photo.net Programmer ad

I’m a little out of touch with what it takes to attract good programmers these days.  Please comment on the following ad…

Programmer

 photo.net can see if they are having a
positive impact

Our current system is based on Oracle 9i and the ArsDigita Community
System 3.2, a free open-source toolkit that was developed initially for
 photo.net toolset and the
ArsDigita Community System.

This is a job that could be done full-time or by a 15-20 hour/week
part-timer who was experienced and enthusiastic and wanted to
concentrate on one or two modules.

Please email a cover letter stating salary requirements and your resume
(in plain text or HTML preferred, PDF is acceptable, Microsoft Word we
can’t read reliably) to philg@mit.edu, with a subject line of “photo.net
programmer application”

4 Comments »

  1. Sebastiano Pilla

    August 23, 2006 @ 5:42 am

    1

    The only problem I see with the ad is that you don’t mention the job location, or if telecommuting will be possible.

  2. Mark Aufflick

    August 24, 2006 @ 3:42 am

    2

    I second Senastiano’s comment. In fact if telecommuting is possible I would be very inclined to put in an application myself. Also you might want to state if visa sponsorship is or is not available. Did I mention that Australia’s free trade agreement with the US makes us as easy to hire as Canadians ;)

  3. philg

    August 24, 2006 @ 11:40 pm

    3

    Telecommuting is required because the company has no permanent office!

  4. Steve

    September 10, 2006 @ 10:29 pm

    4

    Drop the Oracle part?

    Sorry … but I have to say, among every good programmer I’ve ever known, an Oracle requirement is a big minus. I’m not just being pseudo-religious.

    My other suggestion would be to not be quite so wishy-washy about technology. TCL may be fine (I haven’t used it), but as someone who’s seen a lot of promises, a note about “some stuff may be written in RoR” sounds like lip-service to an idea that likely won’t turn into action.

    The rest looks great, though. The first part about “if you like the site and the community” is the most important and most valuable part, since photo.net and the ACS have been around for a looong time and have a lot of fans.

Leave a Comment

Log in
Protected by AkismetBlog with WordPress