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vrapto
System Analyst (Johannesburg)
Location: | Johannesburg, Sandton |
Type: | Permanent |
Reference: | #KB49023 |
Company: | E-Merge IT Recruitment |
Job description
Start your digital journey and partner with the best technology providers that leverage a wealth of world-class expertise. This consulting system analyst role will require an individual that is project-driven and speaks a digital language of analysing, designing and specifying new information systems solutions.
Responsibilities:
- Analysing of business requirements to plan system and configuration changes, providing system capabilities required for the development and installation of new systems or modification of existing systems.
- Manage the full life cycle of development and configuration changes from requirements to analysis and documentation to configure the systems to implementation and migration support.
- Provide input to insurance system capability investigations and provide consulting to Insurance during feasibility investigations.
- Consult to clients and provide guidance on delivering hardware, software and firmware support across domains.
- Evaluate factors such as the number of departments to be serviced, reporting formats, the volume of transactions, time requirements, cost constraints and the need for security and access to the affected system.
- Seek opportunities to improve business processes and systems. Participate in research that will enable recommendations related to the system software.
- Make and validate recommendations based on cost and usability (feasibility) on enterprise-wide projects.
- Deliver work products per the agreed timelines and within the agreed budget.
- Deliver proof of concepts to clients and obtain the necessary sign-off.
- Create systems impact documentation for larger, more complex/enterprise-wide projects that cross systems. Identify project dependencies and possible conflict and manage these to resolution (enterprise-wide).
- Participate in design forums to approve designs and validate recommended software technologies.
- Participate in problem-solving. Support the achievement of the business strategy, objectives and values.
Reference number for this position is KB49023 which is a permanent position based in Johannesburg north offering a cost to company salary of R550 per hour negotiable on experience and ability. Contact Kavisha Bissessar on
az.oc.egrem-e@BahsivaK
or call on 011 463 3633 to discuss this and other opportunities.
Are you ready for a change of scenery? E-Merge IT Recruitment is a specialist niche recruitment agency. We offer our candidates options so that we can successfully place the right developers with the right companies in the right roles. Check out the E-Merge website www.e-merge.co.za for more great positions.
Do you have a friend who is a developer or technology specialist? We pay cash for successful referrals: https://www.e-merge.co.za/careers/referralprogramme/
Requirements
- Degree in information technology.
- Five+ years of software development and system integration experience.
- JIRA, confluence, systems analysis, agile and SQL.
- Have a firm understanding of different database models and technologies.
Posted on 25 Mar 09:24
Kavisha Bissessar
Create your CV once, and thereafter you can apply to this ad and future job ads easily.
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News24.com | LIVE | SA hits 709 coronavirus cases: no fatalities but 2 patients in ICU
2020-03-25 06:00
Stay up to date with the latest news, views and analysis as the number of coronavirus cases in SA increases.
Last Updated at
Share
New Zealand PM assumes emergency powers
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern assumed sweeping emergency powers ahead of a four-week lockdown beginning at midnight on Wednesday, and immediately ramped up border controls to allow detention of overseas arrivals.
Authorities now have the power to seal off areas and detain people to ensure self-isolation rules are followed.
Ardern in theory has the power to amend any legislation at will – but said she intended to remain accountable.
AFP
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India puts 1.3 billion under lockdown
People in the world’s second most-populous nation began their first day under a “total lockdown” ordered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, following a surge in cases.
“To save India, to save its every citizen, you, your family … every street, every neighbourhood is being put under lockdown,” said Modi in a nationally televised address.
The measure, to last three weeks, means that about 2.6 billion people worldwide – about a third of the global population – are now under some form of movement restriction.
AFP
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First known US child virus death was teen ‘in good health’
The first known death of a child due to the novel coronavirus in the US was a teenager in previously good health, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said on Tuesday.
The death of the youth from Lancaster, just north of Los Angeles, was reported hours earlier by public health officials, and comes despite the disease not typically proving severe for juveniles.
“A teenager in good health, succumbed to this virus,” said Garcetti.
– AFP
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With economy sinking, Trump’s own business is in peril
As if presiding over the threatened destruction of the US economy by the coronavirus pandemic is not enough, US President Donald Trump is watching another financial drama: The Trump Organization hotel, golf course and real estate business that made him a billionaire.
His five-star US and Canada hotels with more than 2 200 rooms are mostly empty, his golf courses in the United States, Scotland and Ireland are under pressure to close, and his cherished “Southern White House” – the beach-front Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida is shuttered.
Like other hotels around the country, Trump’s have been forced to lay off most workers and face the fact that the $435 million in revenues that the Trump Organization reported in 2018 is likely to plummet this year.
– AFP
Health24.com | Why can’t we simply kill the coronavirus? Because it’s not alive in the first place
How can such a miniscule packet of genetics cause such chaos around the world? And why can’t we simply eradicate it? Those are the questions on everyone’s lips as the new coronavirus outbreak is having serious consequences for everyone around the world.
What exactly is a virus?
Viruses are resilient little entities made up of proteins and genetic material that can only replicate within an environment inside another living host (such as a human or animal). Microbiologists debated in the past whether a virus can still be seen as “alive” when it has no host to infect.
Prof Nigel Brown, a microbiology expert from the University of Edinburgh, simply defines a virus as a “gift-wrapped nucleic acid”, whether it’s a DNA or RNA or whether it is single or double stranded.
And what about the coronavirus?
We now know that the Covid-19 virus is a single-stranded RNA virus with a capsid (a little cap over the virus) that connects to its host.
While it’s essentially dead (well, dormant and zombie-like) on its own, the power lies in its ability to encode inside the host and spread through saliva or droplets. We also recently learned that this particular virus can survive for at least three days on hard, non-porous surfaces such as plastic and metal, making it easy to spread, especially when people are slack about hygiene.
But why can’t we simply kill it?
The fact of the matter is, the new coronavirus called SARS-CoV-2 found a host, and spread from that host to several other hosts – and ended up causing a worldwide pandemic. It gained a steady foothold in a huge number of hosts all over the world – whether symptomatic or not. (The lack of symptoms in many people is the reason why a lock-down helps to curb the spread.)
In the case of a respiratory virus such as the Covid-19 virus, the virus has a strong foothold in two places – firstly in the nose and throat, from where it easily spreads through saliva, cough droplets and mucus, and secondly from further down in the lungs, from where it is harder to spread, although it can cause fatal damage there, especially in people with preexisting respiratory conditions.
Why does it spread so easily?
In some people who contract the virus and suffer from mild or no symptoms, it means that the virus lodged and multiplied into the nose and throat, while in the more serious cases it lodges and multiplies in the lungs.
This virus is a double-whammy, according to an article in Washington Post – it’s as contagious as a cold (if not more), and has the potential to be as lethal as coronavirus which caused the SARS outbreak in 2003.
In the case of this new virus, the incubation period tends to be longer (anywhere between one and 14 days, the median being 5.1 days) and therefore people are contracting it long before they are even aware of it.
Another thing that favours the Covid-19 virus is its size and design. It is three times bigger than other pathogens that cause diseases such as dengue fever and Zika, and can reproduce and replicate much faster.
What about other pandemics?
While we can’t compare the current coronavirus outbreak to previous influenza outbreaks, the past pandemics in history had some things in common, making them easy to spread and hard to kill.
Just like all the other great outbreaks (some were classified as pandemics, some not) – the flu outbreaks of 1918, 1957, 1968 and 2009, Ebola, SARS and MERS, the virus started out as zoonotic, which means it lived in an animal host and jumped to a human. All these viruses encode their genetic material into RNA. According to Gary Whittaker, a Cornell University professor of virology, a virus as something that can easily switch between being dead or alive.
How will we be able to fight this pandemic?
As we know now, viruses are complex, extremely clever and resilient – an antiviral that stops activity in its tracks needs to be specific to that particular virus. Right now, we don’t have a targeted cure for the Covid-19 virus, but doctors have been treating cases with existing drugs.
Experts believe that this virus is still in its early, strong phase – the ultimate goal is that is becomes like seasonal flu – not as deadly, novel or serious. It will, however, retain the ability to replicate and hang around forever.
In the meantime, the best we can do is to rely on social distancing, practicing good hygiene and flattening the so-called “curve” of the virus to prevent the vulnerable among us from contracting it. We’re hoping, therefore, that although the virus might still be around, its RNA will change in such a way that although it will survive, it will merely cause a mild infection in its host.
READ MORE: Study suggests that new coronavirus might follow seasonal pattern
READ MORE: What are the criteria for a suspected case?
Image credit: Getty
Sport24.co.za | SA sprint star Simbine has mixed feelings over Olympics postponement
South African sprinter Akani Simbine has expressed mixed feelings over the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics due to the global coronavirus outbreak.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) confirmed on Tuesday that the 2020 Games have been postponed to a date beyond 2020 “but no later than summer 2021”.
Simbine, who is the national 100m record holder, said that despite it being a relief, he could not hide his disappointment.
“My feelings over the Games being postponed are on both sides of the fence,” admitted Simbine.
“I’m happy they’re postponed, because this year has been turbulent. You can’t really get in the right training with all these disturbances over the coronavirus, but I’m also pretty sad about it, it was the year we were all building up to… now we have to wait another year, which wasn’t part of our plans.”
Simbine won gold in the 100m at the 2018 Commonwealth Games and is still hoping to claim his first Olympic medal.
The 26-year-old is expected to compete in three events at the Tokyo Olympics: the 100m, 200m and the 4x100m relay.
READ | Athletics SA welcomes postponement of 2020 Olympics
South Africans face a 21-day lockdown from midnight on Thursday, 26 March until Thursday, 16 April.
Simbine revealed that not only has his training schedule been pushed back with the lockdown, it’s also made it tricky to get a proper workout.
“Everything is just pushed back longer now because we are uncertain about when we’re going to travel and race,” he said.
“There’s a lot of uncertainty… with this lockdown coming into effect we cannot train as effectively as possible. I’ve had to set up a gym at home and my running sessions are going to have to change.”
Simbine called on all South Africans to be safe during the nationwide lockdown.
“To all my fellow South Africans, stay healthy, stay at home and wash your hands,” he added.
“Keep your spirits high as this too shall pass. We will be okay and get to the other side of the fence. Much love and blessings and prayers to you and your family.”
– Compiled by Lynn Butler
Further amendments to the money market liquidity management strategy of the SARB
…..
News24.com | WATCH | ‘Some of us will starve’ – Khayelitsha residents frustrated over looming lockdown
Many residents of Khayelitsha in Cape Town are unhappy about the 21-day lockdown that President Cyril Ramaphosa imposed on Monday evening.
The president has called on all South Africans to stay indoors starting at 23:59 on Thursday the 26 March. Only a handful of workers, including essential services will be allowed to continue doing business as usual.
Speaking to News24, residents of Khayelitsha shared their frustrations after listening to the president’s orders.
“He could have asked people in the informal settlements for advice going forward, he could have had a better plan,” Vuyokazi Dini said.
“There are a lot of people that are currently receiving money from Sassa, he could have given those people food vouchers. So that they could have something to eat during this lockdown.”
READ | National lockdown: South Africans will still be able to access their social grant payments
While Shaun Skuze thought the president made a good speech, he said the government didn’t make any effort to help people living in shacks.
“Look at the distances we need to adhere to avoid the coronavirus. We need to be one meter apart from each other. Where I live my neighbour and their neighbour’s houses are not even one meter apart from each other,” he explained.
Skuze said these living conditions will make the nationwide lockdown very difficult for him and his fellow residents.
“The health department must look at where the most populated areas are and look at supplying them with masks and gloves for free.”
He expressed his concern for small businesses, and their ability to survive the lockdown.
“While the president and his cabinet ministers are safe at home, who is going to put food on the tables of the guy that sells cigarettes at the taxi rank?” he asked.
“He can make as much speeches as he wants to, but he is not on the ground with the people where the thing is happening.”
Commercial Advisor Insurance
- Ad Placed : 25 Mar 2020 08:13:57
- Remuneration : PER MONTH
- Employment Type : Full Time
- Employment Level : Professional
- Industry :
- Insurance
Insurance Advisor - Region : Kwazulu-Natal
- Company : Recruitment council
The successful candidate of this newly created position will be responsible for growing and developing the business insurance portfolio. The key outputs for this role are as follows: • New Business sales • Client service and management • High level performance This Commercial Advisor: Face to Face Distribution must align themselves with the culture and values of Awesome Service, Passionate, Honest, Human, Dynamic and Recognition. alicia@recruitmentcouncil.co.za
To Apply for this Job,
Irrigation Rep
Market related salary +incentives +car +fuel card +cell +normal benefits. A major South African irrigation company is urgently looking for an experienced Irrigation Rep in Cape Town who has been successfully involved in the selling and design and planning of irrigation systems. Must have a knowledge of Rainbird products. Contact Ron 0117041302
To Apply for this Job,
Ict Support Technician
CORE PURPOSE OF JOB |
The main purpose of this post is to provide timeous PC/Network based solutions to meet customer’s hardware, software and network requirements and assist them in the use of such solutions and maintain these solutions |
KEY PERFORMANCE AREAS |
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CORE COMPETENCIES |
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REQUIREMENTS |
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SCREENING QUESTIONS |
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Do you have a minimum of 2 years’ experience in a similar working environment? Do you have working knowledge of Microsoft SCCM? |