Vol. 105 Issue 45
Pittnews.com
@thepittnews
Tuesday,October 7, 2014
JOBS
Jobr creates connections at your finger tips
BLEEDING BLUE & GOLD
MCT Campus
Jessica Iacullo Staff Writer
Not just j st in your o r latte
Forget dreamboats. Think dream jobs. Like the dating app Tinder but for career moves, a new smartphone app called Jobr is letting users swipe yes or no on job opportunities. Jobr allows users looking for a job to connect with employers without the hassle of a formal job search. TJ Nahigian, the CEO of Jobr, said the idea for the app came after he noticed that opportunities for “professional experience on mobile” lagged behind dating experience. Nahigian launched the app in May 2014. According to Jobr’s blog, 1,500 recruiters and hiring managers had listed jobs by Sept. 4. Nahigian said his company was not disclosing further data on the number of users or job connections at this time. “Additionally, [I] saw a lot of similarities between recruiting and dating and thought we could improve the experience,” Nahigian said. Hiring managers on Jobr include Facebook, Lyft, Twitter, The Boston Consulting Group, Yelp, Houzz and Uber. Nahigian said hiring managers can post jobs on Jobr through the app or their recruiter web portal. Jobr screens each hiring company’s post to verify that the jobs are real. Jobr connects to the user’s LinkedIn
Jobr
Pumpkin beers and ciders to try this fall page 6
MCT Campus
Laced L d up
Ryan Ardelle, a sophomore majoring in Finance, donates blood Monday in the William Pitt Union. Zach Shaffer| Senior Staff Photographer
Pitt basketball players name their favorite shoes to wear around the court page 9
RESEARCH
Whatʼs in a tweet: Pitt studies tech media Kathleen Fennel Staff Writer
Like the benefits and risks of red wine, chocolate and afternoon naps, a new center at Pitt studies the dual effects of technology consumption. Pitt officially launched the Center for Research on Media, Technology and Health on Sept. 1 to research both the 2 positive and negative effects of media
and technology on health. Existing research focuses on the ways in which media makes us unhealthy and lazy, while other projects seek to uncover the capability of technology to save lives, according to the Center’s director Brian Primack. Located at 230 McKee Place, suite 600, the center has 17 Pitt-affiliated faculty members and is an expansion of a program that the University put
in place five years ago to study media and health in Pitt’s Division of General Internal Medicine. “We want to look at this in a really comprehensive way, look simultaneously at the positive impact and the potential negatives [of media and technology] and then create interventions to
Research
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