When I went to the 'Full Article' I was totally puzzeled where the rest was!?! This review is incredibly lame. The author was like: "Let's see, Linux is great because it runs on everything from my toaster to my server. Can Solaris run on my toaster? No? It sucks!".
The article spends more time talking about the technology previews for Janus and ZFS then the *real* fully functional features of the OS!! WTF?
As a college grad it is of course difficult to instantly obtain the N years experienced required for a job. If you are looking for something that does require something as little as 3-5 years experience, most likely the position might consider a new college hire. Now this point of consideration may only come if an applicant, such as yourself, shows some differentiation.
What have you done, besides go to class and get your degree, over the last four years? Did you have any internships? Part-time jobs? Independent projects? Extra-curicular activities (and no, the cheerleading squad is not what I mean)? All of these things can provide points of differentiation that might convince an employer that they will take an amazing new college hire versus someone who has worked for the last 3-5 years.
Remember, the experience clock does not start once you get your diploma. Ideally, it should start once you acquire an interest in the area of study in which you want to seak a career.
The PCMCIA intergration is not as easy as it sounds. First, you still need the userland tools: cardmgr, cardctl etc... These do not ship with the kernel. Thus you still need to get the card services package from pcmcia.sourceforge.org Second, for 2.3.x kernels you need get the devel snapshots of the cs package. (found on the pcmcia-cs page) Once you have that, everything you be working nicely. I was also a bit confused by 'PCMCIA in the Kernel', but a bit of playing showed what it really ment.
I'm running JDS3 for Linux on my laptop right now. It exists and Sun is moving forward with JDS for both Solaris and Linux
When I went to the 'Full Article' I was totally puzzeled where the rest was!?! This review is incredibly lame. The author was like: "Let's see, Linux is great because it runs on everything from my toaster to my server. Can Solaris run on my toaster? No? It sucks!".
The article spends more time talking about the technology previews for Janus and ZFS then the *real* fully functional features of the OS!! WTF?
Thanks for a crappy review.
http://www.baseart.com/walk-ins/
As a college grad it is of course difficult to instantly obtain the N years experienced required for a job. If you are looking for something that does require something as little as 3-5 years experience, most likely the position might consider a new college hire. Now this point of consideration may only come if an applicant, such as yourself, shows some differentiation.
What have you done, besides go to class and get your degree, over the last four years? Did you have any internships? Part-time jobs? Independent projects? Extra-curicular activities (and no, the cheerleading squad is not what I mean)? All of these things can provide points of differentiation that might convince an employer that they will take an amazing new college hire versus someone who has worked for the last 3-5 years.
Remember, the experience clock does not start once you get your diploma. Ideally, it should start once you acquire an interest in the area of study in which you want to seak a career.
Good luck!
The PCMCIA intergration is not as easy as it sounds.
First, you still need the userland tools: cardmgr, cardctl etc...
These do not ship with the kernel. Thus you still need to get the card services package from pcmcia.sourceforge.org
Second, for 2.3.x kernels you need get the devel snapshots of the cs package. (found on the pcmcia-cs page)
Once you have that, everything you be working nicely.
I was also a bit confused by 'PCMCIA in the Kernel', but a bit of playing showed what it really ment.
see ya
http://jgoldsch.resnet.bucknell.edu/dragon.html
be nice.