Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine wrote: of my best hires (at sri, .5k hosts, circa 1987) were simply > trainable. an english major (f) from reed, and a cs major (m) from a > school that taught cobol as a modern language -- i hired him for his > night job skills, managing an auto body shop, managing ordinary joes > holding tools.
My best hire, now one of my good friends, was someone who was on a teacher-training course but had to drop out due to a long term illness. She came to me recommended by my girlfriend-a-the-time as someone who would make a good office junior. She is now one of the bext web/perl/sql coders I know. A willingness, nay - a NEED, to learn and be open to new concepts is what forward moving technology sectors (like ours I hope) need. Acronyms mean sh*t. When involved in any hiring process, I actively avoid CCIE/MSCE/etc. laden resumes. Mentioning once, fine. Using them like religious phrases is an indictation of, well, stupidity. > i'm recruiter-proof. i'm not sure i'd want anyone who wasn't. Aye. I have *never* used my CV/Resume in getting a job. I still have one, but it's very out of date. Peter