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Search Results for "job market"
There are 3868 Retriever pages mentioning "job market":
  1. Interviewing -- Job
    The individual was concerned with interviewing successfully and completing the necessary job training if offered the position. A local vocational rehabilitation program provided a job coach to accompany the individual on the job interview. After successfully interviewing for the position, the employer accommodated the individual by allowing the job coach to assist the individual on-site during the initial job training phase.
  2. Job Bank
    YWCA Job Banks are open to the public. They offer free resources to job seekers, including computers with internet access and WinWay Resume software, telephone, job listings, and training and education resources. A typewriter and fax may ... be available. Some job banks specialize in serving teens and young adults.
  3. Unemployment -- Jobs
    Frictional unemployment arises because workers seeking jobs do not find them immediately; while looking for work they are counted as unemployed. Friction in this case refers to the incongruity between the demand for and supply of labor. The amount of frictional unemployment depends on the frequency with which workers change jobs and the time it takes to find new ones. Job changes occur often in the U.S.: A January 1983 survey showed that more than 25 percent of all workers had been with their current employers one year or less. About a quarter of those unemployed at any particular time are employed one month later. This means that a considerable degree of unemployment in the U.S. is frictional and lasts only a short time.
  4. Job Creation
    Since it's inception, the Job Creation project has proved quite successful. The project was initially based in Manenberg, but moved to the Bokaap in the city in 2003. Women travel in from various communities to work on a daily basis.
  5. Steven Jobs
    IBM and Hewlett-Packard are the treasure-laden galleons in this made-for-TV movie, while computer geeks Bill Gates and Steven Jobs are the shaggy-haired plunderers. When Gates and his people swagger into IBM and offer to license, not sell, the giant corporation their "DOS" operating system, we can't help but smile when one of the suits smirks, "Fine, the profits are in the computers themselves, not the software." The same thing happens when Jobs' partner, Steve Wozniak—who worked at Hewlett-Packard and was under contractual obligation to give them first shot at anything he helped invent—plunks down a rough-looking personal computer framed in plywood, and the HP execs derisively pass.
  6. Online Jobs
    Online Jobs and Work From Home Jobs are now your real chance to earn cash and prizes! You can get paid for your opinion – just take Online Surveys and Work At Home to help companies improve their products and stay ahead of market competitors.
  7. Steve Jobs
    Steve Jobs was a college dropout when he teamed up with Steve Wozniak in 1976 to sell personal computers assembled in Jobs' garage. That was the beginning of Apple Computers, which revolutionized the computing industry and made Jobs a multimillionaire before he was 30 years old. He was forced out of the company in 1985 and started the NeXT Corporation, but returned to his old company in 1996 when Apple bought NeXT. Jobs soon became Apple's chief executive officer and sparked a resurgence in the company with products like the colorful iMac computer and the iPod music player. Jobs is ... the CEO of Pixar, the animation company responsible for movies like Toy Story and Monsters, Inc. Pixar was purchased by the Walt Disney Company in 2006 for $7.4 billion in stock; the deal made Jobs the largest individual shareholder of Disney stock.
  8. Resume -- Jobs
    Cover letters must get the reader interested enough in your qualifications to look at your resume. They must be brief, too, because reviewers only spend about 30 seconds reading before making a decision. How do you make your first impression both brief and interesting? Start by getting to the point. In snail mail responses, instead of a lead-in sentence that lists the job title, put the job title and reference codes, if any, in a “Subject” line above the “Dear …”. When responding by e-mail, the subject line is built in. Leaving out the job title and any reference code guarantees your e-mail will not be read.
  9. Steve Jobs -- Apple Ceo Steve Jobs
    In kicking off the Macworld Expo keynote, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled a new Macintosh web browser named Safari. Jobs said the browser was "based on standards", "works with any Web site", has much-improved performance over IE (page-loading speed is "three times faster", JavaScript performs twice as fast and it launches "40% faster" - comparisons to Netscape 7.0 shows similar performance gains on the Macintosh platform). The KDE connection: "[f]or its Web page rendering engine, Safari draws on software from the Konqueror open source project. Weighing in at less than one tenth the size of another open source renderer, Konqueror helps Safari stay lean and responsive." The good news for Konqueror: Apple, which said that it will be "a good open source citizen [and] share[] its enhancements with the Konqueror open source community", has today sent all changes, along with a detailed changelog, to the KHTML developers. Congratulations to the KHTML developers for this recognition of their outstanding efforts. Update @22:34: Dirk Mueller has posted an interesting mail from the Safari engineering manager as well as his response.
  10. Internet Marketing Software -- Marketers
    Internet Millions is a new and refreshing e-book on Internet marketing and making money from home. It's a step-by-step guide that shows you exactly how to make money online and is for both beginners and more advanced marketers as well. Tags: Internet Software downloads 2007-01-09
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