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White Paper: Application and Mobile Device Power Profiling, UX = Usability + Battery Life

In the latest white paper on testing and design considerations in applications and mobile device power profiling for power performance and battery life. the single most important factor determining success or failure of a smartphone and a mobile application launch is the user experience it delivers.

Mobile Device and Apps Battery Life

Mobile Device and Apps Usbaility Testing and Battery Life

 

Beyond functional features, the two main components of user experience that need to be evaluated and tested prior to launch are usability and battery consumption. As a concise guide on batteries in mobile devices, this document outlines background knowledge, experimental findings and some lessons learned on battery testing and, power profiling of mobile devices and applications, and design considerations for optimizing battery life in smartphones.

 

 

 

Moe Tanabian, Practice Lead for NextGen TechDNA Smartphone and Wireless Engineering Services, details this in a White Paper

Five Smart Ways to Retain Top Technical Talent

Update software programs, build more robust networks, create better security systems… there are five smart ways to retain top technical talent. Technology hiring and investment have been two bright spots in an overall slow job market and uneven economic recovery. Today, the question is – can it continue?

Companies have already made commitments to reignite technology projects that were put on hold during the economic downturn and to deal with inadequate resources. Even with fresh doubts on the economy, those commitments will likely be fulfilled.

“Companies are playing a bit of catch-up in terms of their infrastructure, as well as the IT staff they need to replace aging hardware and software and who can deal with security challenges,” says Tom Silver, senior vice president of North America for Dice Holdings, Inc.

Now tech professionals with specific skill sets, such as mobile application development or the ability to program in multiple languages, are in high demand. Several forces have converged to create a talent crunch in the tech sector, which is driving competition to lure tech talent and lucrative compensation packages for even newly minted tech professionals:

• Low tech unemployment — As of July 2011, the unemployment rate for computer and mathematical professionals was just 4.7% – about half of the overall U.S. labor market rate. Trends indicate that tech sector hiring will continue to increase throughout 2011. “The search for exceptional, top-quality technical candidates is alive and well as companies struggle to attain the level of talent they desperately need. The war for talent is still fiercely competitive at the top levels,” says Craig Hufford, technology search managing partner and practice lead at NextGen Global Executive Search.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, July 2011.

• Mobile technology boom — The acceleration of the digital revolution is driving demand for mobile application developers, high-level programmers and network systems experts. While these sought-after IT professionals know how to harness technology to help companies run more efficiently and increase revenue, there aren’t enough of them. In fact, job postings on Dice that include some specific tech skills have more than doubled in the last year.

Source: Dice.com jobs posted on Aug. 2, 2010 and Aug. 1, 2011.

 More start-ups — A wave of investment dollars is fueling the growth of many new start-up companies, which is putting pressure on the tech hiring market. Even big name employers such as Google and Facebook are struggling to attain and retain top tech talent. In a widely publicized retention effort toward the end of last year, Google gave all its employees a 10% raise and a $1,000 bonus.

Tech Hiring Gets Aggressive

As a result of the tight IT hiring market, the battle amongst employers for top tech talent is intensifying. Companies around the country are reporting that more aggressive hiring tactics are being used to lure tech professionals away from their current employers. And many think that process is only going to accelerate. According to a recent Dice survey, 54% of employers expect competition for top tech talent to increase this year compared to 2010, while just 3% expect that competition to decrease.

So how do you know if your staff members are looking elsewhere for work? “If there is a noticeable change in an employee’s work habits, such as single day absences, a disengaged attitude, changing to more formal dress, and frequent sick days, these are all indications that the person is looking around,” advises Silver.

Five Proactive Retention Strategies

You can’t completely protect your organization from competing with other employers, but you can use proactive retention strategies so that employees are less inclined to entertain offers from other companies. Putting in the effort up front is worthwhile because it’s difficult to retain employees once they’ve begun to seek employment elsewhere, even with additional compensation or advancement opportunities. “When companies react to a person leaving, they often cannot change the really important reasons why the person is leaving, irrespective of the amount of money they throw at him,” says Hufford.

#1: Make sure it’s a match — Tech professionals have a slightly different motivation from other employees, says Herb Gosewisch, partner at U.S. Alliance Partners, a consultancy focused on employee engagement and sustainability practices. “They have more loyalty to their career and personal development than the company that employs them,” he says. “IT workers tend to stay longer and find more satisfaction when they feel they can ‘own’ their work and it’s something they influence from a creative point of view.”

So the stronger the match between the job requirements and the employee’s skills, goals and values, the more likely it is that the employee will want to stay. “Focus on a key individual and make sure that the projects they’re working on allow them to continue to develop their skill set,” says Silver.

#2: Start strong — Retention efforts should begin during onboarding. “All the recent studies suggest that new employees determine within the first few months of employment whether or not they made a good decision,” says Gosewisch. Engaging new employees in the company culture and business infrastructure from day one will improve employees’ experiences and prospects for staying.

#3: Reduce burnout — In today’s fast-paced IT work environments, stress levels and burnout can run high and lead to employee turnover. Evaluate your project management and organizational approaches, seek ways to improve work-life balance and ensure equitable delineation of duties. Better yet, ask your technology employees for their input on lowering stress and lightening workloads.

#4: Conduct motivation checks — Regularly assessing your employees’ motivation for their work gives you valuable insight into their level of engagement and allows you to make strategic adjustments. Motivation checks also serve as an early warning system. “Regular assessment gives you the opportunity to identify the people who are thinking about leaving or who are somehow dissatisfied with the work or the environment,” says Gosewisch. He adds that getting regular feedback from employees often uncovers small management issues that can be corrected before they become big problems.

#5: Develop a sustainability strategy — Believe it or not, your company’s commitment to the environment, the community and innovation is very important to many key employees, especially Generation Ys and Millennials who often have the most experience with leading-edge technology. These two generations grew up surrounded with environmental messages they see as important. “An employer needs to show that it has a strategy to not only be profitable and exciting, but that it has a social and environmental conscience. It also needs to show that it allows employees inside the company to be innovative and have a voice,” says Steve Caballero, partner at U.S. Alliance Partners. “Making a profit at the expense of the planet, the community, and your people does not cut it anymore.”

Show Me the…Promotion

Beyond organizational and management changes there are other, more tangible things that employers can do to improve retention. While giving employees salary increases is the first and most obvious approach, money isn’t the only answer.

The charts below show rankings of what retention benefits employers are offering versus what benefits employees actually want.

Source: Dice employer survey, March 2011.

Source: Dice survey of tech professionals, June 2011.

Looking Ahead

For the remainder of the year, the technology recruiting market is expected to remain healthy. With certain shortages in metropolitan areas and skill sets, competition amongst employers for top tech talent will continue giving tech professionals the upper hand in the job market. “Tech professionals know that the pendulum has swung back in their favor a little,” says Silver. This means employers need to step up their game – quickly.

The best place to start is a careful and complete review of employee retention practices, benefits and onboarding processes. The focus should be on what the company offers versus what employees and prospective tech candidates actually want. Silver advises, “The IT hiring market is tight and employers don’t want to lose good people. Now is the time to act.”

Originally published http://diceresources.wordpress.com/2011/08/18/smart-retention-strategies/

Occupy Wall Street and a Common Sense Viewpoint

After I have listened to news about Occupy Wall Street on all the major networks, one wonders if any of these reporters have actually visited the OWS web site and read their demands. One look and one can only imagine these are “cradle-to-grave entitlement” people who are hippes of the 60s, children of socialists of the 60s, communists, and anarchists. Their vision of what America out to be is not America at all. Anyone who has taken Economics 101 knows that these demands cannot be paid for and would turn the USA into a 3rd rate country. For the most part these demands are excuses of the lazy. As George Washington said: “Ninety-nine percent of the failures come from people who have the habit of making excuses.”

First they want all worked unionized immediately. That was tried in Soviet Union and look what it has done to European countries that are at or near total bankruptcy. Raise the minimum wage immediately to $18/hr. Create a maximum wage of $90/hr. to eliminate inequality. Okay now this is simply idiotic. Imagine a couple that invests $100k to open a restaurant and now have to increase dishwasher, bus boy, cooks, and prep workers to that wage? Now tell me who is going to pay $15 for a hamburger in order to pay for these wages? And what Doctor who spent 7 years in school and 2 years in residency or a CEO with 20+ years building billion dollar businesses work for that? Plus since this would all mean no profits, you can kiss goodbye to retirement investments as no one would buy any stock to invest in anything. Do these idiots think the federal government can do all the investing? Have these OWS actually seen the great job they have done with USPS and Freddie Mac? If you want that kind of wage automatically remember this – wages are earned by skills and accomplishments of your work. As Abraham Lincoln said, “You can have anything you want – if you want it badly enough. You can be anything you want to be, do anything you set out to accomplish if you hold to that desire with singleness of purpose.”

Okay now this one is just funny – Institute a 6 hour workday, and 6 weeks of paid vacation. When was the last time you heard of great inventions by private companies in France? Institute a moratorium on all foreclosures and layoffs immediately. Again silliness here – banks go out of business and companies go out of business. So where do you now get your groceries, gas, and other needs now that a company that is forced to reduce their workforce cannot and had to close their doors?

Repeal racist and xenophobic English-only laws. Hello!!!!!! Have you any idea what the cost involved printing multiple language signs, documents, and interpreters? If I move to Brazil, is it not my responsibility to learn Portuguese?

Open the borders to all immigrants, legal or illegal. Offer immediate, unconditional amnesty, to all undocumented residents of the US. Stupid, stupid, stupid. What other response can I make?  Create a single-payer, universal health care system. Does not work in UK or Canada which are MUCH smaller than USA, so what makes you think it will work for a country more than 3 times the size of those two countries combined?
Pass stricter campaign finance reform laws. All campaigns will receive equal funding, provided by the taxpayers. I agree with that.

 

Institute a negative income tax, and tax the very rich at rates up to 90%. LOL! Seriously half the people pay NO income tax at all – that is the problem. We already have a progressive tax system. And don’t give me that crap about it was 70% or 90% before Reagan and Kennedy. If you knew your history, you would know that that was for the ultra-rich who paid that – not the $250k to $5M per year income people of today.
Allow workers to elect their supervisors. What? Are you insane? Investors and Board members and the corporate officers decide who is a supervisor. It is their investment – their money – or the official hired to manage their investment that makes that decision.
Lower the retirement age to 55. Increase Social Security benefits. Okay, so by the time you finish college at age 22 you expect a part time 30 hours per week work life of just that of just 33 years? Since the life span is now in the late 70s and 80s, you want only 1/3 of your life to contribute taxes but yet want all of these benefits? Where will that money come from? If you tax everyone making over $90 per hour at 90% of their income, that will not even cover 2% of the total costs to pay for what you want. As Dwight D. Eisenhower stated: “Every step we take towards making the State our Caretaker of our lives, by that much we move toward making the State our Master.”

Create a 5% annual wealth tax for the very rich. Okay so 90% plus 5% – you want to keep 95% of someone’s money in taxes? Where is the desire to work to create wealth?
Ban the private ownership of land. Now this is insanity. Our founding fathers came here to get a piece of their own land – my house IS the American Dream.

Make homeschooling illegal. Not only are you bigots toward people of faith, but I went to high school BEFORE the feds created the Dept. of Education and believe me we were all fine with local school boards running things.  Reduce the age of majority to 16. Personally I would prefer that no one under the age of 30 gets to vote – that is just an opinion. But honestly until you have to pay for your own roof over your head or save to buy a house or start a family, you have no clue about anything other than tweeting and messaging and MTV.

Abolish the death penalty and life in prison. We call for the immediate release of all death row inmates from death row and transferred to regular prisons. In the South we prefer chain gangs because they actually work. And the death penalty carried out within the 2st year of sentencing would go far in detracting criminals from heinous crimes.
Ban private gun ownership. Have you heard of the Constitution? Are you even remotely clued into what give me liberty or give me death means? Do you understand that state militias exist from the beginning as a warning to the federal government? As Benjamin Franklin said: “They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security.”

Atheists Opposing the 911 Cross Seems so Un-American

Atheists opposing the 911 cross totally misunderstand the Constitution and what the Founding Fathers intended, as well as the historical significance of the 9/11 cross.  I am so tired of the politically correct notion pushed by education elites and so-called constitutional lawyers who seem incapable of being fair and open minded.  There were actually 4 crosses – not man-made but simply formed out of the destruction of the WTC.  Out of the death, the ruin, and the rubble, a cross appeared in the aftermath of the World Trade Center attacks on 9/11/2001.  It was as if it were a sign.  It stood in an open spot amidst the rubble and solitary.  No one put it there, or erected it somehow. Millions thought it as a miracle, a sign of hope, and it gave them a small comfort to know that God has not abandoned us.  For millions of others it is the universal symbol and reminder of mass graves (as in Normandy and Arlington).  For them the cross means remembrance off those lost on that tragic day and gives them hope and comfort.

No one put it up because the fact is that everyone was too busy at the time to put up a cross. Everyone was on a recovery mission to save lives.  There simply was no time. The grueling task of trying to find survivors went inch by inch for days, until yes it turned into a job to identify those lost.

The idea that atheists or anyone else would have gotten headaches or sickness from “seeing the 9/11 cross” is absurd.  Perhaps that argument is because they simply fail to understand the Constitution.  The separation of church and state is a reference to prevent another Church of England, not to keep religion out of the public sector. In fact, separation of church and state is from Jefferson’s letter to Danbury Baptists, not the Constitution itself.

On this 10 year anniversary, we should allow the cross to remain at the WTC.  It was born out of tragedy and only offends those with no sense of respect for others beliefs, rights, perception, or feelings.

Medical Device GE Xray Move to China Not Ideal Decision

 

Doctor XRay - Medical
GE and Jeffrey Immelt, President Obama’s top outside economic advisor believe that by moving the headquarters of its 115-year-old medical device XRay business to Beijing, China from the Milwaukee suburb of Waukesha is good for overall growth. I can only guess that the 820 employees in Waukesha, Wisconsin are absolutely giddy over the company’s future growth potential.

Although Anne LeGrand, vice president and general manager of x-ray for GE healthcare, has stated in an interview that a handful of top managers will move to the Chinese capital and there won’t be any job cuts, one has to wonder about the long-term prospects for those left behind. The company said in a statement that GE will hire 65 new engineers and support staff in China. Now let’s see, by my calculations that 65 less jobs that will be created in Waukesha.
XRay - Medical
On one hand we have a greedy American company that puts profit over country. On the other hand, you have a country whose regulatory processes and red tape make it near impossible for US based companies to compete on a global playing field. By taking those jobs to China, GE will be contributing less tax money to our government. Oh wait, I forgot they didn’t pay any taxes last year. What then is their main motivating factor? Wait a minute, I remember now, its company growth. And you know China’s got to be feeling good about that.

Job References You Can’t Control Wall Street Journal Interview

Recruiting experts say that job seekers should be careful about choosing people to connect with on networking sites.  Interview by Wall Street Journal on Job References You Can’t Control and reference checks.

This month, Charles Moore, managing partner at Abba Wireless Executive Search Group, used LinkedIn and MySpace to contact two customers and a former co-worker of a job candidate who was interviewing for a director-of-sales position at a large company. Mr. Moore says he typically contacts references he finds online before sending a candidate to a client.  “What I found out through reference checks is that the person was tough to work with and get along with,” says Mr. Moore. He didn’t pass on the candidate to his client.Read more…