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ColdFusion Contract Job in San Jose, CA

BCforward is seeking a highly motivated and experienced ColdFusion Developer

Job Description:

The ColdFusion developer will augment eBay’s Marketing Resource Management solution (MARS), built in ColdFusion, based on predefined and prioritized business and technical requirements.

Required Skills:

  • Excellent working knowledge of ColdFusion

Education and Qualifications:

Bachelor’s degree preferred but education and experience equally evaluated for relevance

Location: San Jose, CA 95113

Contract length: 3 months

Additional Info: Must be able to pass a background and drug screen

Contact Name: Rashad Cunningham

How to Apply:

To apply for this posting please send your resume to 11077-MH2393[at]emailagent[dot]maxhire[dot]net

 

 

 

ColdFusion MeetUp: Message from Charlie

Charlie ArehartGreetings, folks.

After a few month hiatus, the Online CFMeetup is back on. I’ll be posting a new meeting in a few minutes.

Before that, though, I wanted to offer this note to say a few things, about the recent past and the group’s future.

First, I want to explain that the delay since our last session has simply been for a lack of presenters.  As such, I want to offer, as always, a call for speakers. :-) If you may have presented a session at any other user group or conference in recent months (or have one coming up), or know someone who has and you’d like to encourage them, or if you have any interest in offering a new talk, we are always in need of presenters. Anything related to CF is welcome: new or old topic, beginner or advanced topic.

Second, we will change our scheduled somewhat. Previously, we were always open to having sessions on any Thursdays at either noon or 6p US Eastern time (with the hope to serve needs of speakers and attendees in various timezones across the US and the world). That flexibility was nice, but I suspect it sometimes led speakers to not see a need to commit since there were virtually unlimited opportunities to present.

So in the new schedule, we will change to meeting just twice a month, still on Thursdays, but alternating their times: on the second Thursday of each month, we will schedule to meet in the noon US Eastern slot, and on the fourth Thursday we will schedule to meet in the 6pm US Eastern slot.

About this change, while setting a maximum of 2 presentations a month may seem a drop from the previous possibility of up to 8-10 sessions per month, in actual fact we had an average of just over 2 sessions per month over the past 2 years. So assuming we do fill both slots each month going forward, this will continue the same rate of sessions.

I do hope the new schedule will help speakers regard the slots as more precious. :-) I hope it may also help us more effectively announce the schedule of coming sessions more in advance. That said, if we end up without a speaker in a slot, I’ll be prepared to step in and offer a talk on any of many topics, rather than have none at all.

We will begin this new schedule starting with our next session, being held in that 4th week 6pm slot, on May 23rd. More about that in the meeting announcement to come in the next note. (Though I had planned to step in to speak this week, in that second week slot, I’ll be attending a funeral for a friend so cannot.)

If you may have thoughts or feedback on the schedule or the group, feel free to reply to this note. I hope to continue the Online CFMeetup’s bringing value to the CF community in presenting topics and speakers of interest.

 

CFCamp 2013

CFCamp 2013 Conference

Railo LogoOctober, 14th – 15th 2013
Germering (near Munich)
Germany

Already the fourth time we organize the CFCamp! Each year it was bigger and more comprehensive. The CFCamp has established itself as a fixture for ColdFusion developers and offers this year again many interesting sessions by well-known speakers.

In addition to the two day conference there will be an interesting program of free courses, sessions, the CFAcademy and a fantastic party!

As venue, we again rented the Stadthalle Germering, which was the ideal location for us in the last year.

Due to the great feedback from CFCamp 2012, we will optimize this year CFCamp to the needs of participants and exhibitors.

Reserve your seat here.

Ray Camden Relaunchs ColdFusion CookBooks

Congratulations Ray ! It was a very nice decision and further support for the ColdFusion Developers Community.
Thanks for you great work all this years, keep it up!
I will continue to translate the articles into Portuguese for the Brazilian CF Community: http://ensina.me/coldfusion

Many years ago (early 2006 to be exact) the ColdFusion Cookbook was launched. The idea behind the site was simple. Provide a set of ‘recipes’ with clear solutions provided in ColdFusion. In some cases this was a bit like the regular documentation. (For example, “How do I parse RSS feeds?”). In others, the questions are more unique: How can you test to see if two arrays are the same?”

I’m a big believer in the cookbook format. For the most part, I can use regular documentation to grok technologies. But cookbooks allow you to see more real world examples.

In 2009, I decided to shut down the cookbook site when Adobe launched their own cookbooks (http://cookbooks.adobe.com). I got permission from the original submitters and donated the content to Adobe.

However, the cookbooks at Adobe will soon be switched to “read only” mode. I suppose you could call this “news” (I got permission to mention it), but because of this, I thought it might be nice to re-start the cookbook.

So I’ve removed the “We’re dead” notice, slapped on some Disqus, and switched the search code to Solr. The code behind the site is… um… dusty. But it works. Most of the entries are not quite out of date, but I’ll be taking volunteers to help do edits. (In fact, hell, it may even be worthwhile to relaunch as a wiki.)

I’ll leave folks with a great blog post by Rob Brooks-Bilson. This is an old one too, but it helps describe the philosophy of what kind of content the site expects: A Word on the ColdFusion Cookbook Philosophy

Read the original article here.

Linode hacked due to a vulnerability in ColdFusion server

Yesterday, a group named HTP claimed responsibility for accessing Linode Manager web servers, we believe by exploiting a previously unknown zero-day vulnerability in Adobe’s ColdFusion application server. The vulnerabilities have only recently been addressed in Adobe’s APSB13-10 hotfix (CVE-2013-1387 and CVE-2013-1388) which was released less than a week ago.

As a result of the vulnerability, this group gained access to a web server, parts of our source code, and ultimately, our database. We have been working around the clock since discovering this vulnerability. Our investigation reveals that this group did not have access to any other component of the Linode infrastructure, including access to the host machines or any other server or service that runs our infrastructure.

Credit card numbers in our database are stored in encrypted format, using public and private key encryption. The private key is itself encrypted with passphrase encryption and the complex passphrase is not stored electronically. Along with the encrypted credit card, the last four digits are stored in clear text to assist in lookups and for display on things like your Account tab and payment receipt emails. We have no evidence decrypted credit card numbers were obtained.

Read the complete article here.

Cumulative Hotfix 1 – ColdFusion 9.0.2

ColdFusion LogoThe new cumulative hotfix for ColdFusion 9.0, 9.0.1, 9.0.2 includes support for Google Maps JavaScript API v3 and JDK 1.7 Update 15.These Cumulative Hotfixes consists of previously released cumulative hotfixes and security updates.

Details of cumulative hotfixes are here – 9.0, 9.0.1, 9.0.2

What’s New

  1. JDK 1.7: With ColdFusion 9.0.2 Cumulative Hotfix 1, ColdFusion 9.0.2 is now certified on JDK 1.7 Update 15.
  2. Google Maps v3 Support:
    1. With ColdFusion 9.0.2 Cumulative Hotfix 1, Google Maps JavaScript API library has been upgraded from v2 to v3.
    2. For Google Maps JavaScript API v3, the API key used for Google Maps API v2 will no longer work.
    3. ColdFusion map functions and ColdFusion map related tags are backward compatible. If your ColdFusion application uses native Google Maps JavaScript APIs, ensure that the code base is updated to v3. For more information, refer Google Maps JavaScript API v3 migration document.

ColdFusion 10 Update 8

ColdFusion LogoColdFusion 10 Update 8 includes support for Google Maps JavaScript API v3, Mac OS X Mountain Lion 10.8 and JDK 1.7 Update 15. It includes all the bug fixes from previous updates of ColdFusion 10.

You apply this update using the update mechanism within ColdFusion 10 Administrator.

Read Adobe’s update page  here

Learn ColdFusion in a Week

ColdFusion in a WeekLearn CF in a Week is a community driven training program that teaches all the basics you need to be a ColdFusion Developer in one week.

This course was created by community experts who specialize in the different fields they wrote about, and cover all the essential skills. Completing this course will help you on your way to be hired as a ColdFusion developer, should that be a chosen career path. If you do not wish to work as a ColdFusion developer but wish to gain some ColdFusion knowledge, then this course is also for you.

Check out the site here.