Friday 18th May 2012

Computer Software Engineer Jobs – A USA Listing







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Welcome to our Computer Software Engineer Jobs site. The purpose of this site is to provide a frequently updated list of current open positions for the computer software engineer. Our focus is on computer software engineer jobs which are available in the United States. Here we also provide informative articles, useful statistics, videos, and a book store. Here you will also find current career news. This site is produced by IntellegoJobs, a division of Intellego Web Publishing.

To increase your level of resume exposure to hiring managers and recruiters, we suggest you post your resume to many career sites. This greatly increases the likelihood of finding the right computer software engineer job. You can click here, to instantly post your resume to 85 career sites. This service is provided at a very reasonable cost.

The jobs listed here are in the form of RSS feeds, and will be automatically updated when new jobs become available. The following data should be interesting to the computer software engineer who resides within the United States. This data comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Computer Software Engineer Jobs – Statistics (Bureau of Labor Statistics)

States with the highest concentration of computer software engineers:
(highest at top)

Massachusetts
Virginia
Colorado
Washington
Maryland

Annual salary for computer software engineer for each of the above states:

Massachusetts $96,580
Virginia $101,850
Colorado $93,810
Washington $92,620
Maryland $96,550

Mean hourly wage for computer software engineer:

$43.65

Mean annual salary for computer software engineer:

$90,780

Top paying States for computer software engineer with annual mean wage:
(highest at top)

Virginia $101,850
California $100,200
New Jersey $98,640
Massachusetts $96,580
Maryland $96,550

Metropolitan areas with the highest concentration of computer software engineers with annual mean wage:

Framingham, MA NECTA Division $107,120
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA $111,070
Lowell-Billerica-Chelmsford, MA-NH NECTA Division $97,310
Durham, NC $95,210
Boulder, CO $110,510

Industries with the highest level of employment for the computer software engineers:
(highest at top)

Computer Systems Design and Related Services
Software Publishers
Computer and Peripheral Equipment Manufacturing
Scientific Research and Development Services
Data Processing, Hosting, and Related Services

Education required for the computer software engineer:

Most employers prefer applicants who have at least a bachelor’s degree and broad knowledge of, and experience with, a variety of computer systems and technologies. The usual college major for applications software engineers is computer science or software engineering. Graduate degrees are preferred for some of the more complex jobs. In 2006, about 80 percent of workers had a bachelor’s degree or higher. In today’s competitive market place, you should have at least a bachelor’s degree and preferably some software engineer or related experience when seeking this type of position.

Job outlook for computer software engineer:

Employment of computer software engineers is projected to increase by 38 percent over the 2006 to 2016 period, which is much faster than the average for all occupations. This occupation will generate about 324,000 new jobs, over the projections decade, one of the largest employment increases of any occupation. Overall, job security looks fairly good for software engineers, and will look even better when the economy starts to pick back up again.

Source for the above data:

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Computer Software Engineer Jobs – Conclusion

The computer software engineer earns a good salary and the long term demand outlook looks good. Officially, a computer software engineer develops and designs software, and the career’s horizons figure to expand very rapidly. Over the next 10 years, computer software engineer’s work can be seen in every corner of the economy, from business software to video and computer games, from the software that trigger your car’s air bags to the software programs that keep the Internet running. If you are attending college and currently working toward a degree in software engineering, you have made the right decision in terms of college major. This is because the number of new jobs expected to develop for this profession over the next ten years is one of the highest for all professions. If you are a computer software engineer who is seeking employment, bookmark this site and refer back to it daily.


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Computer Software Engineer Jobs – Listed by State – Updated Daily

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Software Development News

ScienceDaily: Software News
ScienceDaily: Software News
Software Development -- Software Engineering. From embedded software to smart machines, read about advanced logic systems and more.

Internet usage patterns may signify depression
In a new study analyzing Internet usage among college students, researchers have found that students who show signs of depression tend to use the Internet differently than those who show no symptoms of depression.
Self-adapting computer network that defends itself against hackers?
Cybersecurity experts are researching the feasibility of building a computer network that could protect itself against online attackers by automatically changing its setup and configuration.
Optimal planning of solar power plants
The photovoltaics industry is booming, and the market for solar farms is growing quickly all over the world. Yet, the task of planning PV power plants to make them as effi cient as possible is far from trivial. Researchers have now developed software that simplifies conceptual design.
Katrina changed everything: New software predicts how water will spread
All over the country, millions of Americans still live behind dams or levees, and if these were to fail and unleash catastrophic flooding, as some did in New Orleans in 2005, property and life might once again pay the price. Now there is some remarkable software to help swiftly predict how the water will spread.
Android vulnerability debugged
Researchers have discovered and neutralized a serious vulnerability present in all versions of Android, the popular operating system developed by Google specifically for smartphones and tablet computers. The vulnerability could have been easily exploited by malicious software applications, with the effect of making devices based on Google's operating system currently on the market completely unusable.
Free apps drain smartphone energy on 'advertising modules'
Researchers have shown that popular free smartphone apps spend up to 75 percent of their energy tracking the user's geographical location, sending information about the user to advertisers and downloading ads.
Swarming and transporting
On its own, an ant is not particularly clever. But in a community, the insects can solve complicated tasks. Researchers intend to put this "swarm intelligence“ to use in the logistics field. Lots of autonomous transport shuttles would provide an alternative to traditional materials-handling technology.
National study ranks city governments' use of social media
Six times as many big-city governments reached citizens via Facebook in 2011 compared to 2009. Use of YouTube and Twitter grew fourfold and threefold respectively. Researchers ranked the online interactivity, transparency and accessibility of the 75 largest U.S. cities.
To combat identity theft, protect computer, experts say
Having a triple-threat combination of protective software on your computer greatly reduces your chances of identity theft, according to a new study.
Revealed in accurate detail, the underground world of plants
Plant and computer scientists can now study the underground world of plants with more accuracy and clarity. The revolutionary technique will improve our chances of breeding better crop varieties and increasing yields.
Cell phone hackers can track your location without your knowledge
Cellular networks leak the locations of cell phone users, allowing a third party to easily track the location of the cell phone user without the user's knowledge, according to new research by computer scientists.
Best time for a coffee break? There's an app for that
Caffeinated drinks such as coffee and soda are the pick-me-ups of choice for many people, but too much caffeine can cause nervousness and sleep problems. Caffeine Zone, a new software app developed by researchers, can help people determine when caffeine may give them a mental boost and when it could hurt their sleep patterns. The software takes information on caffeine use and integrates it with information on the effects of caffeine to produce a graph of how the caffeine will affect the users over time.
Chemist applies Google software to webs of the molecular world
The technology that Google uses to analyze trillions of Web pages is being brought to bear on the way molecules are shaped and organized. Scientists have adapted Google's PageRank software to create moleculaRnetworks, which scientists can use to determine molecular shapes and chemical reactions without the expense, logistics and occasional danger of lab experiments.
Unique testbed soon will be in space
New and improved ways for future space travelers to communicate will be tested on the International Space Station after a launch later this year from Japan. The SCaN Testbed, or Space Communications and Navigation Testbed, was designed and built at NASA's Glenn Research Center over the last three years.
Scientists develop biological computer to encrypt and decipher images
Scientists have developed a "biological computer" made entirely from biomolecules that is capable of deciphering images encrypted on DNA chips.
Harnessing the predictive power of virtual communities
Scientists have created a new algorithm to detect virtual communities, designed to match the needs of real-life social, biological or information networks detection better than with current attempts.
New tool enhances view of muscles
New research is adding to the arsenal of increasingly sophisticated medical imaging tools with a new signal-processing method for viewing muscle activation details never seen before. A novel method using ultrasound imaging, 3-D motion-capture technology and proprietary data-processing software can scan and capture 3-D maps of the muscle structure in just 90 seconds. Previous methods took 15 minutes -- far too long to ask people to hold a muscle contraction.
NASA clears the runway for open source software
The NASA Open Government Initiative has launched a new website to expand the agency's open source software development. Open source development, which invites the public access to view and improve software source code, is transforming the way software is created, improved and used. NASA uses open source code to address project and mission needs, accelerate software development and maximize public awareness and impact of research.
Software for analyzing digital pathology images proving its usefulness
As tissue slides are more routinely digitized to aid interpretation, a software program is proving its utility. In bladder cancer test case, a new software tool separates malignancy from background tissue.
Smart way of saving lives in natural disasters
Smartphones could help save hundreds of thousands of lives in the aftermath of a disaster or humanitarian crisis, new research has found.
Protecting computers at start-up: New guidelines
A new draft computer security publication provides guidance for vendors and security professionals as they work to protect personal computers as they start up.
Supercomputers take a cue from microwave ovens: Co-design may be the answer to modeling clouds and other big problems
As sophisticated as modern climate models are, one critical component continues to elude their precision -- clouds. Clouds modulate the climate. Experts agree that getting their effect on the climate system correct is critical to increasing confidence in projections of future climate change. To build the breakthrough supercomputers that these researchers need, computer scientists are taking a cue from the world of consumer electronics.
Virtual childbirth simulator improves safety of high-risk deliveries
Newly developed computer software combined with magnetic resonance imaging of a fetus may help physicians better assess a woman's potential for a difficult childbirth.
Human, artificial intelligence join forces to pinpoint fossil locations
Traditionally, fossil-hunters often could only make educated guesses as to where fossils lie. The rest lay with chance. But thanks to a new software model, fossil-hunters' reliance on luck when finding fossils may be diminishing. Using artificial neural networks, researchers developed a computer model that can pinpoint productive fossil sites.
Sound, digested: New software tool provides unprecedented searches of sound, from musical riffs to gunshots
Audio engineers have developed a novel artificial intelligence system for understanding and indexing sound, a unique tool for both finding and matching previously un-labeled audio files.
Galaxy DNA-analysis software is now available 'in the cloud'
Galaxy -- an open-source, web-based platform for data-intensive biomedical and genetic research -- is now available as a "cloud computing" resource. The new technology will help scientists and biomedical researchers to harness such tools as DNA-sequencing and analysis software, as well as storage capacity for large quantities of scientific data.
Software to prevent abuse at the click of a mouse
Teaming up with investigators from the State Office of Criminal Investigation in Berlin, Fraunhofer researchers have come up with an automated assistance system for image and video evaluation that can detect child-pornographic images from among even large volumes of data. Soon, it will make prosecutors‘ work easier.
Relief from 'parking wars': Computer software to revamp city parking
Researchers have developed a traffic simulator that takes into account real parking policies, the habits of urban drivers, and the movements of traffic inspectors to identify strategies for improvement and test the impact of parking policy changes before they're implemented.
OpenSim, open-source software, accurately models human motion, experts say
Engineers have developed an open source software package called OpenSim that accurately models human movement. OpenSim is free and in use across the world helping scientists understand the complex forces of movement to improve diagnosis of physical disabilities and prevent harmful wear and tear.
'First step' to perfect drug combinations
Scientists have discovered a way of speeding up the creation of perfect drug combinations, which could help patients recovering from critical health problems such as stroke, heart attacks and cancer.
The eyes have it: Computer-inspired creativity
Constraints on creativity imposed by computer-aided design tools are being overcome, thanks to a novel system that incorporates eye-tracking technology.
Piecing together the priceless 'Cairo Genizah'
The Cairo Genizah is an irreplaceable repository for information about 1,000 years of human history. But the 350,000 fragments that make up the Genizah are scattered worldwide. Researchers are now putting all these pieces back together with a computer program based on facial recognition technology.
Researchers create simulator to train embryologists
Researchers in Spain have presented a unique system that simulates the environment of an embryology laboratory and avoids the waste of valuable human biological material and breakages of medical equipment.
Differing structures underlie differing brain rhythms in healthy and ill, virtual modeling reveals
Virtual brains modeling epilepsy and schizophrenia display less complexity among functional connections, and other differences compared to healthy brain models, researchers report. The researchers worked backward from brain rhythms -- the oscillating patterns of electrical activity in the brain recorded on electroencephalograms -- from both healthy and ill individuals.
The future of airport passport control
Digital security specialists, major European electronics makers, and experts in biometrics worked together to make passport control at airports faster. The technology also could have broader applications on the way our identity documents are design and on the way we access public services.
'Robot biologist' solves complex problem from scratch
Scientists have taken a major step toward developing robot biologists. They have shown that their system, the Automated Biology Explorer, can solve a complicated biology problem from scratch.
'Ghostwriting' the Torah? New algorithm distinguishes contributors to the Old Testament with high accuracy
A professor has developed a new computer algorithm to help unravel the different sources that contributed to the authorship of the scriptures. Sidestepping the problems of content-based analysis, his algorithm searches for patterns in writing style to give deeper insight into ancient writings such as the Bible.
Robotic telescope network with access via Internet to be built
Internauts will be able to connect to 17 telescopes on four continents to share observation time. A world network of robotic telescopes is to be developed as part of a European citizen science project that has just kicked off in Spain. The network, to which any citizen will be able to connect and share observation time, will offer free open access via the Internet.
Smart phones: Keeping business data secure while allowing installation of personal apps
More and more companies are providing their employees with smartphones. While companies seek the best security available for their data, employees would also like to install apps of their own. Security experts have now developed equipment software with two separate areas: the business area and the personal area.
New software models immune responses
New software lets researchers see how the immune system responds to pathogens that invade the bacteria-rich environment of the gut.
New technique offers enhanced security for sensitive data in cloud computing
Researchers have developed a new, experimental technique to better protect sensitive information in cloud computing -- without significantly affecting the system's overall performance.
Unleashing the power of green data
Sustainability decisions need to rely on the results of quantitative environmental research. Commonly, these results are found in closed, often expensive databases based on proprietary software. Alternatively, environmental information is presented in text documents (pdf-files) which cannot be processed. Researchers have now developed a web-based service applying the concept of open linked data to environmental impact information.
Secure updates for navigation systems
At the push of a button by the driver, control units download the car manufacturer's new software -- such as enhanced map material for the navigation system. To ensure that this data channel is protected from hacker attack, the system needs the right cryptographic key. To date, these keys have been stored in each one of a vehicle's electronic control units. Thanks to a new form of trust anchor, this will be simpler and more economical in the future.
People as 'sensors': Twitter messages reveal NFL's big plays and fans
Using millions of Twitter subscribers as living "sensors," engineers have found a way to monitor fans' levels of excitement and to keep track of the action in National Football League games -- without ever switching on a TV. SportSense is a computer program the engineers created to analyze NFL fan tweets in real time.
New software brings science to life for young people
The use of new technology is helping students to become real ‘science investigators’. Researchers in the UK have developed a software toolkit that shows how such an approach sparks and sustains students’ interest in science.
Sequencing 'dark matter' of life: Elusive genomes of thousands of bacteria species can now be decoded
Researchers have developed a new method to sequence and analyze the 'dark matter' of life -- the genomes of thousands of bacteria species previously beyond scientists' reach, from microorganisms that produce antibiotics and biofuels to microbes living in the human body.
Novel software used in first global camera trap mammal study
A novel software system has been used in the first global camera trap study of mammals. The research emphasizes the importance of protected areas to ensure the diversity and survival of a wide range of animal populations.
Computer-aided design used for breast tissue reconstruction
A technology usually reserved for designing buildings, bridges and aircraft has now been used to aid breast tissue reconstruction in cancer patients.
To clear digital waste in computers, 'think green,' researchers say
A digital dumping ground lies inside most computers, a wasteland where old, rarely used and unneeded files pile up. Such data can deplete precious storage space, bog down the system's efficiency and sap its energy. Computer scientists now propose adapting a real-world approach to the cleanup effort.
Social media expert explores dynamics of online networking
Birds of a feather flock together in cyberspace. At least that is what one social media expert has found while exploring the dynamics of online communities.
Watching viruses 'friend' a network: Researchers develop Facebook application to track the path of infection
PiggyDemic, an application developed by researchers in Israel, allows Facebook users to "infect" their friends with a simulated virus or become infected themselves. This will allow researchers to gather information on how a virus mutates, spreads through human interaction, and the number of people it infects.
'Hanging' computers can be life threatening
When your email program or word processor "hangs" it is annoying, you lose messages or have to reboot your computer and start that writing project again if you hadn't saved the text. But, we depending increasingly on computers in almost all walks of life, not least critical systems such as air-traffic control, in which the computer "hanging" can be life threatening.
Build music with blocks: Audio d-touch
Researchers have developed a new way to generate music and control computers.
Researchers improving GPS accuracy in the third dimension
Researchers who are working to fix global positioning system (GPS) errors have devised software to take a more accurate measurement of altitude -- particularly in mountainous areas. The software is still under development, but in initial tests it enabled centimeter-scale GPS positioning -- including altitude -- as often as 97 percent of the time.
New tool allows first responders to visualize post-event disaster environments
Using iPad™ mobile devices, emergency preparedness officials and first responders participating in an exercise, were able, for the first time, to make use of a new, science-based software tool that allows them to view and modify accurate models of building damage and other post-event disaster effects.
Benefits of the open source software market identified
A new article identifies the social-welfare benefits of open source software, despite the existence of free-riding that is inherent in the industry due to information-sharing. The market creates spillover benefits for both consumers and producers.
DNA construction software saves time, resources and money
Scientists have developed the first software package for automating DNA construction that not only makes the process faster and more efficient but -- with an eye on the economics of scientific discovery -- also identifies which construction strategy would be the most cost-effective.
Software predicted risk in California West Nile virus epidemic
A computer model of the spread of West Nile virus was able to predict areas where human cases would be concentrated, especially around Sacramento in 2005. The success of the model, say researchers, depended on its focus on biological factors and on a high volume of reports from members of the public.
Facing up to better face recognition
Face recognition software of the kind incorporated into biometric identification tools, photo-gallery applications and social media websites can be very useful, but it also raises privacy concerns given the seeming ease with which faces in photos can now be tied to an individual. Researchers have developed even more powerful software for face recognition.
New anti-censorship scheme could make it impossible to block individual Web sites
A radical new approach to thwarting Internet censorship would essentially turn the whole Web into a proxy server, making it virtually impossible for a censoring government to block individual Web sites.

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