quoted ad:

Software Developer

Capital City Press, a high-quality printer of scientific, medical and 
educational short-run journals is seeking a Software Developer to join our IT 
team.

Our desired candidate will work closely with technical and non-technical staff 
to create innovative applications from concept creation, though software 
architecting, to implementation and maintenance.  The ability to work 
effectively as a member of a development team committed to creative 
collaboration, best practices and methodologies, and exceeding expectations of 
our customers is required.

Exceptional programming, database design, problem solving, and communications 
skills are expected.  Proficiency working with the following is highly 
desirable: .NET Framework (ASP.NET), UniData-UniBasic, XML-XSL, and FileMaker 
Pro.  Experience working with Unix shell scripting, C, Perl, Dreamweaver MX, 
and SQL Server is a plus.

For additional information on this opportunity, visit our website at: 
www.capcitypress.com .  Submit a cover letter and resume via mail or email at:

Human Resources Manager
Capital City Press, Inc.
P.O. Box 546
Montpelier, VT  05601

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 



There is now one applications developer.  Me.  I'd really like some help.  We 
are a printer (manufacturer) that also provides editorial services to our 
customers.
We are running Primac, a package for the printing industry, with modifications, 
on UniData 5.2 on AIX 4.3.2, which we are upgrading to the latest version of 
Primac on UniData 6 on a Solaris server.  We do have a couple of large 
FileMaker Pro databases that we have taken over from user departments and 
enhanced.  We'd like to migrate those elsewhere (I'm pushing for UniData, of 
course) but it won't happen quickly.  We have no SQL Server or .NET 
applications at this time, though we'd like to see easier access to all that 
glorious information in UniData.  We use XML extensively with one of our 
customers and some of our production workflow uses XML.  I have done work with 
XSLT as part of both uses of XML.  We do have some Windows servers but most of 
our production servers are Unix boxes.  Workstations are mostly Windows PCs but 
we do use Macs, primarily in our production workflow.  OS X is good enough that 
we might see some increase on the Mac side where people have a choice.

Karjala
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