gary (04/16/83)
Computer Graphics Development Opportunity
for computer science graduates with
UNIX and C experience
Equity is available for computer science graduates of all
levels interested in joining a new fully funded startup in
the Saratoga / Los Gatos area.
You should have a BS, MS, or PhD in computer science with
UNIX and 'C' experience to qualify for this opportunity.
CAD or graphics experience will be helpful as well as any
other programming work.
If you would like to help develop the next generation
graphic system, send your resume to:
Qubix Graphic Systems, Inc.
18835 Cox ave.
Saratoga, California
95070
or
Call (408) 370-9229
Larry Krummel
Qubix Graphic Systems Inc.
...{decvax,ucbvax}!decwrl!qubix!larry
...ittvax!qubix!larry
decwrl!qubix!larry@Berkeley.ARPAdbl@duke.UUCP (07/28/83)
JOB OPENING - Duke University, Department of Computer Science
POSITION: Systems Programmer, Computer Science Laboratory
EFFECTIVE: Immediately
SALARY RANGE: $21,600 - $31,500, depending upon experience (plus University
Staff benefits)
ENVIRONMENT:
The Department maintains an interactive computing facility which is pri-
marily for graduate student and faculty use. It consists of several machines,
the largest of which is a DEC PDP 11/70 with 1.5 megabytes of memory, 404
megabytes of disk storage, and a dual density tape drive, running UNIX
(V7/2BSD). Terminals are provided in all offices, as well as in a public clus-
ter. Other peripheral equipment includes a Tektronix model 4014 graphics
display system, a HP 7220 four-pen plotter, a Versatec printer/plotter, two
letter quality printers, and two medium speed line printers. The departmental
facilities are on both the CSnet and the Usenet computer networks.
The Department's interactive VLSI design and graphics facility is built
around a DEC Vax 11/750 with 2 megabytes of memory, running UNIX (4.1BSD).
Peripheral equipment includes a Ramtek 9400 high resolution color graphics
system, a HP 7220 eight-pen plotter, and a DEC VT-125 medium resolution graph-
ics terminal.
There are also two DEC PDP 11/34A systems, both running UNIX (V7), an IBM
Series/I, running IBM's EDX operating system, and a student microprocessor
laboratory, consisting mainly of DEC and Hewlett-Packard microprocessors.
Expansion of this facility with funds provided by the University and an
NSF CER grant are beginning, including a new 1450 sq.ft. computer room, a DEC
Vax 11/780 system with 8 megabytes of memory, 2.5 gigabytes of disk storage,
two high density tape drives, and a high speed line printer, running UNIX
(4.2BSD), and an Ethernet local area network to tie all the local machines
together.
A network of personal workstations with high quality color and B&W graph-
ics, each running UNIX (most likely 4.2BSD) will be added in late 1984 and in
subsequent years. A statewide microwave network to tie the participants in the
Microelectronics Center of North Carolina effort together for video, voice and
data communications has also begun, with the prototype link between Duke and
the University of North Carolina to be in place in the next month.
JOB DESCRIPTION:
This position is in partial support of the expansion of the Department's
computing facilities outlined above. The Systems Programmer position will aug-
ment the existing staff, a Sr. Systems Programmer (Lab Administrator) and a
graduate student assistant, in many of the following duties:
1) Participate in the installation, testing, and maintenance of all software,
including operating systems, compilers, interpreters, databases, CAD systems,
networking, and other utilities. Also included is the installation of new dev-
ices and the ability to write and install software drivers into the operating
systems.
2) Interface with vendors in the resolution of problems regarding both
software and hardware.
3) Participate in the training of other staff members, faculty, and new gradu-
ate students in the use of the Departmental computing facilities. It will be
necessary to have a high level of knowledge about the facilities and the
hardware and software available. This person on many occasions will have to
serve as a user consultant for faculty, staff, and graduate students.
4) Participate in the preparation and maintenance of documentation, insuring
that it is kept up-to-date, and in the dissemination of information and docu-
mentation to the users of the Departmental computing facilities as needed.
5) Maintain the Departmental tape archives, insuring that backup of all disk
file systems is accomplished in a timely and organized fashion.
6) Participate in the evaluation of new software and hardware to meet the
changing and growing needs of Departmental research and education. Devise and
evaluate the results of benchmarks and other comparisons.
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS FOR CANDIDATES FOR THIS POSITION:
BS in Computer Science or related field. A thorough working knowledge of
UNIX system internals and the C programming language. Experience with DEC Vax
and PDP-11 hardware.
If interested, send resume in confidence to:
via US Mail: via electronic mail:
David Leonard duke!dbl - USENET
Department of Computer Science dbl.duke@udel-relay - CSnet and ARPAnet
Duke University
Durham, NC 27706
or call David Leonard at (919) 684-3048.
Duke University is an Equal Opportunity Employer.pleasant@topaz.ARPA (Mel Pleasant) (01/04/85)
I'm posting this message for a friend of mine. I don't know anything about the job(s) in question. I can say that this is a small consultant company - that's about all I know.... The company is looking for individuals with 1-2 years of experience. They are extremely interested in individuals who have experience in C, Basic (Basic Plus 2 I would presume), and/or PL/1 and have worked with graphics and/or communications software. If you're interested, you should send a resume to: Mr. Richard Nemeth APT Developments Corp. 20 Exchange Place Suite 4500 N.Y., N.Y. 10005
cnj@bambi.UUCP (Charlie Judice) (01/06/85)
The Wideband Services Research division of Bell Communications Research, Inc has several openings for new CS-Phds and EE-Phds with strong software background and experience. The goals of this division are to understand and anticipate the wideband ( 64Kbps up to multi-gigabit/sec ) communication needs in the future for business and personal use. Special attention is given to interactive video and wideban information browsing applications. Staff members are expected to know their field thoroughly and be familiar with related work at other industrial and academic research laboratories. Projects usually involve small, inter- disciplinary teams that identify a new service concept, outline a hardware and software architecture, and build lab models for demostration of feasibility or field measurements. Typical buzzwords heard in the hallways include: multi-media storage and retrieval, distributed university, third age of video, world net information browsing, picture videotex, teletex, multi-media bridging. Our facilities include: 2 VAX 11/750's running Berkeley 4.2, 5 Apollo's, and several varities of PCs. A PEL Image processor capable of storing and displaying HDTV images in real-time. A local TV head end and associated studio with video editors, digital effects generators, several studio quality cameras. Hardware design is performed on two Mentor CAD workstations. Limited summer employment for Phd candidates is available for the summer of '85. Send inquiries to: Dr. Charles N. Judice ( Charlie ) Bell Communications Research 2A287 Morristown, NJ 07960 bellcore!bambi!cnj