Earn Money Surveys
March 23rd, 2010 by gregirwin1952

If you have a security suite running on the computer, what technologies would you on and what you leave off? Some of the people of Sophos intererested are in the discovery of your opinion, and so we run a very quick survey to find out denken.Klar what you would most likely you are running anti-virus (doh!), but would you put that device control for a policy on the use of USB sticks? Would you run application control to prevent unauthorized games, P2P file-sharing and other non-block-business-related programs that you select run? There is only one way for us to find out: Some of you may remember that we initiated last year is Klingon anti-virus on an unsuspecting (and largely ambivalent) Welt.de silver lining in the (now) Sophos Anti-Virus completed in Klingon project that we have some promotional T-shirts are still around on the floor of the filing cabinet. These T-shirts are highly valued and very rare - but I did it, as a price for the first person out of the hat, pulled out of the study to sichern.Die T-shirts say: "Sophos Klingons" with the message "Have SoSlI" Quch! "underneath. The last part is the grossest what you say in Klingon - I'll let you Google it for you as it is very insulting. (Enjoy this video? You can learn more about the SophosLabs YouTube channel and subscribe if you like) So, take please the short survey and good luck! Or how to get in Klingon, Qapla '!
Written on 23 March 2010 by Graham Cluley, Sophos
Filed under:
Clu-blog, competition
The results of the CALL / ACBD Survey If You Could Do It All Again: Job Satisfaction and Law Library workers in Canada, have just been published. The results support what many of us anecdotally - Law Library workers are a group of very satisfied. In fact, nearly 88% of respondents fell into the "satisfied with their jobs" category.Published in the latest Canadian Law Library Review (Volume 35, No. 5, Winter 2009,) the survey covers a region that is rarely examined has been. While salary surveys within the law library area will be carried out regularly, along with the job satisfaction of library workers in general, the survey shows, the authors conclude that small study had in fact done to the satisfaction at work in law libraries, specifically . From the introduction: "The authors are working 'theory was that these people, for the most part enjoy their work, but we wondered how everyday problems in terms of manpower, lack of space, budgets, operating pressure, and so on . We have also considered whether certain species could be the rule of law differ from other libraries, how those problems manifest. "The results do not hold many surprises - after all, has compared the position of sales at historically low levels for other professional groups and law library types are usually pretty fast sounds (both positive and negative) among colleagues. However, there are some interesting findings that age and the type of law library are giving, appear to play a role in certain areas of satisfaction to play. Here are some of the highlights were most and least successful of JobAsked what were the biggest successes of their work, respondents itselfThe top two answers autonomy / freedom and challenge / Work top two issues are at least satisfactory physical environment (eg, office, library space ) and salary.Type the LibraryAcademic law library employees feel, time-crunch: 46.1% felt not enough hours in a day, doing everything Courthouse Library workers were most likely to say they were satisfied or very satisfied that the implementation have been useful work Regierungsbibliothek workers were most likely to feel that his staff had little concern them as individuals [have Steve comment: I was hard pressed finding something to pull that added too negative on private. ] AgeWorkers older than 61 were more likely than any other age group feel that their workload was fairworks under 30 were most likely not with their level of compensation to be satisfied, the survey was to listserv CALL's distributed, and include several regional law library associations (VALL ) in September 2008. The whole article worthwhile to read (for those who is not the case in print, CLLL available to me). Congratulations to the survey authors Nancy McCormack and Nicole Eva for their good research and reporting! This webpage is a good deal more information on the topic of this unique content.







