Q. Does anyone know what the active duty side uses? I am trying to find authorized software to barcode army medical records for national guard, and my J6 doesn't know what software to put on our computers.
Thank You.
All your Moms are confidential. It is just barcode library software.
What if I told all that you we use Microsoft Word on government computers?
Thank You.
All your Moms are confidential. It is just barcode library software.
What if I told all that you we use Microsoft Word on government computers?
A. The active duty Army uses MC4 to document medical records. Go to www.mc4.army.mil, click on the helpdesk link on the left and submit your question on their homepage. Someone will get back to you. Be specific in what system you're using, etc.
What business card software or website saves your design individually?
Q. I would like to create and save my business card design as an individual jpg or pdf file, so that I can upload it onto vista print. I am having difficulty doing this because every software and site seems to save the card as duplicates on a sheet of paper (for in-home printing). Any recommendations would be very helpful.
A. As per my recommendation http://www.Bizcardsoftware.com would be great for you for easy printing options in different formats. However for better guidance you should contact their Support at helpdesk@bizcardsoftware.com or at +1-800-405-7125 (Toll Free) 1-585-672-5458 (Outside of the US or Canada, please dial 001-585-672-5458)
What do you do as a computer software engineer?
Q. I've been looking up jobs working with programming, and it appears that Computer Software Engineering will be one of the fastest growing occupations in coming years. I've also been learning to program for a short while, and I would love to have a career in it. So, what exactly would you do as a CSE? Like, for instance, at Google. What tasks do you do there? Or, at Apple. What specific things do you do regularly? I know that debugging programs is one task CSEs do a lot.
A. I'm a software "designer/engineer", so my job covers a bit of both sides of the fence. In general though, a "software engineer" is very different to what we affectionately call "code-monkeys" (more generally simply called "programmers").
Whether you do design like I do or not, a software engineer spends at most 75% of his time coding, and 25% of his time on other things (often closer to 50%/50% though). Those things may include debugging, but in a reasonable sized team, you'll probably delegate that off to a code-monkey. More likely, you'll also spend time attending meetings with marketing people to make sure the product is still proceeding on the right track from a market perspective; attending meetings with the legal department to discuss the oddities of different licensing models for different components that you're using; and spending more time than you'd like acting as a defacto helpdesk for the people that are sick of talking to the actual IT helpdesk in the company.
As you say you're just starting out - honestly, you're more likely than not to be a code-monkey for at least 3 or 4 years before becoming a software engineer. Some companies call all their programmers "software engineers" but in the real world, there is a very big difference.
Whether you do design like I do or not, a software engineer spends at most 75% of his time coding, and 25% of his time on other things (often closer to 50%/50% though). Those things may include debugging, but in a reasonable sized team, you'll probably delegate that off to a code-monkey. More likely, you'll also spend time attending meetings with marketing people to make sure the product is still proceeding on the right track from a market perspective; attending meetings with the legal department to discuss the oddities of different licensing models for different components that you're using; and spending more time than you'd like acting as a defacto helpdesk for the people that are sick of talking to the actual IT helpdesk in the company.
As you say you're just starting out - honestly, you're more likely than not to be a code-monkey for at least 3 or 4 years before becoming a software engineer. Some companies call all their programmers "software engineers" but in the real world, there is a very big difference.
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