Help With Hiring Python Developers

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • fuego

    Help With Hiring Python Developers

    My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
    two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling. We've
    posted at Monster, Dice, jobs.perl.org and python.jobmart. com. Can
    anyone advise other job boards that might be helpful? Also, feel free
    to have a look at the job description and let me know if there is
    anything that we're missing. This is the first time we've recruited
    specifically for these Python and Zope, as we've had internal
    advocates who have brought its use to critical mass.


    Thanks in advance!
  • Alex Martelli

    #2
    Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

    fuego <fuego13@excite .com> wrote:
    [color=blue]
    > My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
    > two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling. We've
    > posted at Monster, Dice, jobs.perl.org and python.jobmart. com. Can
    > anyone advise other job boards that might be helpful? Also, feel free[/color]

    Have you tried python.org? I believe they list jobs offers too,
    nowadays. Also <http://www.pythonandzo pe.com/JobMarket/index_html>?

    Could also be just that the job market is tight for Manhattan-local
    candidates right now... considering you accept Perl as well as Python,
    and have Zope/Plone only as 'desired' and not 'required', I'd say you're
    casting as wide a net as feasible, and then some, in terms of skills
    background.


    Alex

    Comment

    • Bill McClain

      #3
      Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

      On 2004-12-01, fuego <fuego13@excite .com> wrote:[color=blue]
      > My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
      > two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling.[/color]

      Allow offsite workers and you'll have all the candidates you want.

      -Bill
      --
      Sattre Press The King in Yellow
      http://sattre-press.com/ by Robert W. Chambers
      info@sattre-press.com http://sattre-press.com/kiy.html

      Comment

      • Skip Montanaro

        #4
        Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers


        fuego> We've posted at Monster, Dice, jobs.perl.org and
        fuego> python.jobmart. com. Can anyone advise other job boards that
        fuego> might be helpful?

        The official home of the Python Programming Language


        Skip

        Comment

        • Miklós P

          #5
          Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

          "fuego" <fuego13@excite .com> wrote in message
          news:388e4edd.0 411302107.79140 dfb@posting.goo gle.com...[color=blue]
          > My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
          > two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling. We've
          > posted at Monster, Dice, jobs.perl.org and python.jobmart. com. Can
          > anyone advise other job boards that might be helpful? Also, feel free[/color]
          ...[color=blue]
          > Thanks in advance![/color]

          Hm, you're looking for *Manhattan locals* who are required to have Perl
          skills (i.e. magically working, hardly readable line noise :D ) but
          optionally they may have Python skills, too (i.e. magically working, easily
          readable pseudo code :D )

          How about adding the additional requirement of COBOL and that the applicant
          must live in a particular street? :-)

          Miklós



          Comment

          • Ed Leafe

            #6
            Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

            On Dec 1, 2004, at 12:18 PM, Bill McClain wrote:
            [color=blue][color=green]
            >> My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
            >> two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling.[/color]
            >
            > Allow offsite workers and you'll have all the candidates you want.[/color]

            Exactly. I'm 5 hours away in Rochester, NY, and might be interested in
            the job, but man, that commute would be a pain! ;-)

            ___/
            /
            __/
            /
            ____/
            Ed Leafe



            Comment

            • William Park

              #7
              Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

              fuego <fuego13@excite .com> wrote:[color=blue]
              > My company (http://primedia.com/divisions/businessinformation/) has
              > two job openings that we're having a heckuva time filling. We've
              > posted at Monster, Dice, jobs.perl.org and python.jobmart. com. Can
              > anyone advise other job boards that might be helpful? Also, feel free
              > to have a look at the job description and let me know if there is
              > anything that we're missing. This is the first time we've recruited
              > specifically for these Python and Zope, as we've had internal
              > advocates who have brought its use to critical mass.
              > http://jobs.primediabusiness.com/ar/...lyst/index.htm
              >
              > Thanks in advance![/color]

              You are not being realistic.
              - "email marketing" means spams.
              - "Perl and/or Python" and " "Zope and Plone" indicate that you
              don't know what you are doing, so you're simply listing what any
              clueless HR would be doing.
              - Manhattan, New York is expensive place to live in, even you're
              paying Manhattan dollar.

              Instead of listing what I should know, why don't you list what I would
              be doing? That is, what problems do you need to solve?

              Yours truly,
              --
              William Park <opengeometry@y ahoo.ca>
              Open Geometry Consulting
              Linux solution for data processing.

              Comment

              • Yet Another Mike

                #8
                Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                "Ed Leafe" <ed@leafe.com > wrote in message
                news:mailman.71 25.1102131626.5 135.python-list@python.org ...[color=blue][color=green]
                >> Allow offsite workers and you'll have all the candidates you want.[/color]
                >
                > Exactly. I'm 5 hours away in Rochester, NY, and might be interested[/color]

                And, if they are willing to go offsite, why not go to India and save lots of
                bucks?

                If I had the skills, I'd be willing to take a contract up to 1 year with
                expenses paid
                to visit Manhattan!



                Comment

                • Ian Bicking

                  #9
                  Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                  Yet Another Mike wrote:[color=blue]
                  > "Ed Leafe" <ed@leafe.com > wrote in message
                  > news:mailman.71 25.1102131626.5 135.python-list@python.org ...
                  >[color=green][color=darkred]
                  >>>Allow offsite workers and you'll have all the candidates you want.[/color]
                  >>
                  >>Exactly. I'm 5 hours away in Rochester, NY, and might be interested[/color]
                  >
                  >
                  > And, if they are willing to go offsite, why not go to India and save lots of
                  > bucks?[/color]

                  Trust issues? In general, Python requires you trust your programmers.
                  People give Java grief about its restricted environment and static
                  typing, but if you don't trust the programmer to do a good job, at least
                  with Java they (maybe) can't mess things up as badly for everyone else
                  working on a project. You can mess things up royally with Python. I
                  like working with a language that respects my intelligence, but that's
                  not without its costs.

                  In general, Python rewards highly-skilled programmers with a
                  considerably increased productivity. We talk about how Python is also
                  easy to learn and maintain, and that's still true, but it doesn't mean
                  that it evens out the differences in productivity between programmers.
                  In fact, quite the opposite -- that it's easy to learn and maintain
                  means that there's less risk in using a highly skilled, highly
                  productive programmer; in other languages you risk being left with a
                  program that only another highly skilled programmer can maintain.

                  Also, Python encourages agile methodologies, even if you aren't
                  explicitly trying to use agile methodologies. They just work well.
                  They also work well when you can have a more intimate relationship
                  between developer and project manager or customer. Hiring in India or
                  elsewhere makes that intimate relationship harder to create. And
                  frankly, Python is not the language for companies who expect mediocrity
                  in their programmers, and I think that outsourcing is for companies that
                  expect mediocrity.

                  I don't mean to insult Indian programmers -- certainly there are Indian
                  programmers who are just as good as a good programmer in the US, able to
                  communicate well, able to work independently, able to judge tradeoffs,
                  etc. But those aren't the cheap ones. This isn't just about nation of
                  origin. Outsourcing is about turning programmers into a commodity, and
                  you can only make a commodity out of something where quality isn't an
                  issue. In the case of programming, that means you must expect the
                  lowest common denominator of quality given the constraints. I think
                  that's a stupid way to look at programming in general, but it's *way*
                  more stupid with Python.

                  --
                  Ian Bicking / ianb@colorstudy .com / http://blog.ianbicking.org

                  Comment

                  • Michael Fuhr

                    #10
                    Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                    Ian Bicking <ianb@colorstud y.com> writes:
                    [color=blue]
                    > ...that it's easy to learn and maintain means that there's less risk
                    > in using a highly skilled, highly productive programmer; in other
                    > languages you risk being left with a program that only another
                    > highly skilled programmer can maintain.[/color]

                    Indeed. An acquaintance of mine advocates writing code that only
                    skilled programmers can maintain (he favors a language that shall
                    remain nameless but that has been known to resemble modem noise or
                    cartoon swearing). His justification isn't that he wants to keep
                    the work in the good-ol'-boy network (although that might be part
                    of it), but that by making it difficult for anybody else, you're
                    ensuring that only good programmers ever work on the code.

                    Tell that to the poor slob who gets stuck with the job because the
                    department can't or won't hire anybody else.

                    --
                    Michael Fuhr

                    Comment

                    • Paul Rubin

                      #11
                      Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                      mfuhr@fuhr.org (Michael Fuhr) writes:[color=blue]
                      > Indeed. An acquaintance of mine advocates writing code that only
                      > skilled programmers can maintain (he favors a language that shall
                      > remain nameless but that has been known to resemble modem noise or
                      > cartoon swearing).[/color]

                      TECO? Some of the best programmers I know used it, but I hadn't heard
                      of anything being done in it in quite a while.

                      Comment

                      • Aahz

                        #12
                        Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                        In article <7x8y8cxo6z.fsf @ruckus.brouhah a.com>,
                        Paul Rubin <http://phr.cx@NOSPAM.i nvalid> wrote:[color=blue]
                        >mfuhr@fuhr.o rg (Michael Fuhr) writes:[color=green]
                        >>
                        >> Indeed. An acquaintance of mine advocates writing code that only
                        >> skilled programmers can maintain (he favors a language that shall
                        >> remain nameless but that has been known to resemble modem noise or
                        >> cartoon swearing).[/color]
                        >
                        >TECO? Some of the best programmers I know used it, but I hadn't heard
                        >of anything being done in it in quite a while.[/color]

                        APL. I've heard programmers making similar comments (including possibly
                        Michael's nameless acquaintance).
                        --
                        Aahz (aahz@pythoncra ft.com) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/

                        WiFi is the SCSI of the 21st Century -- there are fundamental technical
                        reasons for sacrificing a goat. (with no apologies to John Woods)

                        Comment

                        • Andrew Koenig

                          #13
                          Re: Help With Hiring Python Developers

                          "Aahz" <aahz@pythoncra ft.com> wrote in message
                          news:cp1td2$dfo $1@panix1.panix .com...
                          [color=blue]
                          > APL. I've heard programmers making similar comments (including possibly
                          > Michael's nameless acquaintance).[/color]

                          Especially programmers who've never used it.

                          To me, grousing about APL's unusual character set sounds a lot like grousing
                          about Python's unusual lexical structure. Both language aspects seem weird
                          at first, but the weirdness rapidly goes away with experience.


                          Comment

                          Working...