Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Job - Contract Java Developer - Jacksonville

0 views
Skip to first unread message

r...@rmitsearch.com

unread,
Dec 6, 2003, 2:39:03 PM12/6/03
to
Location: Jacksonville, FL

Term: 3 Months

Experienced Java developer to augment project team.
Responsible for systems design and programming for assigned Intranet
web-enabled systems with application of OO techniques.
Proficient in Java, JSP, Javascript, DHTML, GUI techniques.
Experienced in all facets of delivering enterprise scale J2EE
solutions. Provides mentoring to team members learning Java, OO
techniques, and internet technologies.
Experienced with J2EE application servers and Unix (iPlanet and
Solaris preferred). Proficiency in current development practices and
techniques such as design patterns, methodologies, processes, and
configuration management.

US Citizens or Permanent Residents Only

Contact: r...@rmitsearch.com

r...@rmitsearch.com

unread,
Dec 1, 2004, 3:00:55 AM12/1/04
to
Service:

> Throughout the hearing, the main issue was whether or not Cummings was a
> threat to the community. Varney was ADAMENT in his assessment of Cummings
> as a danger but when pressed by Trujillo could come up with nothing more
> substantive than the BOOKS found in Cummings' home.
>
> These books came from publishers like Loompanix and dealt with such
> things as making bombs and establishing false identities. The other
> damning evidence was a list of Secret Service frequencies (from an
> issue of Monitoring Times), a copy of a magazine article that listed
> Secret Service codenames for President Reagan (dated 1983), and a
> material that the Secret Service had suspected was C4 explosives but
> which later turned out not to be.
>
> For some reason they feel COMPELLED TO MENTION THIS AT EACH HEARING as
> if C4 had actually been found when in fact the substance was something
> dentists use: DENTURE MOLD (the owner of the house was a dentist).
>
> The Secret Service specifically complained about his affiliation with
> 2600 Magazine (not a secret and not a reason to label someone a criminal).
[
The Secret Service is apparently unaware that 2600 magazine is the
world's preeminent above-ground hacker zine, subscribed to by members
of security departments all over Wall Street (at the least).

It is filled with fascinating information, highly useful for securing
one's systems. Here's a random sample factoid from 2600: although
on-site company switches are comm


0 new messages