ColdFusion Job with CF Webtools

CF Webtools is still hiring ColdFusion developers. Whether remote or local to the Omaha, NE area, we want to hear from you!

Upwards of 80% of our work is ColdFusion based. We are looking for reliable, honest and experienced ColdFusion programmers who can make an immediate contribution to our highly skilled team. We prefer local talent, but for the right fit, telecommute may be a possibility.

We provide a full suite of services from complex tool development, sophisticated charting applications, DB engineering, to site design, blogs, e-commerce and hosting. For someone who likes to have their hands in everything, this is a great opportunity.

We offer a competitive salary, health/dental/disability insurance, a flex plan, life insurance, a bonus structure, referral incentives and a great team atmosphere. We're amenable to flexible work hours – if you can budget your time and get projects done with a good personality and ease of communication, then you'll fit right in.

We are also hiring a project manager that has at least 1 year of IT project management experience.

Se details at http://www.cfwebtools.com/default/index.cfm/about-us/job-openings/

ColdFusion 8.0.1 Updates

Recently I have been working on a few ColdFusion 8.0.1 servers for CF Webtools and I've had the pleasure of sifting through the myriad of Security Updates, Hot Fixes and other updates. I've posted a couple blog posts about this and reference Charlie Arehart's wonderful summary of the patches.

A while back David Epler posted an article called What does a fully patched ColdFusion 8.0.1 Server look like? which is a useful reference.

Well today David published the Unofficial ColdFusion 8.0.1 Updater 2. This update is supposed to contain everything needed to fully patch ColdFusion 8.0.1. I have not tested it YET, but I plan to. He also published a well documented ColdFusion 8.0.1 HotFix Matrix PDF that details every security update, hot fix and patch. I really could have used this last week as I was doing this exact thing by downloading every patch and figuring out which files were used or were superseded by a newer patch. This is a lot of detective work requiring a large about of file comparing and documenting.

Thank you David for compiling this information.