Oct 25, 2009
wetland oh wetland ...
Oct 20, 2009
sawang dah makin banyak ...
Dah naik sawang blog aku ni . Langsung tak di sentuh, di cubit, di edit dan di perapa-apakan olehku. Malangnya nasibmu wahai blog kerna tuanmu masih lagi di alam ke'malas'an di tahap yang tak dapat dihuraikan dengan apa jua perkataan di muka bumi ini.
Memang aku tgh malas, nak buat cammana. Walau macammana pun aku kena la letak target, paling bodo pun 1 minggu 1 kali kena update. Kalau tak, memang kekal bersawang la blog nih.
Sep 5, 2009
Banyaknya Jalur Gemilang ...
Aug 29, 2009
Kayuhan Sahur
Jul 31, 2009
Lupa Itu Juga Rahmat
Jul 17, 2009
Hidup Bermakna, Mati Bermakna
Jul 15, 2009
Wahai Insan ..
Jul 14, 2009
Suatu Pengajaran
Jul 13, 2009
Taman Saujana Hijau, Presint 11, Putrajaya
Sebelum ni aku dah sampai ke salah satu puncak. kali ni targer nak sampai ke puncak yang lagi satu yang lagi tinggi. Bahaya jugak bila time downhill sebab corner tajam la jugak. jenuh aku main brek. Sampai kat atas sekali memang best. Puas hati aku sebab :
- Permandangan indah waktu pagi
- Cuaca nyaman dan angin sejuk ...syahdu je
- Sunyi je sebab aku sorang je kat atas tu
- Dapat tengok keliling putrajaya (yang cover area tu la)
Lepas tu terus balik ikut jalan Presint 11D, 11F ( masih dalam pembinaan). Jalan ni turun bukit. Kelajuan maksimum sampai cecah 44KM/J .Memang cantik rumah-rumah kat sini. Tak tau la untuk di jual atau kuarters. Lepas tu sampai ke pusat komuniti Presint 11. Lepas tu kayuh naik bukit lagi dan terus turun bukit sampai la rumah.
Jul 11, 2009
Wetland ride again
Jul 6, 2009
The Seven Most Common Mistakes Made by Newbie Cyclists
The Seven Most Common Mistakes Made by Newbie Cyclists
1: Seat Too Low
2: Feet Improperly on Pedals
3: Using the Wrong Gear
4: Not Stopping for a Stop Sign
5: Riding in the Wrong Lane
6: Not Using Headlights and Taillights at Night
7: Not Listening
Articles write by Ken Kifer
<<< click here for more details >>>PD oh PD ...
Jul 4, 2009
We don't run, we dont walk but we cycle
Jun 30, 2009
Trip ke Perak
air sungai yang mengalir |
Mandi Jangan tak mandi |
menggigil kesejukan |
air sungai yang sejuk |
Jun 27, 2009
Doa Pendinding
2. Tidak Berhasil, Tidak Berjaya, Gagal
3. Berbahaya
4. Melarat, Bertambah Payah
2. Berhasil, Berjaya dan Tidak Gagal.
3. Selamat dari bahaya.
4. Tidak melarat, Menjadi Senang.
My first night ... ?
Jun 24, 2009
10 skills developers need in next five year
============================================
By Justin James, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, June 19, 2009 11:09 AM
For those looking to get ahead in your field or simply stay employed, this is not the time to be complacent. Find out what skills to work on now to maximize your future job prospects.
With the recent changes in the economy, a lot of developers are focused on their short-term job prospects.
At the same time, it's important to make sure that you get the most bang for your buck when it comes to taking the time and energy to learn new skills. Hence, here is our list of 10 skills you should be learning right now to make sure that your resume is relevant for the next five years.
The list is hardly exhaustive, and there are huge swaths of the industry it won't cover (mainframe developers, for example). Nonetheless, for average mainstream development, you can't go wrong learning at least seven of these skills--not only to the point where you can talk convincingly about them at a job interview, but actually use them on the job.
1: One of the "Big Three" (.NET, Java, PHP):
Unless there is a radical shift in the development world (akin to an asteroid hitting Redmond), most developers will need to know at least one of the Big Three development systems--.NET (VB.NET or C#), Java, or PHP--for the near future.
It's not enough to know the core languages, either. As projects encompass more and more disparate functionality, you'll need to know the associated frameworks and libraries more deeply.
2: Rich Internet Applications (RIAs):
Love it or hate it, in the last few years, Flash is suddenly being used for more than just animations of politicians singing goofy songs. Flash has also sprouted additional functionality in the form or Flex and AIR.
Flash's competitors, such as JavaFx and Silverlight, are also upping the ante on features and performance. To make things even more complicated, HTML 5 is incorporating all sorts of RIA functionality, including database connectivity, and putting the formal W3C stamp on AJAX. In the near future, being an RIA pro will be a key resume differentiator.
3: Web development:
Web development is not going away anytime soon. Many developers have been content to lay back and ignore the Web or to just stick to "the basics" their framework provides them with.
But companies have been demanding more and more who really know how to work with the underlying technology at a "hand code" level. So bone up on JavaScript, CSS, and HTML to succeed over the next five years.
4: Web services:
REST or SOAP? JSON or XML? While the choices and the answers depend on the project, it's getting increasingly difficult to be a developer (even one not writing Web applications) without consuming or creating a Web service.
Even areas that used to be ODBC, COM, or RPC domains are now being transitioned to Web services of some variety. Developers who can't work with Web services will find themselves relegated to legacy and maintenance roles.
5: Soft skills:
One trend that has been going for quite some time is the increasing visibility of IT within and outside the enterprise. Developers are being brought into more and more non-development meetings and processes to provide feedback. For example, the CFO can't change the accounting rules without working with IT to update the systems. And an operations manager can't change a call center process without IT updating the CRM workflow.
Likewise, customers often need to work directly with the development teams to make sure that their needs are met. Will every developer need to go to Toastmasters or study How to Win Friends and Influence People? No. But the developers who do will be much more valuable to their employers--and highly sought after in the job market.
6: One dynamic and/or functional programming language
Languages like Ruby, Python, F#, and Groovy still aren't quite mainstream--but the ideas in them are. For example, the LINQ system in Microsoft's .NET is a direct descendent of functional programming techniques.
Both Ruby and Python are becoming hot in some sectors, thanks to the Rails framework and Silverlight, respectively. Learning one of these languages won't just improve your resume, though; it will expand your horizons. Every top-flight developer I've met recommends learning at least one dynamic or functional programming language to learn new ways of thinking, and from personal experience, I can tell you that it works.
7: Agile methodologies:
When Agile first hit mainstream awareness, I was a skeptic, along with many other folks I know. It seemed to be some sort of knee-jerk reaction to tradition, throwing away the controls and standards in favor of anarchy. But as time went on, the ideas behind Agile became both better defined and better expressed.
Many shops are either adopting Agile or running proof-of-concept experiments with Agile. While Agile is not the ultimate panacea for project failure, it does indeed have a place on many projects. Developers with a proven track record of understanding and succeeding in Agile environments will be in increasingly high demand over the next few years.
8: Domain knowledge:
Hand-in-hand with Agile methodologies, development teams are increasingly being viewed as partners in the definition of projects. This means that developers who understand the problem domain are able to contribute to the project in a highly visible, valuable way. With Agile, a developer who can say, "From here, we can also add this functionality fairly easily, and it will get us a lot of value", or "Gee, that requirement really doesn't match the usage patterns our logs show" will excel.
As much as many developers resist the idea of having to know anything about the problem domain at all, it is undeniable that increasing numbers of organizations prefer (if not require) developers to at least understand the basics.
9: Development "hygiene":
A few years ago, many (if not most) shops did not have access to bug tracking systems, version control, and other such tools; it was just the developers and their IDE of choice. But thanks to the development of new, integrated stacks, like the Microsoft Visual Studio Team System, and the explosion in availability of high quality, open source environments, organizations without these tools are becoming much less common. Developers must know more than just how to check code in and out of source control or how to use the VM system to build test environments. They need to have a rigorous habit of hygiene in place to make sure that they are properly coordinating with their teams. "Code cowboys" who store everything on a personal USB drive, don't document which changes correspond to which task item, and so on, are unwelcome in more traditional shops and even more unwelcome in Agile environments, which rely on a tight coordination between team members to operate.
10: Mobile development:
The late 1990s saw Web development rise to mainstream acceptance and then begin to marginalize traditional desktop applications in many areas. In 2008, mobile development left the launch pad, and over the next five years, it will become increasingly important.
There are, of course, different approaches to mobile development: Web applications designed to work on mobile devices, RIAs aimed at that market, and applications that run directly on the devices. Regardless of which of these paths you choose, adding mobile development to your skill set will ensure that you are in demand for the future.
(Justin James is an employee of Levit & James, Inc. in a multi-disciplinary role that combines programming, network management and systems administration. He has been blogging at TechRepublic since 2005).