Showing posts with label Interview Tips. Show all posts

Career Opportunities in Dentistry  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , , , , ,

Your work as a general practitioner mainly involves the following:

1. The removal of dental caries or decay from the teeth and filling up of the cavities;

2. Tooth extraction which includes the administration of anesthetics

3. Application of teeth sealants

4. Treatment of gum diseases by performing gum and bone surgery which includes examination of x-ray results

5. Take teeth impressions used as model for dentures to replace the extracted teeth

The first is to buffer the news. Watch something funny before. Since the news usually ends on upbeat notes, that should keep your mood up. Another technique is to do something while you watch the news, so that you don't spend all of your focus on the news. Read a book or do a crossword while watching the news.

By focusing on the Latest SEO news only, you are more likely that you will allow it to adjust your mood. By giving it only part of your attention, you can stabilize your mood a bit more. You can also watch the news with someone else. That way, you have someone with whom you can talk about what you are seeing which might help you to release any anxiety that you are feeling.

Sometimes, watching the news on television is more harmful than helpful. The internet allows you to get news whenever you want and that might work better. Yahoo and Google both have comprehensive news sites and companies like the New York Times and CNN also maintain extensive web presences. It would allow you to watch the news a little at a time and get headlines without needing to get too much information.

Why We Need Education  

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Education enhances one's knowledge and as the saying goes; Knowledge is Power. However, power that a person posses will be dependent on how an individual uses it. A person could ultimately choose to use knowledge and power for the benefit of themselves, for others or to be simply used in the destruction of mankind. Education is the knowledge of putting one's potentials to maximum use. Education makes man a right thinker. It tells man how to think and how to make decision.

This is where the education should be given importance. As education is geared towards individual development, such development should eventually transform into social development. For individuals and nations, it is key to creating, applying, and spreading knowledge-and thus to the development of dynamic, globally competitive economies.

It is one important policy that a state must promote, as education is the only means to understand its history, culture and to some extent their religion. Education is the only means to unite a country, a people as nation. This is to say that education is a must if a nation aspires to achieve growth and development and more importantly sustain it. The importance of education cannot be neglected by any nation. And in today's world, the role of education has become even more vital. It is an absolute necessity for economic and social development of any nation.

Google - Yahoo! Deals  

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Yahoo on Wednesday sent a letter to its shareholders justifying its deal with Google, saying it will enhance the company's profitability and provide more shareholder value than the offer put forth by Microsoft to invest in Yahoo's search business.

The deal with Google will generate US$250 million to $450 million in incremental operating cash flow for Yahoo in the first year, Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock and CEO Jerry Yang wrote in the joint letter.

Together, Google, with a 61.8% share and Yahoo, with 20.6%, own 82.4% of the U.S. search market, according to comScore's latest monthly report.

Let me first start by explaining what Social bookmarking is and why it is important to social bookmark all of your blog posts. Quite simply stated, social bookmarking will bring your blog more traffic. As internet marketers, that it exactly what we are all after. Social bookmark sites allow us to share our favorite sites with others who might be interested as well as increasing our back links at the same time.

All the links that you leave have the potential to bring traffic back to your blog. As you begin to regularly submit your link to authority social bookmarking sites, like Digg, Twitter, and Stumbleupon, your blog will benefit greatly by moving up rank rapidly in the search engines for your selected keywords.

Now just a quick tutorial on how to easily social bookmark your blog posts.

First, what you need to do is find a list of some social bookmark sites. There are plenty around, just do a Google search or go to SocialMarker.com.

Next you have to sign up at each bookmarking site. This process may take up to an hour but keep in mind that you are only going to have to go through this process one time.

It is no magic that you can get the information you want on the web. It will be free, if you want it to:

1. Search for your subjects. You will be landed on some websites.

2. Read the web page, if the information that you need is given enough or you want more information. Normally the free information websites only provide you with some general information.

3. If not, click on the underlined keyword on the page. Normally, you be sent to the sales page of the products matching the subject you searched in details. If you really like it then buy it. If you only want to get that information free then go to 4.

4. Go back to the previous website. Check all the ads appearing on the web page, select the one that shows exact or similar information that you searched for. If you find the information that you want, you have 2 choices. Buy it or look for the keywords of the web page, the words that appear many times in the web page or the headline.

5. Search the keywords on search engines until you are totally satisfied for information gathered or repeat step 1 again. Sooner or later you will find what you wanted.

In general, finding information free on search engines requires a lot of patience and is time consuming. Free websites most likely provide only limited information if you are searching for something important. The best choice is to buy it because bought information is usually written by specialists and is copyrighted.

The secret to getting indexed in Yahoo involves constant updates to your site. The updates, however, have to be done on both the site and through Real Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds. Here’s how you go about getting indexed.

The first step is to start a blog for your site. You can build a blog on your site or use a free service. I prefer blogger.com. Once you have the blog up with content posted, you must turn the blog into a real simple syndication feed. Again, you can use your own system. I prefer to use a free service because I really don’t have the time to waste on such things.

If you have a yahoo email account, you need to access you’re My Yahoo page. If you don’t have an account, get one! Once you are on the My Yahoo page, do the following:

1. Click the “add content” link in the upper left hand under the search box.

2. When the new page opens, click the “Add RSS by URL” link on the right of the “Find Content” search box in the upper section of the page.

3. Enter the exact link provided by Feedburner and click “add.” Do NOT add the url for your blog.

4. Click the “My Yahoo” tab at the top of the page and refresh the page.

At this point, you should see your feed at the bottom of the page. If you don’t, be patient. Yahoo is sometimes slow, so just try it again in an hour or so. When the feed is added, you should see the name of your blog and the title of each post under it. Yahoo can take up to a day to add new posts, so don’t panic if they don’t show up immediately.

Once you’ve completed the above, Yahoo will follow the links in the blog and index the pages on your site.

Always keep your keywords as descriptive and as relevant to your subject matter as possible. In other words, the search engines follow whatever you write, they don't know what your article is about. The search engine crawlers will take a snapshot of exactly what you write. If you have used the correct descriptive keywords to make your point, your audience will have no trouble finding what you have written.

Believe me Google and Yahoo want you to find what you're looking for. When deciding on what keywords to use in any situation, I find the best strategy is to put myself in the shoes of my searching customer. I ask myself, what question would I ask, to find what I'm selling, and how would I phrase it. When you can answer that question, your customers should have no problems finding you.

For instance, if you are selling coffee online and you want your customers to find you, you could advertise "coffee for sale", but when your prospective customer types "coffee for sale" into the search engine, they will get millions of results returned, and finding you in the results is a joke. However, if you advertise "Mike's Aroma Blast Kona Coffee", your customers will find you every time.

It doesn't matter whether you are selling something online or searching for something to buy, using relevant keywords makes all the difference between success and failure.

SEO myth: Meta tags  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , , , , , , , ,

The general reasoning behind people or companies still wanting or attempting to use meta tags is: "Meta tags will make all the difference for our web site" or "We have heard or read of companies that their web sites were placed way on top because of meta tags". Our response to such statements is, four or five years ago, it could have been true somewhat, even if some people don't exactly agree on that statement.

At the beginning of the Internet, meta tags were originally incorporated in a site as an attempt to better assist webmasters. They were also included to help search engines discover what their site was all about. Well, as one might expect, it didn't take very long that some people found a way to short-circuit the system as it were.

Some actually tried and successfully got around in abusing this technique by writing useless keywords into their meta tags in hopes to trick the search engines to rank them higher. Today, and because of all this abuse, most major search engines, especially Google, are placing less and less importance in the presence or absence of meta tags and their content.

Types of Keywords  

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Keywords are basic raw material used in Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Keyword selection must be done using Keyword Research where we use special tools to find out a list of Keywords (search terms) searched by targeted audience, recently. Keyword can be single word, two or three words, multiple words and theme based.

Basically There are 3 Types of Keywords:-

  1. Keyword of Single word:- Keyword of Single word helps in bringing huge traffic but these terms are mostly not relevant these days, as, searchers mostly use two or three keyword to find out their required information.
  2. Keyword of Multiple words:- Keyword of Multiple words is used to target a specific traffic, which leads to high sale, top position in search result listing as well as improves page rank competition. Keyword of Multiple words are known as Specific Keyword where we target a specific audience & not general searcher. Keyword of Multiple words helps to target a specific page for a specific audience.
  3. Keywords based on Theme:- Keywords based on Theme are used in each page of web site to focus on a specific topic correlated to a targeted topic or idea . Keywords based on Theme effectively contribute in growth of informative pages for its site focusing on different related topics.

"Dangling links" are simply links that point to any page with no outgoing links. They affect the model because it is not clear where their weight should be distributed, and there are a large number of them. Often these dangling links are simply pages that we have not downloaded yet..........Because dangling links do not affect the ranking of any other page directly, we simply remove them from the system until all the page ranks are calculated. After all the page ranks are calculated they can be added back in without affecting things significantly." - extract from the original page rank paper by Google’s founders, Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page.

A dangling link is a link to a page that has no links going from it, or a link to a page that Google hasn't indexed. In both cases Google removes the links shortly after the start of the calculations and reinstates them shortly before the calculations are finished. In this way, their effect on the page rank of other pages in minimal.

Although it may be functionally good to link to pages within the site without those pages linking out again, it is bad for page rank. It is pointless wasting page rank unnecessarily, so always make sure that every page in the site links out to at least one other page in the site.

How to get repeat traffic  

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1. Make sure you update all of the pages on your site frequently. Unchanged sites can be dropped by some sites and nobody wants to go onto a site and see something last updated in 2005 do they? It could be a good idea also to put a last updated counter so it shows to people you update it a lot so they will check back.

2. Allow customers and visitors to your site to be able to sign up for discounts and special offers. Put a form on your site to allow them to be able to sign up for a weekly, fortnightly or even monthly newsletter which they may be interested in.

3. Add a link to allow people to add your site to their favorites or send this to a friend, it will remind people about your site when they take a look in their bookmarks and think “Oh look, I wonder if this site has any updates”

4. Make sure that your site is easy to find if people forget the address. I have wanted to visit a website but could never find it. The best thing to do is put links so users can add your site to social bookmarking sites, so even if their computer dies they will be able to find their way back.

5. Never spam anybody who has signed up for a newsletter. If people no longer wish to receive these then make sure you do take them off the mailing list. This makes you look respectful and that you are not a cowboy who will just spam peoples’ in boxes to try and sell their product or get the odd page view.

6. Make a “Whats New?” section. People will instantly go to this to take a look at what has recently been updating and following on from earlier they will like a site that is always updated and will probably come back to take a look at what is new and what has been updated.

Tips To Increase Traffic To Your Blog  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , , , , , , , ,

Just like any web site, it is capital you accept cartage visiting your blog. Once you accept a connected breeze of cartage advancing to your blog it’s abundant easier to run as you will body responses and get acknowledgment for the online autograph that you’ve posted.

A abundant way of accretion cartage to your blog is by announcement in forums and added online communities targeted at your blogs niche. There are actually bags of forums on the internet and award one in your alcove to access cartage to your blog shouldn’t be a problem. Just seek google or one of the added above seek engines.

Targeted cartage is acutely important as it will accompany you added committed readers to your blog. Random hits don’t beggarly annihilation these days, you wish to recruit an admirers and accumulate them absorbed by announcement on affair online autograph that will kepp them advancing back.

Another abundant means of accretion cartage is autograph articles, just like this one. Make abiding your commodity is on affair and gives as abundant advice as possible. You’re your online autograph amid 250-500 words for best results.

Social book appearance is aswell acceptable a abundant way to access cartage to your blog. Website like Digg, De.licio.us and Stumble Upon can accompany hoards of cartage to your website with the actual post.

How to describe yourself?  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , , ,

"Describe yourself!", This question is almost invariably asked in the majority of interviews, and just as invariably answered dismally!. What does one say and why do we always seem so flustered by the question?. Because we have always been taughtby our parents and respected elders not to boast or talk about ourselves.

With a childhood full of such repressive advice, its not surprising that the majority of us begin the answer with a stammer and a blush, almost instantly changing from flash to foolish and ruining our chances of employment.

So what do we say? Frankly, just answer the question as it comes. Most disconcerted candidates dread this question and begin with a silly "Basically, my name is ...". Why don't we realise that our CV is there right in front of the interviewer, and he knows this already.
By repeating the stuff that fills our CV, we just demonstrate that we are an 'in-the-box' kind of person, with little if any skill in innovation and presentation.

Actually, a question of this kind is an ideal way to plug in everything we want to say about ourselves that we had leave out of the CV. If you have attended a premier institution, say that the institution taught you much more than the degree it awared ypu, mention people who influenced ypu, talk about the books you like reading, your hobbies and your other interests.

Talk about your strengths; perhaps mention an instance when you used your conflict resolution skills or selling skills or whatever. But make certain that it does not sound like blowing your trumpet. Mention these instances as learning.
Tall about your weaknesses, but make sure that they are 'positive' weaknesses. For instance you could say that that you sometimes pay more attention to detail than is warranted. You can openly confess a tendency to be impatient with team members who cannot carry their own weight, or who cannot contribute sufficiently.

But first, think today what you want to say and practice. Remeber, if you hesitate about yourself, your interviewers will doubt whether you fit their bill of requirements. After all, if you don't know about you, who does?

What is Data Flow Diagram  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , ,

The Data Flow Diagram is commonly used also for the visualization of structured design data processing. The normal flow is represented graphically. A designer typically draws context level DFD first showing interaction between the system and the outside entities. Then this context level DFD will then be exploded in order to further show the details of system being modeled.

A DFD is one of the three essential perspectives of Structured Systems Analysis and Design Method (SSADM). In this method, both the project sponsors and the end users need to collaborate closely throughout the whole stages of the evolution of the system. Having a DFD will make the collaboration easy because the end users will be able to visualize the operation of the system, the will see a better perspective what the system will accomplish and how the whole project will be implemented.

A project implementation can also be made more efficient especially in progress monitoring. The DFD of the old system can be laid side by side with the new system's DFD so that comparisons can be made and weak points can be identified so that the appropriate innovations can be developed.

There are four components of a data flow diagram which are the following:
External Entities / Terminators - These refer or points to the outside parts of the system being developed or modeled. Terminators, depending on whether data flows into or from the system, are often called sinks or sources. They represent the information as wherever it comes from or where it goes.
Processes – The Processes component modifies the inputs and corresponding outputs.
Data Stores – refers to any place or area or storage where data will be placed whether temporarily or permanently.
Data Flows – refers to the way data will be transferred from one terminator to another, or through processes and data stores.

As a general rules, every page in a DFD should not contain more than 10 components. So, if there are more than 10 components in one processes, one or more components should have to be combined and then make another DFD to detail the combination in another page.
Each component needs to be number. Same goes for each subcomponent so that it will be easy to follow visually. For example, a top level DFD must have components numbered 1,2,3,4,5 and next level subcomponent (for instance of number 2) numbered 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 and so on.
There are two approaches to developing a DFD. The first approach is the Top Down Approach where a DFD starts with a context level DVD and then the system is slowly decomposed until the graphical detail goes down to a primitive level.

The other approach, Event Partitioning Approach, was described by Edward Yourdon in Just Enough Structured Analysis. In Event Partitioning Approach, a detailed DFD is constructed all events are made. For every event, a process is constructed and then each process is linked with other processes through data stores. Each process' reaction to a given event is modeled by an outgoing data flow.

There many DFD tools available in the market today. Some of these DFD tools include Microsoft Visio, ConceptDraw, Dia, SmartDraw and SILVERRUN ModelSphere. Most of these tools have drag and drop capabilities and have analysis tools to help a designer see instant potential flaw in the diagram so correction can done immediately.

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A Career In Corporate Law  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , ,

To be a lawyer, one needs to be a qualified in the field of law. To be a graduate in law, it takes four years in undergraduate school and three years' specialization in law through a law school. In this case, specialization would be in corporate law. To practice law, you need a license. To get the license, you first need to pass the bar exam - an examination that will test your knowledge, character and attitude. After the test, students are then recruited by law firms.

Junior Corporate Associate

As a junior corporate lawyer, you will be learning things the hard way. As a junior corporate associate, you have to do the grunt work of organizing documents, faxing, proofreading, copying, scheduling meetings, etc. In addition to these, the junior associate also has various other duties. These duties can be classified into various categories such as drafting contracts and conducting reviews, preparing filings, due diligence and writing of memoranda. A lot of a junior associates' time is spend doing research work. A lot of trial and error work goes on into drafting contracts, security disclosure statements and corporate resolutions - and these are things that are not necessarily taught in law school. The junior associate, at times, has to spend a lot of time proofreading.

A law firm may later offer a junior associate the role of a partner. This involves working on individual projects and having junior associates working for you. So to be a good corporate leader, you will need to be hard working, diligent and possess excellent problem solving skills. A corporate lawyer gets paid extremely well, but the job it involves a lot of hard work. Many corporate attorneys work in excess of 60 hours a week.

What Does A Corporate Lawyer Do?

A corporate lawyer mostly works in the legal department of a business, as a legal advisor. Their work includes dealing with issues of taxes, employee rights, amalgamations, mergers and acquisitions. In short, a corporate lawyer has to ensure the legality of commercial transactions. There are other types of practice a corporate lawyer could undertake, and not all lawyers do the same type of job. Some provide advice on legal or/and non-legal issues to the corporation. In this area, the work of a corporate lawyer starts from the formation a corporation and goes on through the life of the business. Until it is dissolved.

Java questions for Exams  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , ,

Q:How can I write a program that takes command line input?

A:Java programs that take input from the command line declare a special static method called main, which takes a String array as an argument and returns void। The example program below loops through any arguments passed to the program on the command line and lists their values. More details available to subscribers:How can I write a program that takes command line input?

Q: What does public static void main(String[]) mean?

A: This is a special static method signature that is used to run Java programs from a command line interface (CLI)। There is nothing special about the method itself, it is a standard Java method, but the Java interpreter is designed to call this method when a class reference is given on the command line, as below. More details available to subscribers:What does public static void main(String[]) mean?

Q: Why are command line arguments passed as a String?

A: Command line arguments are passed to the application's main method by the Java runtime system before the application class or any supporting objects are instantiated। It would be much more complex to define and construct arbitrary object types to pass to the main method and primitive values alone are not versatile enough to provide the range of input data that strings can. String arguments can be parsed for primitive values and can also be used for arbitrary text input, file and URL references.

Q: Why doesn't the main method throw an error with no arguments?

A: When you invoke the Java Virtual Machine on a class without any arguments, the class' main method receives a String array of zero length। Thus, the method signature is fulfilled. Provided the main method does not make any reference to elements in the array, or checks the array length before doing so, no exception will occur.

Q: Why do we only use the main method to start a program?

A: The entry point method main is used to the provide a standard convention for starting Java programs। The choice of the method name is somewhat arbitrary, but is partly designed to avoid clashes with the Thread start() and Runnable run() methods, for example.

Q: Can the main method be overloaded?

A: Yes, any Java method can be overloaded, provided there is no final method with the same signature already। The Java interpreter will only invoke the standard entry point signature for the main method, with a string array argument, but your application can call its own main method as required. Main method modifiers Q: Can the main method be declared final? A: Yes, the static void main(String[]) method can be declared final.

Q: I get an exception if I remove the static modifier from main!

A: The static void main(String[]) method is a basic convention of the Java programming language that provides an entry point into the runtime system। The main method must be declared static because no objects exist when you first invoke the Java Virtual Machine (JVM), so there are no references to instance methods. The JVM creates the initial runtime environment in which this static method can be called, if you remove the static modifier, it will throw a NoSuchMethodException. Application start up

Q: What is threaded programming and when is it used?

A: Threaded programming is normally used when a program is required to do more than one task at the same time। Threading is often used in applications with graphical user interfaces; a new thread may be created to do some processor-intensive work while the main thread keeps the interface responsive to human interaction. The Java programming language has threaded programming facilities built in, so it is relatively easy to create threaded programs. However, multi-threaded programs introduce a degree of complexity that is not justified for most simple command line applications.

Q: Why are wait(), notify() and notifyall() methods defined in the Object class?

A: These methods are detailed on the Java Software Development Kit JavaDoc page for the Object class, they are to implement threaded programming for all subclasses of Object.

Q: Why are there separate wait and sleep methods?

A: The static Thread।sleep(long) method maintains control of thread execution but delays the next action until the sleep time expires। The wait method gives up control over thread execution indefinitely so that other threads can run. More details available to subscribers:Why are there separate wait and sleep methods? Threads and runnable types

Q: What's the difference between Thread and Runnable types?

A: A Java Thread controls the main path of execution in an application। When you invoke the Java Virtual Machine with the java command, it creates an implicit thread in which to execute the main method. The Thread class provides a mechanism for the first thread to start-up other threads to run in parallel with it. The Runnable interface defines a type of class that can be run by a thread. The only method it requires is run, which makes the interface very easy to to fulfil by extending existing classes. A runnable class may have custom constructors and any number of other methods for configuration and manipulation.

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Tips You Can Use To Improve Your Memory  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , ,

Improve Your Memory

If you have the desire to Improve your memory then please go through this.When it comes to our general memory, we tend to receive the data before we analyze and store it into our brains. Much of this information is stored in a form that is called short term memory. To improve your memory, you will want to take the desirable parts of this short term memory and store it into your long term memory.Placing information in your long term memory will allow you to remember it much longer than just a few minutes. Studies have shown that much of the information we absorb can be lost in just a few minutes.

After a single hour has passed, two thirds of this information will be lost. After 24 hours has passed, 90% of the information we received the day before can be lost. As you can see, this can make remembering things difficult, especially when you consider the fact that most of us are presented with numerous facts and figures on a daily basis. There are a number of strategies you can use to reverse this. The first thing you will want to start doing is organizing the information you take in. To do this, you will need to figure out how you want to absorb information. You could use rote memorization, or you could use a outline form.
When you receive useful information, it is important to pay attention to it. You may also find it helpful to use multiple senses. You can write it down, say it out loud, or look at it.

When you use multiple senses to memorize something, this will send a message to your brain saying that it is important, and your brain will place it in your long term memory. Another thing that can help you improve your memory is recall. If you recall something multiple times, this will allow your brain to take the information and place it in your long term memory instead of just the short term memory.


Following the steps above will allow you to commit any information you want into the long term memory of your brain. It is excellent for college students who have to take multiple exams. You will also want to do the same thing for about three more days. If you find this to be tedious, it is easier than you think. It is important to remember that your brain will get rid of information that it assumes isn't important. If you don't go over the information enough times, your brain will place it in your short term memory. Once you've repeated the same process 20 times in a span of three days, this will send a message to your brain that this information must not be forgotten.

Five Tips for Writing a Great CV  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , ,

The trends for writing a good CV change all the time. Should you write a CV with all your work history? Do you bullet point this or that? Just what sort of information should you put in a CV.Plenty of websites will tell you what the current trends for writing a CV are. But you want your CV to look good and leave a fine impression with potential employers, so here are five tips to help you write a better CV than everyone else.

Keep it short

When a job opening comes up, potential employers are flooded with applications. Many CVs don't even get read and are tossed without a thought. CVs that are too long to read are amongst the first to be passed up, so keep your CV short and concise.
Structure it properly and make sure your CV is easy and fast to read. Choose to put things that are memorable on your resume, such as accomplishments or experience that makes you stand out. Be wise with your words and use text that's catchy but stay with relevant terms appropriate for the position you're applying for.

Work Backwards

The first thing that should be on the list of your work experience and job history is the most recent position you held. Potential employers don't care what you did twenty years ago – they want fresh blood and new energy in their company. Pertinent and recent is what they'll watch for, to determine if you're suitable for the job.

Tell the Truth

We all want to present ourselves in the best light and impress potential employers. Lying or glossing over black spots on your CV isn't the way to go about doing so. If you try to cover up areas in your work history, most likely they'll be discovered later on down the line, costing you a potential job.
Look at the positive sides of less-than-desirable work history. If you were unemployed for a period, what did you do in that time? What did you learn? What did you occupy your time with? Put a spin on things and present your history in its best light.

Just The Facts

A CV isn't the place to wax poetic or to gush on about an achievement. A CV is basically a list of facts about why you're qualified for an open position in a business or company. You want to be creative about the power words you choose to describe yourself, not about the type of fiction you can come up with to boost your appeal.

A Cover Letter?

Yes! Include a cover letter with your CV. A cover letter tells your employer your motivation for the job and presents the rationale behind your application. A cover letter is the first thing your potential employer will see, and it introduces you more formally to the business you'd like to work for. Consider it your first "meeting" and have your cover letter include a strong statement of your accomplishments towards the end.

Five simple steps. Yet are they? for if it were that easy, would most applicants not make sure they were all followed. You'd think so, wouldn't you? So often this is not the case. And now you can!

Java Questions  

Posted by Rajiv Pandey in , , ,

Java, the language- is a high-level object-oriented programming language, influenced in various ways by C, C++, and Smalltalk, with ideas borrowed from other languages as well (see O'Reilly's History of Programming Languages). Its syntax was designed to be familiar to those familiar with C-descended "curly brace" languages, but with arguably stronger OO principles than those found in C++, static typing of objects, and a fairly rigid system of exceptions that require every method in the call stack to either handle exceptions or declare their ability to throw them. Garbage collection is assumed, sparing the developer from having to free memory used by obsolete objects.
One of Java's more controversial aspects--widely accepted at the time of its release but increasingly criticized today--is its incomplete object-orientation. Specifically, Java primitives such as int, char, boolean, etc. are not objects, and require a completely different treatment from the developer: as int is not a class, you cannot subclass and declare new methods on it, cannot pass it to a method that expects a generic Object, and so on. The inclusion of primitives increases Java performance, but at the arguable expense of code clarity, as anyone who's had to work with the so-called "wrapper classes" (Integer, Character, and Boolean) will attest. Java 5.0 introduces an "autoboxing" scheme to eliminate many uses of the wrapper classes, but in some ways it obscures what is really going on.

Frequently asked questions about Java...

1. What are the primitive types in Java?
2. How do you declare constant values in java?
3. Do primitive types have a class representation?
4. What does a static inner class mean? How is it different from any other static member?
5. What are the different kinds of exceptions? How do you catch a Runtime exception?
6. What are the disadvantages of reference counting in garbage collection?
7. What is the sweep and paint algorithm?
8. What is reflection API? How are they implemented?
9. What is the primary advantage of XML driven Java Beans?
10. In Java,how are objects/values passed around?
11. What are the differences between AWT and Swing?
12. What is phantom memory?
13. What are the differences between EJB and Java beans?
14. What are STRUTS?
15. How can you do multiple inheritance in Java?
16. What is data encapsulation? What does it buy you?
17. What are the differences between ArrayList and a Vector?
18. How are memory leaks possible in Java?
19. why multiple inheritance using classes is disadvantage in java?
20. What is the basic difference between Java and .Net?
21. What is the difference between an object and an instance? And give me a real time example to differ?
22. why java does not support Multiple Inheritance?
23. Why java does not support Multiple Inheritance?Why java is not pure Object Oriented?
24. Whether a Class,Method can be garbage collected or not?How?
25. Whether private,protected method can be overloaded,overrided or not?Tell me reason?
26. Why ArrayList is faster than Vector?
27. Meaning - Abstract classes, abstract methods?
28. please tell me about oops?
29. what is main difference between jsp and servlets?
30. what is jdbc?
31. what is difference between procedure and functions?
32. What is run time polymorpism and complie time polymmorpism?
33. what is differents between object and static object?
34. what is a concrete classes? is java object class is concrete class?
35. What are java archives?
36. what is the difference between call by value, call by reference, call by address?
37. Can an exception be rethrown?
38. Which class is the immediate superclass of the Container class?
39. If a method is declared as protected, where may the method be accessed?
40. What is the return type of a program's main() method?
41. What class of exceptions are generated by the Java run-time system?
42. What is the difference between a field variable and a local variable?
43. Under what conditions is an object's finalize() method invoked by the garbagecollector?
44. What is a void return type?
45. What is the purpose of the enableEvents() method?
46. What is the purpose of garbage collection?
47. What restrictions are placed on method overriding?
48. What happens if an exception is not caught?
49. How can a dead thread be restarted?
50. What methods are used to get and set the text label displayed by a Button object?