Front-end dev skills at Yahoo! Juku school

Today Yahoo! announced via the YUI blog that they’re seeking students for their Yahoo! Juku program. Yahoo! Juku is an interesting training opportunity in front-end development skills—“HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and PHP”, plus more—as well as working experience within a guided program inside Yahoo. Yahoo is pretty direct about their goals for the Juku program, which are to grow talent they particularly need, train their own staff to teach (cool!) and also draw attention to the void around web skills in academic CS programs. Here’s Yahoo’s call-to-action:

If you’re a budding Front-End genius with a strong background in programming fundamentals and a passion to learn, [Yahoo! would] like to hear from you.

The vision of the Juku program is to provide top-quality training in frontend technologies (HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and PHP) with the ultimate goal of producing great frontend engineers. Participants are put through 3-4 months of intensive training taught by some of the best frontend engineers at Yahoo!, focusing not just on concepts, but also on best practices in terms of maintainability, accessibility, and performance.

I like that Yahoo is addressing the lack of CS dept. attention toward web development skills, while so many social websites bring web programming into day-to-day lingo. And in the ashes of the Yahoo-Microsoft merger coverage (disclosure: I work for partly MSFT), it is nice to see focus continue on efforts like education, even with so many open questions about where Yahoo heads next.


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Bad Credit Offers

However, two years ago all of this changed. The Office of Fair Trading decided that credit card penalty fees were too high, and as a result of this a new regulation was brought in that stopped any credit card provider from charging more than a maximum of £12 per fee.

For many credit card firms this meant massive losses, and many officials were concerned that all credit card users would suffer as a result of these losses. It appears that they were right.

Over the past couple of years credit card fees, charges, and interest rates have rocketed, as the firms try to claw back the lost revenue from the capped penalty charges.The following Credit Cards are for People with Bad Credit or less than perfect credit. These cards may be able to help build, rebuild or re-establish your credit if you make on-time payments with all of your creditors and maintain your account balances below the credit limits. Choose from both secured and unsecured credit card offers below.
badcreditoffers.com is solution for you have bad credit credit cards. They can give service for comparison website for people with bad credit. Badcreditoffers.com featuring credit cards, home loans, auto loans, personal loans, and much more. You can apply for the offer that’’s right for them, and by making payments on time you can start down the road toward rebuilding their credit and, perhaps, your financial future.


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Business Startup: To-Do Checklist

As promised, I’ll be keeping you up to date on all the tasks and processes that goes into creating my new business - {radiiate}. I’m sure you’ll agree with me, that there’s a whole bunch of things that needs to be put into place when creating a new business; and even though it is a very exciting experience, it also requires a lot of time (and patience if admin tasks aren’t your thing).

So here’s a progress report:

Creating an identity

The first thing I did was to decide on a name and create a logo for the new business venture. In my opinion, it is very important to get this out of the way first, as you need to be able to visualize your dream business and without a name / logo, that’ll never happen.

Business Cards

Many people will argue that business cards is not needed for online professionals, as their website / blog / online portfolio becomes their “business card”. Even though I might tend to agree with that argument, a lot of corporates still prefer exchanging business cards - so it is better to be prepared (and have your business card ready) when go to a project pitch with the big-wig corporates…

Anyway, this means that I had a 1000 cards printed for {radiiate} (will still post photos of them, when I find the inspiration to photograph them :) ) and they’ve already been pretty valuable on a few occassions.

Registering a company

This is super, super important - you have got to distinguish between your own, personal finances and that of the company. So I’ve registered a Closed Corporation (CC) in South Africa - basically a Limited Liability Company - to allow me to have a separate legal entity to work with. Since I bought a shelf company (I needed to have a company that was already registered on 1 March this year for tax purposes), I’ve filed for the changes to the name and members’ details - which should take about 2 / 3 weeks to be approved.

Hiring!?

Since I don’t have offices yet (I’m still living the freelance life and working from home), I haven’t been able (or interested really) to employ anyone full-time. I have however established relationships with a bunch other freelancers, to whom I can outsource work on-demand. In addition, I have found a local designer / coder to basically work for me on a freelance basis, whereby I send him work on a daily basis and he bills me per hour (as I’m booking out 90% of his time at the moment, he is almost an employee, except for the fact that his remuneration is not part of any of my overheads).

Remaining To-Do’s

I’ve still got quite a bit to do, before I can say that I’m running a new business… :) Here’s the most important things that still needs some attention:

So what do you make of all of this? Got any experience in this regard?

(Image by ~dontvu219)


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Video Blog Review 1 - FavBrowser.com

Welcome to the first Daily Blog Tips video post. It has been a long time since the idea of playing with videos came into my mind, and now I am finally up with the first one. I am aware that the quality needs to get improved, but if you guys like the format it might become a weekly feature on the blog. Apart from blog reviews I will try to to tutorials and how-to videos as well.

On this first blog review I will cover the design and layout aspects of FavBrowser.com, a blog coming from one of our readers (I asked his permission to review it).


In future reviews we will cover different aspects, like search engine optimization, content quality, promotion strategy and so on. If you took the time to watch the video, please let me know if you would like to see more of them, and if you have any suggestions for topics or formats.

If for some reason you can’t see the video player, here is the link for the YouTube page: http://youtube.com/watch?v=WI074pRX13w.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

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Video Blog Review 1 - FavBrowser.com

Welcome to the first Daily Blog Tips video post. It has been a long time since the idea of playing with videos came into my mind, and now I am finally up with the first one. I am aware that the quality needs to get improved, but if you guys like the format it might become a weekly feature on the blog. Apart from blog reviews I will try to to tutorials and how-to videos as well.

On this first blog review I will cover the design and layout aspects of FavBrowser.com, a blog coming from one of our readers (I asked his permission to review it).


In future reviews we will cover different aspects, like search engine optimization, content quality, promotion strategy and so on. If you took the time to watch the video, please let me know if you would like to see more of them, and if you have any suggestions for topics or formats.

If for some reason you can’t see the video player, here is the link for the YouTube page: http://youtube.com/watch?v=WI074pRX13w.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

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