read more of Walker’s story.

State picks up funding slack, but uncertainty remains



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Darcy Chappel


Darcy Chappel landed a job two weeks ago at the Bureau of Disability Adjudication, which relies on funds from the Social Security Administration. When the clock struck midnight on the shutdown, that money dried up, but the state of Nevada stepped in to keep her office in Reno open. Chappel writes:

I am lucky that if I am required to take unpaid leave from my job, I have my working spouse to fall back on. But it will still be a major hardship if I have to take a cut in pay. I have two teenage boys at home who rely on my paycheck for their educational expenses, extracurricular activities and vivacious appetites.

I'm sure that the congressional members who failed to reach an agreement to fund federal agencies Monday night could care less about my plight. They are focused on undermining the Affordable Care Act, and delaying the enforcement of the mandate that requires all Americans to obtain health insurance.

While I may not personally agree with Obamacare, I think that House Republicans are being irresponsible by playing around with others' livelihoods.

They are taking a stand, but it is at their constituents’ expense. After all, they are still getting a paycheck as "non-essential" government agencies are being shut down.

They won't feel the trickle-down effect of their actions, and they probably aren't worried about the impact of their actions on this 40-year-old mom of three.

They probably don't realize that if Nevada's Bureau of Disability Adjudication has to shut down for even a day, that severely ill people who have applied for disability will have to wait even longer for benefits.

It would be interesting to see if they would be so quick to take a stand if it directly affected their pocketbooks or health.

Read more of Chappel’s story.


Original Post:
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Hot  Jobs  30 Sep 2013
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  1.  Java Developer with Drools (Need Guvnor in Resume), Chandler, AZ (contract) 
  2.  Sr. Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX.  (full time)
  3. Test Lead, Seattle WA . (full time)
  4.  Java Developer, Brookfield, WI. (contract)
  5. Sr.Html5/Java Cript Developer, Austin,TX. (full time)
  6. Sr Ca Plex Developer, Austin, TX. (full time)
  7. Project Manager (State Govt.) Austin,TX (contract)
  8. Chief Medical Officer, Long Beach, CA (full time)
  9. Senior Oracle Ebs   Applications Administrator, Altanta, GA. (contract)
  10. Java/J2Ee Developer with .Net Mvc (State Client),  Austin, TX. (contract)
  11. .Net Mvc Web Programmer,  Austin, TX. (contract)
  12.  Share Point Developer/Analyst (State Client), Austin, TX (contract)
  13.  Developer Node.Js+Mongo Db + Socket.lo (Salary + Equity) Austin, TX. (full time)
  14. Sap Servigistics,  Austin, TX (contract).
  15. Legacy Systems Analyst (State Govt.)  Austin, TX (contract).
  16. Hp Asset Manager/Hp Service Manager,  Lyndhurst, NJ, (contract).
  17. Java Developer,  Bethesda, MD,  (contract).
  18. V.P. of Sales & Business Development,  Austin, TX. (full time).
  19. People Soft Hrms Consultant (State if Tx Dept.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  20.  People soft Financial Functional Analyst,  Pittsburgh, PA, (contract).
  21. Game Developer/C++ Consultant Remote Opportunity,  Toronto, ON, Canada, (contract).
  22. Bi Developer, Irving, TX, (full time).
  23. Network Administrator, Austin, TX, (full time)
  24. Mdms Functional Lead // Business Analyst (State Govt.), Austin, TX,  (contract).
  25. Ms.Sql Server DBA with Oracle DBA Experience,  Austin, TX,  (contract).
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WASHINGTON (AP) — A conservative challenge to the president's health care law has the federal government teetering on the brink of a partial shutdown.

The Senate has the next move on must-do legislation required to keep the government open past midnight on Monday, and the Democratic-led chamber is expected to reject the latest effort from House Republicans to use a normally routine measure to attack President Barack Obama's signature health care law.

Congress was closed for the day on Sunday after a post-midnight vote in the GOP-run House to delay by a year key parts of the new health care law and repeal a tax on medical devices as the price for avoiding a shutdown. The Senate is slated to convene Monday afternoon just 10 hours before the shutdown deadline, and Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has already promised that majority Democrats will kill the House's latest volley.

A House GOP leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, said the House would again rebuff the Senate's efforts to advance the short-term funding bill as a simple, "clean" measure shorn of anti-heath care reform provisions.

Since the last government shutdown 17 years ago, temporary funding bills known as continuing resolutions have been noncontroversial, with neither party willing to chance a shutdown to achieve legislative goals it couldn't otherwise win. But with health insurance exchanges set to open Tuesday, tea party Republicans are willing to take the risk in their drive to kill the law, so-called "Obamacare."

"You're going to shut down the government if you can't prevent millions of Americans from getting affordable care," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md.

A leader of the tea party Republicans, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, insisted the blame rests with Senate Democrats.

"The House has twice now voted to keep the government open. And if we have a shutdown, it will only be because when the Senate comes back, Harry Reid says, 'I refuse even to talk,'" said Cruz, who led a 21-hour broadside against allowing the temporary funding bill to advance if stripped clean of a tea party-backed provision to derail Obamacare. The effort failed.

The battle started with a House vote to pass the short-term funding bill with a provision that would have eliminated the federal dollars needed to put Obama's health care overhaul into place. The Senate voted along party lines to strip that out and set the measure back to the House.

The latest House bill, passed early Sunday by a near party-line vote of 231-192, sent back to the Senate two major changes: a one-year delay of key provisions of the health insurance law and repeal of a new tax on medical devices that partially funds it. The steps still go too far for the White House and its Democratic allies.

Senate rules often make it difficult to move quickly, but the chamber can act on the House's latest proposals by simply calling them up and killing them.

Eyes were turning to the House for its next move. A senior leader vowed the House would not simply give in to Democrats' demands to pass the Senate's "clean" funding bill.

"The House will get back together in enough time, send another provision not to shut the government down, but to fund it, and it will have a few other options in there for the Senate to look at again," said McCarthy, the No. 3 House Republican leader.

He suggested that House Republicans would try blocking a mandate that individuals buy health insurance or face a tax penalty, saying there might be some Democratic support in the Senate for that.

On the other hand, Democrats said the GOP's bravado may fade as the deadline to avert a shutdown nears.

Asked whether he could vote for a "clean" temporary funding bill, Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, said he couldn't. But Labrador added, "I think there's enough people in the Republican Party who are willing to do that. And I think that's what you're going to see."

A leading Senate GOP moderate called on her fellow Republicans to back down.

"I disagree with the strategy of linking Obamacare with the continuing functioning of government — a strategy that cannot possibly work," said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.

McCarthy wouldn't say what changes Republicans might make. He appeared to suggest that a very short-term measure might pass at the last minute, but GOP aides said that was unlikely.

Republicans argued that Reid should have convened the Senate on Sunday.

Yet even some Republicans said privately they feared that Reid held the advantage in a fast-approaching end game.

Republicans argued that they had already made compromises; for instance, their latest measure would leave intact most parts of the health care law that have taken effect, including requiring insurance companies to cover people with pre-existing conditions and to let families' plans cover children up to age 26. They also would allow insurers to deny contraception coverage based on religious or moral objections.

Tea party lawmakers in the House — egged on by Cruz — forced GOP leaders to abandon an earlier plan to deliver a "clean" stopgap spending bill to the Senate and move the fight to another must-do measure looming in mid-October: a bill to increase the government's borrowing cap to avert a market-rattling, first-ever default on U.S. obligations.

In the event lawmakers blow the Monday deadline, about 800,000 workers would be forced off the job without pay. Some critical services such as patrolling the borders, inspecting meat and controlling air traffic would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent, and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.

McCarthy appeared on "Fox News Sunday," while Cruz and Labrador were on NBC's "Meet the Press." Van Hollen appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation."



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Bill Gates has finally admitted the puzzling Control-Alt-Delete key combination used to access the login screen on personal computers was a mistake.

"It was a mistake," Gates, co-founder and former chairman of Microsoft, said during a recent appearance at Harvard University. "We could have had a single button, but the guy who did the IBM keyboard design didn't want to give us our single button.

“You want to have something you do with the keyboard that is signaling to a very low level of the software — actually hard-coded in the hardware — that it really is bringing in the operating system you expect, instead of just a funny piece of software that puts up a screen that looks like a login screen, and then it listens to your password and then it’s able to do that,” the billionaire software mogul explained. 

The odd combination was originally designed to reboot a PC, but it became part of PC folklore as a login prompt in early versions of Windows. The IBM PC that Gates helped develop was introduced in the fall of 1981.

Gates' admission came after years of debate over the origin of Control-Alt-Delete.

"Finally," Taylor Soper wrote on GeekWire.com.

In a 2001 interview marking the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC, David Bradley, the engineer who came up with the Control-Alt-Delete sequence, blamed the oddity on Gates.

"I may have invented it," Bradley said, "but Bill made it famous."

That left Gates "looking rather awkward" for more than a decade, TheVerge.com said.

In 2011, Bradley said he still didn't know why Gates used the Control-Alt-Delete for the login screen.

“Why they used it for the login also, I don’t know,” Bradley told CNET. “I guess it made sense for them.”

While Windows 8 defaults to a new login screen, the Control-Alt-Delete requirement is still used in Windows XP and Windows 7, and it still works in Windows 8 as a shortcut for locking your PC or accessing the task manager.


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By Caroline Humer

(Reuters) - Americans will pay an average premium of $328 monthly for a mid-tier health insurance plan when the Obamacare health exchanges open for enrollment next week, and most will qualify for government subsidies to lower that price, the federal government said on Wednesday.

The figure, based on data for approved insurance plans in 48 states, is the broadest national estimate for the cost of coverage when President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law takes full effect next year. The prices of the new plans are at the heart of a political debate over whether they will be affordable enough to attract millions of uninsured Americans when enrollment begins on October 1.

Obama, who is facing a Republican threat to eliminate funding for the law or shut down the federal government next week, said the fierce opposition stems from the fear that Americans will embrace the program.

"Essentially they're saying people will like this thing too much, and then it will be really hard to roll back," Obama said on Tuesday in a conversation about healthcare with former President Bill Clinton. "What we're saying is, just look for yourself. Take a look at it, and you will discover that this is a good deal for you."

The Obama administration is counting on signing up 7 million Americans, including 2.7 million younger and healthier consumers who are needed to offset the costs of sicker members, in the first full year of reform through the state exchanges.

A major factor in determining the price was the level of competition among insurance companies, with rates significantly higher in states with fewer players, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in its report.

The new health plans are organized in five tiers with different monthly premiums and out-of-pocket costs: catastrophic coverage, bronze, silver, gold and, in some areas, platinum.

The national average cited by HHS refers to the second-cheapest among silver plans on the market - which many healthcare economists expect to be the most popular for their balance of coverage and out-of-pocket costs. On average, the least expensive plans in this group were reported in Minnesota, where it costs $192 per month, and Tennessee, $245.

At the high end of pricing are states with large rural populations, where it can be more expensive to deliver healthcare: Mississippi at $448 per month; Alaska, $474; and Wyoming, $516. Florida came in right at the national average at $328.

U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said the new plan prices were still a costlier proposition for Americans, based on what they may have paid for individual plans in the past. Under the Affordable Care Act, insurance plans must cover a wider range of preventive and other medical services and cannot turn away applicants based on prior illnesses.

"Even the Administration is having a terrible time spinning this law," McConnell said in a statement. "About the best they could claim was that some premiums would be lower than projected. Note that I didn't say lower, but lower than projected."

HOW AFFORDABLE?

Debate over whether Obamacare will prove affordable for millions of uninsured Americans has intensified in the past few months, as states have announced rates. States that have supported the law said it would lead to lower prices. Others that have opposed the reform - including Georgia, Florida, and Indiana - warned of "rate shock" for consumers compared with what they could buy on the individual insurance market a year ago.

HHS said the average price was 16 percent lower than its own projections on premiums. In addition, consumers who earn up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level, or $62,040 for a couple, will qualify for subsidies that will lower the price further.

The data is mostly based on 36 states where the federal government will operate the insurance exchange. About 14 other states and the District of Columbia are running their own exchanges. Three states - Hawaii, Kentucky and Massachusetts - had not released premium information at the time of the report.

States with the lowest average premium tend to have more insurance companies offering plans, the report said. It said eight issuers on average were selling plans in the states with average premiums in the lowest 25 percent, while states with average premiums in the top 25 percent had only three insurers on average.

Pricing varies widely not only by state but by community. For instance, Florida has 67 different geographical rating areas, and their prices for the second-lowest-cost silver plan range for a 40-year-old from $239 to $352 a month.

"The take-up of the exchanges is going to vary significantly by state and by community as word gets out," said Michael Sparer, professor of health policy at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health.

Texas has been among the Republican-led states most fiercely opposed to Obamacare, but its monthly rates came in below the national average, HHS said. With 76 plans to choose from in Austin, a 27-year-old would pay $169 per month for the lowest-cost mid-tier one. In Dallas-Fort Worth, that monthly premium was $217, from 43 plans available, the report said.

"The rates in Texas are looking good," said Gary Cohen, who is charged with overseeing the exchanges at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Insurance industry surveys show rates are the most important factor in drawing consumers to the exchanges, which is key to making the healthcare overhaul work.

Another concern has been that insurance companies will limit access to doctors to keep prices low. Cohen said that these so-called "narrow networks" were a trend before the Affordable Care Act took effect.

The law was adopted in 2010, but two of its main pillars, the health exchanges and the expansion of Medicaid, take effect in 2014. Household names like UnitedHealth Group Inc, Aetna Inc, WellPoint Inc and Humana Inc will sell plans on at least some exchanges. Newcomers such as Medicaid specialist Molina Healthcare Inc will also play a role.

(Additional reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York and David Morgan in Washington D.C.; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Lisa Shumaker and Lisa Von Ahn)

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An extremely rare coin sold for $2.75 million during an auction on Monday, greatly exceeding expectations and making it one of the all-time biggest such sales in U.S. history.

Mining.com reports that the “Coiled Hair Stella” coin was minted in 1880 featuring a profile image of Lady Liberty. The coin contains about six grams of pure gold and was never released into circulation. On the back of the coin an inscription reads, “ONE STELLA” and “400 CENTS.”

"The 1880 $4 Coiled Hair Stella is one of the so-called white whales of the coin collecting world. They are so rare, they come on the market maybe once or twice, at most, every decade," Paul Song, director of rare coins at Bonhams, which auctioned the coin in Los Angeles, told Reuters.

“They are so rare, they come on the market maybe once or twice, at most, every decade,” Song said. “That particular gold coin, there's only 10 or 12 now, and most of these are in public institutions or private collections.”

The $2.75 million selling price is reportedly more than 66.6 percent higher than earlier estimates and places it in the top 10 of all-time U.S. gold coin sales.

Three other Stellas were sold at the same auction, though were of slightly different designs are were considered less valuable, according to Numismatic News. The entire 27-coin collection was worth an estimated $8 million before auction.

“That may not be a Monet painting, but in my world, that’s pretty amazing,” Song told Reuters.

Fox News adds that the coin was designed by former United States Mint engraver George T. Morgan. The idea at the time was for the U.S. to have its own international coinage in order to improve trade with European nations. And while Congress voted against approving the coin, an estimated 12 to15 sample coins were still produced.

“Few collectors have ever seen one, let alone had the chance to own such a numismatic treasure,” explains auction site Stack’s Bowers. “It has been years since a Coiled Hair Stella appeared for sale, and this one is as beautiful as it is rare, with nice cameo contrast nicely complementing the superb aesthetic quality. In short, it would be virtually impossible to replace the quality and rarity seen here, and it may be years before another Coiled Hair Stella is offered.”

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Samsung Electronics on Wednesday announced that it will unveil a handset featuring a curved display in October, upping the ante in the smartphone war as the South Korean electronics giant seeks to differentiate itself in the increasingly competitive market.

This would be the first smartphone with a curved display to go into mass production, according to analysts, a reflection of the company's prowess in pushing ahead with new technologies.


While Samsung did not provide specifications of the phone's hardware, a curved display essentially wraps around the device to cover the left and right edges such that if the phone is placed face down, text messages or stock tickers, for example, could be displayed along a side.

The idea is that the edge of the phone would be unlocked, offering users easy access, while the phone itself would remain password protected, say analysts.



"This is great news. This is the first step in a game changing technology that will eventually lead to foldable handsets," said Mark Newman, senior analyst for global memory and consumer electronics at Sanford C. Bernstein.

Samsung had shown off a prototype smartphone with a curved screen earlier this year at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas but did not specify a time frame for its launch.

Analysts say Samsung will likely manufacture a limited number of curved display smartphones in order to test the demand for the device.

"The production of such a device is a testament to Samsung's strength and size because they are able to produce these units and see how they do on the market," said Mykola Golovko, senior analyst for consumer electronics at Euromonitor.

"From a consumer perspective, I don't know how useful it's going to be. But it's a way for Samsung to differentiate their devices," he said.


Kiranjeet Kaur, senior market analyst at IDC Asia Pacific, expects the device will be part of the company's premium offerings priced somewhere upwards of $700. Samsung's initial models typically have high prices as they target the niche "early adopter" segment of consumers.

She noted that the new phone could be a variant of the Galaxy Note 3 smartphone that was launched in Seoul earlier on Wednesday.

As for what it means for rival Apple, analysts said it highlights Samsung's innovative edge over the iPhone maker.

(Read morePanned new iPhones still draw die-hards at launch)

"Apple definitely needs to consider its research and development roadmap with regards to innovation in features of devices," said Ajay Sunder, senior director, telecoms, Asia Pacific at Frost & Sullivan.

Samsung, which has blazed a trail with its highly popular lineup of Galaxy smartphones, overtook Apple as the world's most profitable handset vendor in the second quarter, according to Strategy Analytics.

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CHICAGO (Reuters) - Two men were charged in connection with a shooting in Chicago last week that injured 13 people, including a 3-year-old boy, but neither are believed to have been the gunman, Chicago police said on Monday.

The gunman fired into a crowd gathered to watch a basketball game using an military-grade weapon last Thursday.

Byron Champ, 21, and Kewane Gatewood, 20, were each charged with three counts of attempted murder and aggravated battery with a firearm, police said in a written statement.

The relationship between the two men who were charged and the shooter is unclear.

"These charges are just the beginning, and this investigation remains ongoing at this time," Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said in the statement.

Champ, a documented gang member, was convicted of unlawful use of a weapon by a felon in July 2012 and sentenced to boot camp at a Cook County facility, police said.

McCarthy said Champ being "back on the streets to be part of this senseless shooting" was "unacceptable."

The shooting took place in the Back of the Yards neighborhood in a park where residents were enjoying a basketball game on a warm evening.

Three-year-old Deonta Howard underwent surgery after he was shot in the head. The Chicago Tribune reported on Monday that Deonta was "making a quick recovery" and is expected to be released from the hospital within a few days.

NATIONAL GUARD

The shooting came 10 days after Mayor Rahm Emanuel and McCarthy held a news conference to claim success in a strategy of flooding 20 high-crime neighborhoods with police. Back of the Yards was not one of the neighborhoods that received reinforcements, McCarthy said last week.

On Saturday, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn said he would be open to sending the National Guard into the city to help police, but only if local officials supported the idea, according to the local CBS news station.

However, McCarthy is against the proposal.

"The National Guard is not a policing force, they are a military force," he said on Monday at a graduation ceremony for new police officers.

Gun violence in Chicago led to more than 500 murders in 2012, according to a report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. New York City, with three times Chicago's population, had 419 murders in 2012, the FBI said.

Homicides in the city this year are down 21 percent compared to last year - at 305 compared to 389, according to the Chicago Police Department.

President Barack Obama, who considers Chicago his hometown, tried to tighten the nation's gun control laws after 26 people, among them 20 children, died in a shooting rampage last December in Newtown, Connecticut.

The effort failed in Congress after the powerful gun rights lobby, the National Rifle Association, opposed tougher laws.

Meanwhile Chicago and the state of Illinois have loosened some gun laws this year despite the Emanuel's opposition. The city council abolished its registry of gun owners after its gun control law was ruled unconstitutional by the courts. Illinois approved the concealed carrying of guns and is the last state in the nation to authorize some sort of carrying guns in public.

(Reporting by Renita Young and Brendan O'Brien; Writing by Brendan O'Brien; Editing by Alison Williams)



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NASA is looking for participants willing to stay off their feet. Specifically they're looking for research subjects willing to remain on a special tilted bed for 70 straight days.


But full participation in a bed rest study isn't exactly easy. Subjects will not be able to get out of bed for any reason and have to pass a modified Air Force Class Physical, which includes an electrocardiogram, a drug and alcohol screening, and infectious disease screening.

According to Forbes.com, participants who complete the study will make $18,000 or $1,200 per week.

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Beth Ann Shriber, who participated in a 2006 study, said the monotony of remaining in bed all day, every day, can take its toll psychologically.

"You don't have to do anything but lie here," Shriber said in an article on NASA.gov. "I would say it's more about enduring."

The current study is designed to examine the longterm effects of weightlessness on astronauts' bodies. To simulate space the study subjects will lie on a specially designed bed that is tilted slightly.

In space there is no gravity to keep fluid from traveling towards the top of the body, so study participants lie with their head slightly lower than their feet. Certain subjects will be able to periodically exercise on specially designed equipment like a vertical treadmill.

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Simply by lying in bed the participants will experience a host of physical effect including atrophying muscles and a decrease of bone density. In addition, a person's overall fitness can decrease, since their hearts don't have to work as hard to pump blood.

In spite of the challenges, some participants have been interested in repeating the experiment.

"Some people are really interested in the science return and love helping NASA," John Neigut, a researcher with the NASA Flight Analogs Project, told the Houston Chronicle. "We have numerous repeat requests for people to come back to the study."

The study will be based out of NASA's Human Test Subject Facility at the University of Texas Medical Branch medical center in Galveston, Texas. After participating in the experiment, subjects will have a two-week period to recuperate.


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