[net.jobs] Syst. Prog. Position Available

ladner@uw-beaver.UUCP (05/31/83)

                              Systems Programmer

                        Department of Computer Science
                           University of Washington
                               Seattle, WA 98195

A  highly  skilled  Systems  Programmer  is  needed for program maintenance and
development  in  a  graduate  instructional  and  research  oriented   computer
laboratory.   Responsibilities include:  maintaining the operating systems of a
DECSYSTEM  2060  and  a  VAX  11/780  running  Unix;  hardware   and   software
troubleshooting;  system  performance  tuning;  and  assisting  users  with the
installation and maintenance of software.

Highly desirable: Two years experience with DEC computers; familiarity with DEC
10's or 20's and VAX's running Unix; proficiency with  assembly  languages,  C,
and Pascal.

Salary range: $2100 - 2800 per month depending on experience.

Please  send  your  resume  before  July  1,  1984  to  Richard Ladner, ARPANET
ladner@washington, USENET ladner@uw-beaver, telephone (206)543-9347.

rcj@burl.UUCP (06/02/83)

Just a small hint for you guys out there trying to hire Unix wizards,
systems programmers, and the like:

You all seem to go into great detail about the hardware (i.e., Vax 11/780
with xxxx uP and 5 DEC rp05 4.5 Megabyte Drives with..... [the numbers
are probably all wrong, but you get my drift]).  Then you state that this
machine, which you have described in infinite detail, is running Unix.
Wow, Unix!!  Really!!??  What flavor of Unix?  A person who has worked
on USG Unix only might have a little bit of trouble with Berkeley.  The
difference between V7 Unix and Release 5.0 is incredible!!  Also, what
is the user population on the system; what is the average load that
I will have to contend with; etc.

I don't mean to flame anyone out, but I really feel that you should
either be totally cryptic and hope someone gets interested (not likely),
or give the prospective applicant some real idea of what he/she will be
getting into if he decides to go for the job.  Try to remember that
a systems type is basically software-oriented -- the difference between
a Vax 11/750 and a Vax 11/780 is not nearly as important to them as
the difference between flavors of Unix and different user populations
and applications.
--

The MAD Programmer -- 919-228-3814 (Cornet 291)
alias: Curtis Jackson	...![ floyd sb1 mhuxv ]!burl!rcj