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Technical.ly
29-07-2025
- Business
- Technical.ly
This Week in Jobs: Pound the (internet) pavement and check out these 25 tech career opportunities
There's no question the internet has massively changed the way we search for jobs. Back in the 1970s, a typical job search meant scouring classified ads in the newspaper and putting on your best business attire to hand out individually typed resumes in person. This was how it was 51 years ago today on July 29, 1974, just days before the resignation of President Nixon. Little did anyone know that this thing called the internet was quietly brewing. It was on that day that two researchers laid the groundwork for the internet with a paper introducing TCP/IP: the Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol. These two systems work together to move data between computers. Without it, there would be no internet as we know it, and you would still be hitting the pavement and awkwardly asking receptionists face to face if they had any available positions. The internet started simple, by breaking it down into steps, and making sure nothing gets lost along the way. The same rules apply to job hunting. The News Use this interactive map to see where Pennsylvania's $90B in AI and energy money is going — and what doesn't add up. As the debate over artificial intelligence regulation intensifies, the divide over how and whether to rein in the technology is becoming increasingly stark. A company's price during an exit can differ from its valuation during financing, legal experts at Ballard Spahr explain. CEO Chris Wink: We were wrong before about AI killing jobs. Here's the proof. Here's how tech leaders in Delaware are using AI to bring racial equity to education, jobs and tech access. In Q2, Pittsburgh's $600M in VC, mainly driven by AI investments, defied nationwide trends of a capital slowdown. Partner Spotlight Crossbeam is the first and largest Ecosystem-Led Growth platform. The remote-first company acts as an escrow service for data, allowing companies to find overlapping customers and prospects with their partners while keeping the rest of their data private and secure. Companies use this data to sell more effectively, market to the right audiences, build the right products, collaborate with their service partners, generate demand, inform M&A, and more. This has created an entirely new way of doing business called 'Ecosystem-Led Growth' or ELG — and it works: 40% of Crossbeam's customers' closed deals come from their ecosystem. The Jobs Greater Philly Perpay is hiring an Associate Category Manager, Business Development Lead and Head of Compliance. CubeSmart is hiring a Database Engineer. NetApp has an open listing for a Senior Solutions Engineer – Enterprise Sales. Phenom in Ambler is hiring a hybrid Solution Architect. Slalom is looking for a Cyber Resilience Specialist. DC + Baltimore Educational resource company TCRE in Baltimore is bringing on two Sales Interns this fall. Brooksource is looking for a Financial Systems Security Admin and a Business Analyst. Warner Bros. Discovery is seeking a Staff Cybersecurity Engineer. Anduril has a listing for a Senior Software Engineer – Intelligence Systems. L3Harris in DC is seeking a Manager, Cyber Intelligence. Pittsburgh Duolingo has a listing for a Senior Software Engineer, Backend. Aurora is seeking a Senior Data Analyst. PNC needs a Software Engineer Sr. Palo Alto Networks is hiring a Solutions Consultant – SLED. The End Remember, every big career move starts as a seemingly tiny action.
Yahoo
19-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Bitcoin nears record high as analysts tell market to ‘buckle up'
The price of bitcoin is approaching a new all-time high after rising more than 10 per cent in recent days, leading some analysts to predict another record-breaking rally in 2025. The world's leading cryptocurrency rose above $105,000 on Monday, just $4,000 away from the record high it reached in January 2025. Crypto experts have attributed the latest price increase to massive inflows from institutional investors, greater support from governments and regulators, as well as improved sentiment among retail investors. The collision of positive catalysts have led some industry figures to forecast a 'parabolic' price rise for bitcoin in the months ahead. 'I truly understood bitcoin in 2011-2012 and in all these years, the bull case for it has never been stronger,' former PayPal president David Marcus wrote in a post to X. 'Banks can now custody and offer BTC to their customers, sovereign states and corporations are competing to buy, utility phase of TCP/IP [Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol] for money is taking off. Buckle up.' Standard Chartered analyst Geoff Kendrick recently predicted bitcoin could reach as high as $120,000 by the end of June, reinforcing his year-end forecast of $200,000. "While timing sharp rises in bitcoin is difficult, we think the current period of potential strategic asset reallocation away from US assets may trigger the next such upswing," he wrote in April. "If so, we would expect a new all-time high to be reached in Q2 with further gains over the summer.' Other cryptocurrencies have also experienced significant gains in May, with ethereum and dogecoin adding around 40 per cent to their value over the last week. The market has also been boosted by broader economic stability, with a major trade deal reached between the US and UK, as well as indications that the trade war between the US and China is cooling. This has brought renewed attention to typically high-risk assets like cryptocurrencies, which investors tend to sell during periods of uncertainty in favour of save haven assets like gold. Some crypto analysts believe that the current market momentum could see bitcoin reach new highs as early as this week, with the next resistance level pegged at $107,000. 'The impressive corrective pullback from late January to early April, in our opinion, created substantial margin for a new wave of growth,' Alex Kuptsikevich, the chief market analyst at the online trading platform FxPro, told The Independent. 'Therefore, we will not be surprised if, along with the positive dynamics of stocks, bitcoin will move to the renewal of historical highs already this week.' For bitcoin to realise these predictions,however, some have pointed to the $100,000 price point as a key support level. Should the cryptocurrency fall back below this figure, it could potentially lead to a broader sell-off that sees bitcoin pull back towards its 50-day moving average below $90,000. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data


Business Mayor
13-05-2025
- Business
- Business Mayor
Bitcoin nears record high as analysts tell market to ‘buckle up'
Sign up to our free weekly IndyTech newsletter delivered straight to your inbox Sign up to our free IndyTech newsletter The price of bitcoin is approaching a new all-time high after rising more than 10 per cent in recent days, leading some analysts to predict another record-breaking rally in 2025. The world's leading cryptocurrency rose above $105,000 on Monday, just $4,000 away from the record high it reached in January 2025. Crypto experts have attributed the latest price increase to massive inflows from institutional investors, greater support from governments and regulators, as well as improved sentiment among retail investors. The collision of positive catalysts have led some industry figures to forecast a 'parabolic' price rise for bitcoin in the months ahead. 'I truly understood bitcoin in 2011-2012 and in all these years, the bull case for it has never been stronger,' former PayPal president David Marcus wrote in a post to X. 'Banks can now custody and offer BTC to their customers, sovereign states and corporations are competing to buy, utility phase of TCP/IP [Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol] for money is taking off. Buckle up.' Standard Chartered analyst Geoff Kendrick recently predicted bitcoin could reach as high as $120,000 by the end of June, reinforcing his year-end forecast of $200,000. 'While timing sharp rises in bitcoin is difficult, we think the current period of potential strategic asset reallocation away from US assets may trigger the next such upswing,' he wrote in April. Read More Roger Ver's Plea to Trump: End US Lawfare and Uphold Justice 'If so, we would expect a new all-time high to be reached in Q2 with further gains over the summer.' Other cryptocurrencies have also experienced significant gains in May, with ethereum and dogecoin adding around 40 per cent to their value over the last week. The market has also been boosted by broader economic stability, with a major trade deal reached between the US and UK, as well as indications that the trade war between the US and China is cooling. This has brought renewed attention to typically high-risk assets like cryptocurrencies, which investors tend to sell during periods of uncertainty in favour of save haven assets like gold. Some crypto analysts believe that the current market momentum could see bitcoin reach new highs as early as this week, with the next resistance level pegged at $107,000. 'The impressive corrective pullback from late January to early April, in our opinion, created substantial margin for a new wave of growth,' Alex Kuptsikevich, the chief market analyst at the online trading platform FxPro, told The Independent . 'Therefore, we will not be surprised if, along with the positive dynamics of stocks, bitcoin will move to the renewal of historical highs already this week.' For bitcoin to realise these predictions,however, some have pointed to the $100,000 price point as a key support level. Should the cryptocurrency fall back below this figure, it could potentially lead to a broader sell-off that sees bitcoin pull back towards its 50-day moving average below $90,000.