Tag Archives: Portal

First Job Posting for New Year 2012

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This is our first job posting for this special New Year 2012.  So we are hoping to provide you the best of jobs around the world for our viewers around the world. Quatre Bornes Portal also provides you the list of ultimate jobs around the world so that we can make your lives better for your better tomorrow. So we all hope that you have been utilizing some of our efforts in getting you the jobs from the most promising country in Economy and Development. Well if you are not sure of what we are talking, you must be going through some of our articles we wrote lately related to UAE progress in employment and recruitment.   So don’t you waste your time on doing some crazy things, and better focus upon the terms you can think it is highly possible for you to get a job in the list. So far we have posted more than 1000 jobs in quatre bornes portal. So why not you might be the lucky ones to get the hold of new job, new location and new life.


#01: Commercial Manager – Qatar | APG Global
#02: 3rd Line Windows Server Engineer (Server 2008 Security)

Happy NewYear Mauritius – 2012

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Quatre-Bornes.com wishes all our readers a Happy and Prosperous New Year 2012. We sincerely hope that this new year will bring you and your family all the best of everything including a good health which is vital these days.  To all the regular posters, whether we agreed or disagreed, annoyed or complimented, Happy New Year. Lets hope 2012 is a good year for all. This is our sincere wish and we hope to write better articles and better information for this year hopefully.  As we promised in 2011 that we would give something different and we are doing it now that this year we are hoping for the best hopefully we will bring some great things in quatre bornes portal.

Best Innovative Companies of year 2011

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Best Innovative Companies around the world – We are going to talk about those companies which really got the world market to such a different heights. World always looks for innovation and progression in Technology, we the people of the quatre-bornes town portal wanted to provide you the information which would make you understand why these companies in 2011 are top ranked and what made them on top. Some of the companies were just added and to your surprise chinese market also entered the best innovation companies around the world.

Ranked 1: Apple
Apple Inc. formerly Apple Computer, Inc., an American multinational corporation, that designs and markets consumer electronics, computer software, and personal computers was established on April 1, 1976 in Cupertino, California.
On January 6, 2011, the company opened their Mac App Store, a digital software distribution platform, similar to the existing iOS App Store.
As of September 24, 2011, the company had 357 retail stores, including 245 stores in the United States and 112 stores internationally. Apple has recently been the largest publicly traded company in the world by market capitalization, and the largest technology company in the world by revenue and profit.
On October 4, 2011, Apple announced the iPhone 4S, which includes an improved camera with 1080p video recording, a dual core A5 chip capable of 7 times faster graphics than the A4, an “intelligent software assistant” named Siri, and cloud-sourced data with iCloud.
On October 29, 2011, Apple purchased C3 Technologies, a mapping company, for $240 million.

Management Metrics from Quatre Bornes Portal

I’ve learned that the most important metrics are often ones you never read about on the income statement or in the financial press.
Regardless, most managers only measure outputs, not inputs, which is like telling a Little League team to score more runs, rather than actually explaining how to swing a bat and make contact with the ball. Similarly, most companies measure traffic, revenue or earnings, without considering how to improve the company at an atomic level: how to make a meeting better, or an engineer more productive.

Here are five metrics that great teams should measure:

Metric 1: Flow State Percentage

Jobs that require a lot of brainpower—software programming for instance—also demand deep concentration. You know that feeling when you’re “in the zone,” cranking on something. That is flow, a term coined by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Unfortunately, most of us are constantly interrupted during the day with meetings, emails, texts, or colleagues who want to talk about stuff. These interruptions that move us out of “flow state” increase R&D cycle times and costs dramatically. Studies have shown that each time flow state is disrupted it takes fifteen minutes to get back into flow, if you can get back at all. And programmers who work in the top quartile of proper (ie uninterrupted) work environments are several times more productive than those who don’t.

Ideally programmers and other knowledge workers can spend 30% – 50% of their day in uninterrupted concentration. Most office environments don’t even come close. To get started, ask your engineers to track for a few days their personal flow state percentages: how many hours each day are they in flow, divided by the number of total hours they’re at the office. And then brainstorm ways that the team can move this number up. For example, perhaps there’s a little paper sign at each person’s desk that says “Go Away, I’m Cranking.” Or maybe you have a day where no meetings are allowed. Tom Demarco has written insightfully on the topic of flow.

Metric 2: The Anxiety-Boredom Continuum

Years ago, back when I was younger and cooler, I took a salsa class with my wife-to-be where the instructor said something that really stuck with me. He said that his goal was to keep all of his students in the pocket between boredom and anxiety – but closer to anxiety. In other words, we shouldn’t be so overwhelmed that we break down and give up, but we also shouldn’t be coasting either. He kept the rhythm fast enough so that we were challenged, but not so difficult that we lost the steps completely. And he kept tuning the difficulty level of the class to stretch but not break us.

This same anxiety-to-boredom continuum also applies to managing people. Star performers can get bored easily, and often function best when they’re expected to rise to great challenges. You want expectations to be high, but not completely overwhelming. With this in mind, check in with your employees periodically about where they are on this continuum, while also keeping an eye out for signs of where they stand. If they have low energy, or are showing up late and leaving early, they may be bored. If they’re responding to small setbacks with anger or frustration, or getting sick a lot, they may be pushing too hard.

Metric 3: Meeting Promoter Score

Most meetings suck. And they’re expensive: a one-hour meeting of six software engineers costs $1,000 at least. People who don’t have the authority to buy paperclips are allowed to call meetings every day that cost far more than that. Nobody tracks whether meetings are useful, or how they could get better. And all you have to do is ask.

In the last minute of a meeting, ask the participants to each rate from 1 to 10 how effective the meeting was, with one suggestion for making the meeting better. It can be on a scrap of paper, or a simple web form. Verne Harnish has some good ideas about running better meetings.

Metric 4: Compound Weekly Learning Rate

My three year old son just asked me what the word “expert” means. When I answered, he nodded and asked “so am I an expert about superheroes yet?” The best leaders hold on to this relentless curiosity. Joi Ito wrote recently about “neotony”, the retention of childlike attributes in adulthood. This ability to learn is like the compounding interest on an investment: after two or three years, a relentless learner stands head and shoulders above his peers. Jeff Weiner, the CEO of LinkedIn, referred me to Joi’s posting. Jeff is one of the most relentless learners I know, and this quality is an essential element of his success and the success of his teams. So try asking your team this question: how did you get 1% better this week? Did you learn something valuable from our customers, or make a change to our product that drove better results? As your team gets into a learning rhythm, you can review this as a group. 1% per week adds up.

Metric 5: Positive Feedback Ratio
Sean Parker, Jim Breyer Predict the Industries Social Media Will Reinvent Next Adrienne Burke Adrienne Burke Contributor
How Business Leaders Handle The Social Data Explosion Rawn Shah Rawn Shah Contributor

You can learn as much from John Gottman as you can from John F. Kennedy about being a great communicator. Gottman, a psychologist, is the author of “Why Marriages Succeed or Fail”.

In his research, he found that marriages that succeed tend to have five times as many positive interactions as negative ones. And when a couple falls below that ratio, their relationship falls down too.

The same is true at the office, where you’re often connected for years in relationships with people who can either become wary of your criticisms or eager to give you their best effort. Catch people doing good things. Never miss a chance to say something nice, even if you feel a little silly. Then when you have feedback on areas to improve, they‘ll really listen. It may be hard to manage to the 5:1 ratio at the office, but you should be mindful of the balance.

So, there you have it, 5 metrics that will never show up in the best companies’ financial statements or a Wall Street Journal article, but are the kinds of reasons those companies succeed. Tracking these five metrics isn’t glamorous. But it’s something everyone can do. And it really works.

Traffic Jam in Mauritius – Profitable Economy

Well it is not a secret that Mauritius, so called Paradise on Earth is the place of Traffic Jams. This is just not a traffic jam once a while situation, but its a traffic jam on daily basis. So why do you think Government is not acknowledging these crisis in the country.

The fact might be that it can be most profitable source of income in the country.  Well you might think of it or not, but keep your mind open and think wide and think over the money.  We already discussed about this topic earlier but today we want to refresh your mind with some sense of it all.

So lets take it a crude example of just 100 cars going from quatre-bornes to portlouis by around 7.30A.M in the morning to Port Louis. So they approximately take around an hour the best case scenario and they would burn approximately 3 litres of petrol or diesel or what so ever and which would cost around 150 MRU one way and approximately say 250 RS per trip.

Approximately 250 x 100  = 25000 (Per day)
25000 x 25 = 625000 (Per month) for just 100 cars
625000 x 12 = 7500000 (Per Year) for just 100 cars

According to our survey they are approximately around 5000 vehicles which visit Port louis every day, so its approximately1250000  and for 25 days a month =3125000 so per year 375,000,000 is the income generated by the government just related to the fuel, so why would they want to do something for the public.

So why would they don’t want to settle on something special where the income flow is way too high. This would be the same case for the important things which and why things are not stopped.

Now that we all know about this fact as any idiot who has common sense really would know what it means  now that they have decided to do something called “TRAFFIC SOCIO ECONOMY”

A group of researchers will be asked to assess the impact of traffic on the economy, environment and health.

Several competencies of different ministries and other public and private institutions have formed a working committee to carry out this mission.

Traffic congestion and above costs about almost Rs 3 billion to the economy and severely restricts the productivity, well being of citizens and the environment.

Coordinating the work will be conducted by the Mauritius Research Council, whose director Dr Arjoon Suddhoo plans to produce a first set of recommendations by the end of the year.