I've got an eMall system. I am working hard to get it to the point where I can hang it up on the Giant Java Tree. I'm grinding it out in html, servlets, and JSPs. I've already hung a piece of it up on the tree: webThingy. It runs on mySQL. To see a wee bit of it look here. This registration servlet is not live and not visible to the world at large; it's my testbed. It will be GPL'd soon.
Dig this: the servlet engine is running last Wednesday's snapshot of Kaffe using Apache mod_jserv 0.9.12 on a Cobalt RaQ. I think it's the only RaQ in the world running java servlets.
A carefully constructed salary history is your best friend. Just keep it consistent. Your salary requirement should be ~25% of your current salary; therefore, your salary history should be such that you appear to be asking for a modest (9-12%) increase. Unless, of course, you have less than 2 years experience. Then you can easily double your leverage. Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies
absadamnlutley!
who cares?
scoundrels accusing cads...
I've got an eMall system. I am working hard to get it to the point where I can hang it up on the Giant Java Tree.
I'm grinding it out in html, servlets, and JSPs. I've already hung a piece of it up on the tree:
webThingy.
It runs on mySQL. To see a wee bit of it look here. This registration servlet is not live and not visible to the world at large; it's my testbed. It will be GPL'd soon.
Dig this: the servlet engine is running last Wednesday's snapshot of Kaffe using Apache mod_jserv 0.9.12 on a Cobalt RaQ. I think it's the only RaQ in the world running java servlets.
TTFN.
A carefully constructed salary history is your best friend. Just keep it consistent. Your salary requirement should be ~25% of your current salary; therefore, your salary history should be such that you appear to be asking for a modest (9-12%) increase. Unless, of course, you have less than 2 years experience. Then you can easily double your leverage.
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies