Freelance LabVIEW Programmers (Singapore Only)

Hi,
I am currently looking out for Freelance LabVIEW Programmers who are able to work on a part-time basis. 
The various works that may be required from time to time are:
1) Existing Program Upgrading and Improvements review
2) LabVIEW projects with NI hardware (may include interfacing with external protocols)
3) GUI re-architecture
4) etc...
If you are located in Singapore and are interested in such opportunities, please email your resume or experience to [email protected]
Thanks for viewing.
Best Regards,
Ken

hi  Iam in Malaysia Iam intersted in your part time job  IAm CLAD  certified contct me
E-mail: [email protected]
Tel:0112911876
Regards

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    Good day,
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    - On behalf of my employer.
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    Since LabVIEW 5.1... 7.1.1... 2009, 2010
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    Dear Sir,
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    • Efficient Simulation of SCADA system of Unsought Tablets Detection for Pharmaceutical Industries – Extremely perfect and efficient approach to simulate any industrial plant. Two Vis were designed for this simulation, one simulates the server and other simulates the plant, and they both were linked to each other through global communication functions, designed for the course of Virtual Instrumentation Programming, University of South Australia, June’09
    The workshops conducted in NED University are:
    • Hands-On LabVIEW – A two session workshop organized by IEEE branch NED University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi, Pakistan, 12th and 14th February,2009, Presentation 2. It is available at the following address
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    • Hands-On National Instruments – A two- session workshop on handling NIPXI-6229, NISCXI-1112,1162 and 1124, Instrumentation Centre, NED University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi, Pakistan, 28th June and 1st July, 2008
    • Getting Started with LabVIEW 8.5 – A two-session workshop, NED University of Engineering & Technology, Karachi, Pakistan, 17th and 24th April, 2008, Presentation 1. It is available at the following address
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    International Voicemail & Fax: +61 2 8080 8132
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    EULA
    1) This is a private email, and although the views expressed within it may not be purely my own, unless specifically referenced I do not suggest they are necessarily associated with anyone else including, but not limited to, my employer(s).
    2) This email has NOT been scanned for virii - attached file
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    Copyright © 2004-2015 Christopher G. Relf. Some Rights Reserved. This posting is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License.

  • Do labVIEW programmers get any RESPECT where YOU work?

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    Oh, and back to my question, Do labVIEW programmers get any RESPECT where YOU work? If they do, let's do lunch. I work for peanuts.Message Edited by Broken Arrow on 06-24-2005 02:33 PM
    Richard

    Respect will derive from the quality and reliability of the work you produce, not the systems you use to produce them!
    The same is true for them of course.
    The people I most respect at work are those who are well grounded in their area of expertise, systematic and methodical in their approach, grow their skill base, flexible in their solutions, document well and organise religiously.
    They almost always seem to be the most softly spoken in meetings, listening more than speaking and the most successful wherever they choose to exercise their talents.
    Selection of a particular system for your solutions may considerably aide you in producing higher quality and higher reliability solutions in a more timely fashion, that are also lower cost over the life cycle of the solution!
    In considering the issue that you raise; remember that software solutions, which is actually what you are about, relate to basic constructs such as: -
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    I would suggest that a strongly typed development methodology such as that encouraged by Labview, results in more reliable solutions more frequently than weakly typed approaches such as C. (Ask them about memory pointer management, type casting issues, memory de allocation and buffer overruns.... ohm yes and of course DLL hell..... that will keep em quiet)
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    Well, it doesn't matter what you use to arrive at the solution, it's the quality of the solution that counts!
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    P.S. At the moment I constitute one of the majority of Labview users.... I am the only one at our location.
    I don't know how much respect I have; but I do enjoy what I do and those I choose to do it with.
    As I anticipate doing it for a long time yet, I look forward to many more years enjoying myself thoroughly!Message Edited by Conseils on 06-24-2005 10:31 PM

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  • Finding Experienced Labview Programmers

    I have repeatedly run into the same problem with labview development, a lack of experienced programmers.  Over the last several years I have seen an unreal growth is the market for labview applications but it doesnt appear that the developer community is keeping up with this demand.  Where can I find Labview programmers to fill this demand.  The job postings outnumber the seekers and there are many great positions unfilled.  What a crazy thing.  I find labview programming is very fulfilling and a great career.  Are there any Experienced programmers looking for jobs or is this a lost cause?
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    Are you offering a job?
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    Most placement firms simply don't know about the language, so they (a) don't know who's working with it, and (b) don't know about the job offerings, so they can't tie the possibilities to the ones looking for work. I can't tell you the number of times I've talked to recruiters who've called me and when I told them I used LabVIEW their response is "Lab-what?".
    Another is simply that LabVIEW programming requires a different mindset, so it's not readily taught in schools. Not taught = no graduates who know the language = no potential workers. Why isn't it taught in schools? Well, that can start a whole debate, and I'm not going there.
    Yet another reason, it seems to me, is that LabVIEW isn't as flexible in terms of the kinds of programs you can write. I say this not to disparage LabVIEW, or start a flame war, but simply as a realistic assessment based purely on my own experience. There's just some stuff that you cannot do in LabVIEW, but can easily do in C/VB/C#/Java/whatever. Heck, I recently coded up a large .NET app in C# that would have been impossible in LabVIEW.
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    Corollary to (2) and (5): Sometimes LabVIEW jobs are found in test engineer positions on job boards, as opposed to "programming" jobs. This sometimes makes it difficult to find jobs.
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  • LabVIEW Freelancer - Programmer/Tutor - Singapore based - CLA

    Hello * ,
    Open for short/long term LabVIEW project.
    Familiar with NI PXI (Digital/Analog/Serial IO/PMU etc). PXI modules analysis and comparison based on project requirement .
    Familiar with NI LabVIEW & MS Visual Studio.NET programming.
    Available as a freelancer.
    Singapore based.
    For any query please feel free to contact me at drawsomecode (at) gmail.com 
    With project requirement in mind/paper will be great. 
    Thanks for reading this post.
    Regards,
    Drawsome

    Hi,
    Students are welcome to email me at [email protected] for help or enquiry on LabVIEW tutor / FYP oriented tutoring / FYP project.
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  • Freelance LabVIEW Programmer

    Hi everyone!
    I'm here to offer my services to anyone who is in search of a freelance programmer.  I'm 24 and currently a 3rd year student in Electrical engineering .  I've been programming pretty intensively for almost 4 years now in my current job (part-time for now!).  I have a few projects under my belt, many of which are fairly extensive.  I have very good knowledge of radiofrequencies, specifically microwave range, ActiveX (COM in general), GPIB instrument control, OOP programming in LabVIEW, etc. etc.
    I'm simply offering my help because I enjoy programming in LabVIEW and would like to make a few extra bucks in my spare time working from home (being a full-time student with a job leaves me with only a few hours a week).
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    I'm located in Montréal, Québec, Canada (Oui, ma langue maternelle est le français (québécois )!
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    Thanks for the info!
    Sorry for the inconvenience.
    Moderator: Please delete thread!
    Message Edited by NahoY on 09-24-2007 11:15 AM

  • Why do labview programmers use 10.1Hz as the default frequency instead of an even 10.0?

    It was a question that was brought up during lab class and no one had an answer for.  Any ideas?
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I call it the wagon wheel effect.
    In old westerns, whenever a wagon with a big spoked wheel would ride by the camera, sometimes the wheel would look like it is slowly rolling forward, sometimes slowly rolling backwards, sometimes it would look like it was at a standstill.
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    Experiment and give it a 9.9 Hz sine wave, you'll see it appears to move backwards.
    So my guess (and it is only a guess) is that whoever designed the express VI gave it a default of 10.1 Hz to help visually simulate on the graph the motion of the sinewave.
    It really doesn't matter what they picked as the default as it is up to you as the LabVIEW programmer to change that default setting (either in the express VI or wiring in a value) to something that makes sense for your application.

  • Are drivers for LabView 5.1 only supported by the later models, 6.x and 7.x?

    Thanks in advance for your help.

    I'm confused by your question. Are you talking about hardware drivers (NI-DQ, NI-GPIB) or instrument drivers? You should be able to use current hardware drivers with older version of LabVIEW and you can (in most cases) use older hardware drivers with new versions of LabVIEW. For instrument drivers, NI only maintains LabVIEW 6 and 7 versions on it's Instrument Driver Network but I'm pretty sure maintains an archive of older versions if they exist. If you have a specific instrument driver that you need, make a request on this forum. NI might be able to provide an older version or someone can save it to a previous version. One or two probably won't be a problem but numerous requests might be a little out of line. At some point, you might want to consider a
    n upgrade. There have been numerous improvements since 5.1 and upgrading is usually not a major problem.

  • Can a freelance LabVIEW programmer become an Alliance Member?

    Looking at the application form it is clear that NI are (understandably) only interested in established companies who will generate lots of hardware sales for them. What about all the talented LabVIEW application and instrument driver developers who work on contract with smaller companies - any exposure for us? These are exactly the kind of people who need a central advertising space but cannot normally fund it themselves.

    > Thank you for the question! I'm curious for the official answer of the
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    > I think a lot of small businesses are interested in a paid
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    >
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    There are individuals that enter into the alliance program. They
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