Well paid Summer Internship

<p>Paid Internship at a fast moving technology company</p>

<p>Become a part of helping build the Silicon Valley of the east coast!</p>

<p>huelab is an emerging technology company in New York City seeking interns who want to gain valuable insights into how a technology oriented company works. Interns who perform well during the internship can be fast-tracked into permanent roles in our small but growing team.</p>

<p>We are looking for driven, smart individuals, who are interested in business development, technology, and simply getting to learn new things while working with some of the coolest people you will meet this summer. </p>

<p>Excellent written and verbal command of the English language is a minimum for any of the following offers:</p>

<p>Junior Systems Administrator </p>

<p>[ul] RAID arrays keep you up at night? [/ul]
[ul] Windows and Linux preferred, Mac experience can be handy. [/ul]
[ul] Experience with Perl, shell scripting, MySQL, PostgresSQL, Apache are highly desired[/ul]
[ul]We love to do things “right”, you should too![/ul]
[ul]Psst – we don’t really like Windows ;)[/ul]
[ul]If you like to code in Java, talk to us about that as well.[/ul]</p>

<p>Business Development Specialist
[ul]Yeah, this is a sales job – but with a twist[/ul]
[ul]No aggressive telemarketing[/ul]
[ul]Highly professional candidates desired[/ul]
[list]Be friendly and bright – and if you know computers, you get your resum</p>

<p>Hard to take a company seriously when their site is template-based…</p>

<p>and a bad template at that ;)</p>

<p>ProcrastiNate, is it better to have a “non template” based site that is not compatible with some of the aforementioned web standards that are increasingly important for cross browser compatibility?</p>

<p>In all honesty, I’m honestly not sure what you mean by “template” based, anyway – most web designers use templates, either of their own design, or modified from others, to provide consistency of look and feel/functionality across the site. To do so would be to have a mishmash of styles and types of functionality. Oh, you’re referring to the usage of a CMS? I won’t go into major detail about the advantage of using a CMS gives the maintainer(s) of a website, but I will point you toward some sites that are run using a CMS – and they aren’t “not to be taken seriously”:</p>

<pre><code>http://plone.net/sites
http://drupalsites.net/
</code></pre>

<p>Amnesty International, the Brazilian government, MTV.co.uk, The Onion, and Ubuntu not good enough as examples of major sites that use CMS systems?</p>

<p>CMS offer some advantages over hand coding, to wit:</p>

<pre><code>Automated templates
Easily editable content
Scalable feature sets
Web standards upgrades
</code></pre>

<p>and more. See the Wikipedia artice on [url=<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system]CMS[/url”>Content management system - Wikipedia]CMS[/url</a>] for more.</p>

<p>I mean a generic template from some random russian company as opposed to a custom design by either an in-house designer or a professional design studio. The whole notebook thing you’ve got going there is just plain silly imo.
I dont mean to be harsh but, honestly, your site looks like it was made from one of the FrontPage 2000 templates I used when I was 10 years old…</p>

<p>On the other hand i didnt mean to imply that CMS’s are bad, they’re extremely useful tools. I hadn’t looked at the blog section so i didnt even realize you were using one…</p>

<p>What makes a Russian designed website better than a “professional” design studio? Ever heard of outsourcing?</p>

<p>Besides, they’re inquiring about a web developer/designer internship position to work on their website.</p>

<p>By the way, your home page looks like utter garbage.</p>

<p>Yes i frown upon outsourcing, but that’s not what they did here. The russian site they link to is some sort of real estate business…i’m kinda lost on that one…</p>