36 lines
4.1 KiB
HTML
36 lines
4.1 KiB
HTML
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<title>Zk | 2011-04-18 14:40:58</title>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Gentium+Plus:ital,wght@0,400;0,700;1,400;1,700&family=Lato&family=Ubuntu+Monodisplay=swap" />
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<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/style.css" />
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<h1>Zk | 2011-04-18 14:40:58</h1>
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<p><span class="tag">blog</span> <span class="tag">fossil</span> <span class="tag">diary</span></p>
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<p>At the beginning of this year, I had two jobs. Â By March, however, I had quit one and been informed that I was, for all intents and purposes, being laid off from the other. Â While this wasn’t a huge surprise, I was still pretty disappointed - time to start the job-hunt again. Â I brushed up my resume, pulled all my references together, and got started searching. Â As I applied and attended job fairs and the like I started noticing a disheartening trend, however. Â I’m graduating in May with a degree in music composition, but applying for technical jobs. Â More than I once, I was turned down without further consideration as soon as the recruiter got to the education section of my resume.</p>
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<p>Rather than be coy about my education, however, I’m combining the fact that much of my applying for jobs happens online with my resume into a <a href="http://resume.drab-makyo.com">visual resume</a> that offers all the same information while show-casing my design and visualization abilities.</p>
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<p>There’s a lot of conflicting information on how to structure a resume these days - should it be restricted to one page?  How personal should you be?  Avoid using ‘I’? Should you have an overview or skills section?  While I can’t say one way or the other what’s best for a personal resume (personally, I keep it to one page, have short overview and skills section, use ‘I’ while still being professional), I had a little more freedom working with visual resume.  Not only would it be divided up into separate pages  for clarity’s sake, I could take a little more time on each page to talk myself up and explain the accompanying graphics.</p>
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<p>This project used, of course, Protovis, but I also included a map using OpenLayers and with CloudMade tiles. Â It was nice to get back into the swing of mapping again, as I haven’t really touched that in a while with the library maps project being shelved. Â And of course, it was fun to work with Protovis as always. Â The biggest problem came up when I had finished the whole project, though, and started checking it in other browsers. Â Chrome: great. Â FireFox: great. Â Safari on iOS: great. Â Internet Explorer: …nothing. Â Neither Protovis nor OpenLayers would work properly in IE8 64bit. Â This could prove to be a problem. Â The solution I’m working on is to export the graphics generated by Protovis (SVG format) to a format that IE does recognize and have an IE version of the page (done unobtrusively, of course, using IE’s browser-specific tags). Â The plus side to this is that, since I will have the graphics already exported, I’ll be able to pull together a paper version of this resume that I can print out on glossy and use in some circumstances in person. Â The down side being that I lose almost all the interaction that I have in place currently in the other browsers. Â Ah well.</p>
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<p>Page generated on A Visual Resume</p>
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document.querySelectorAll('.tag').forEach(tag => {
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tag.innerText = '';
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tag.innerHTML = `<a href="/tags.html#${text}">${text}</a>`;
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