Skills Log

In: web resources

19 Jan 2010

Skills Log is a professional development network where people record their skills, and find new skills to learn based on their occupation.Users rate their skill proficiency, and can add their experience/education, and tie to their skills thereby creating an interactive rsum. By maintaining contacts within the system, such as colleagues, friends or acquaintances, users can also search the skills of their contacts, to find for example someone they know who speaks Spanish, or to find a colleague who is an expert with Excel. Links and images can be added or imported from delicious and Flickr to illustrate skills and to share resources with contacts.
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4 Responses to Skills Log

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bostonianinmo

February 7th, 2010 at 8:16 pm

Part time employees rarely get any fringe benefits.

Independent contractors NEVER get them. (But since you refer to the person as your "boss" you may actually be an employee not an IC, at least if you're in the US.)

If you're an IC and are not satisfied with your compensation, bill them more for your services. If they refuse to pay, move on.

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Old Kid

March 16th, 2010 at 2:03 am

PC Pit stop its free and does a good job at alot of pc testing

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Nelli

March 19th, 2010 at 2:27 pm

Iraq was bit more stable in Saddam's days then today. Yes thousands of people were killed by government, which is cruel but now more then 600,000 people killed under American command.

There is no doubt that Saddam was a bad guy but the way American removed his government was far more big mistake.

And the bigger problem I could see is that Americans will leave Iraq in more unstable position. They will leave Iraqis with the following.

1. Government who hasn't roots in people
2. Sunni, Shiite and Kurds are fighting
3. Infrastructure which was destroyed by devastated American bombing including civilian targets like hospitals, school, houses, flats, places of worship etc.
4. No economic activities

Now you can see what new Iraq will be after Americans' attack.

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Taba

March 28th, 2010 at 12:34 pm

I do something similar. I simply use TCP for all of my home network, but for my file server, it runs IPX only, and my laptop runs both IPX and TCP so it has access to all those sources. It's not super secure in that configuration alone, but unless somebody knows to load the IPX protocol and passwords, they won't even know its there. On my system I also control the IPX packet routing so it only goes between two specific physical ports.

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