Showing posts with label IT-professional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IT-professional. Show all posts

24 April, 2018

Need for security-professionals in Norway

Yes, it's been an often-discussed topic in Norwegian media in later years:

"Lack of security-professionals."

Well, as commented in this (Norwegian) article, BY a security-professional; there seems to be a lack of security-oriented IT professionals, but, not because they aren't there at all. They are. What is seriously lacking in this scenario, is competence in recruiting firms looking for this kind of competence. Always has been.

Computer-security is not a fixed-set field, AT ALL. Even though a lot of so-called "professionals" seem to be stuck on the idea that it is.

Serious professionals wanting to work in this field on the other hand, are (often) painfully aware of what it actually entails to do so:

  • constant refreshing on networking- / computing- / vulnerability-security in IT
  • vulnerability-monitoring of often-used software in the company
  • a simple awareness of the fact that: nobody is ever 100% secure
Computer-security is a weight-battle; does the securing of something vulnerable affect normal operations? Or, is the fix / security-measure absolutely needed for normal operations? These are everyday obstacles a security-professional has to deal with on a regular basis, so they have to be quite flexible on expanding their knowledge-base, and often.

These points are often completely missed by recruiters. They don't look for ability / knowledge / flexibility, they often tend to only look at academic degrees (preferably multiple(!)), gender, published articles / blog-posts and other non-related (and often quite unrealistic) demands for the position(s) in question.

Then, they complain about not finding any candidates for their outrageous requirements.

Seriously, re-define your demands / requirements to a more realistic degree, maybe you'll find a competent person to do the job. But you most certainly will NOT find the dream-candidate with the kind of demands currently set as standard.

26 October, 2017

Cloud Engineer + DevOps

The Cloud

A cloud engineer is an IT professional responsible for any technological duties associated with cloud computing, including design, planning, management, maintenance and support.

The cloud engineer position can be broken into multiple roles, including cloud architect, cloud software engineer, cloud security engineer, cloud systems engineer and cloud network engineer.

Each position focuses on a specific type of cloud computing, rather than the technology as a whole. Companies that hire cloud engineers are often looking to deploy cloud services or further their cloud understanding and technology.

https://aws.amazon.com/what-is-cloud-computing/



DevOps

DevOps is the combination of cultural philosophies, practices, and tools that increases an organization’s ability to deliver applications and services at high velocity: evolving and improving products at a faster pace than organizations using traditional software development and infrastructure management processes. This speed enables organizations to better serve their customers and compete more effectively in the market.



From my employer's website [edit/red.]:
 Robots and artificial intelligence create opportunities of enormous dimensions. 

 We have developed the market-leading virtual assistant, who has taken the European market by storm. The company is experiencing rapid growth and we are looking for new colleagues to join us at our office in Stavanger, Norway. Become a part of what the World Economic Forum calls "The Fourth Industrial Revolution"! 

 As an employee in our company, you become a part of a young and dynamic environment with a high degree of freedom for self-development. Your colleagues have exceptional expertise in data and technology, and all developers get access to state of the art equipment. 

 Our technology stack today consists of Linux, PostgreSQL, Apache, Varnish, Java, Spring, Grails, Groovy, Gradle, Python, Javascript, Lua, Torch, IntelliJ IDEA, Git and Amazon Web Services (hence the aws-amazon links above). We will use any required additional technologies in the future to solve whatever new challenges may arise.