by GoIllini » Thu 11 May 2006, 18:04:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clueless', 'G')ood question.
I am in the IT industry and see Hardware & Software R&D is in all reality coming, to an end (at least as we know it), and now reducing costs in production now seem to be the focus, and that means moving production and application development to lower cost areas like (we already know where).......
Intel is investing 1 billion or more in Aisa, and My friends that work at Cisco live in constant fear of outsourcing to India.
The only game in town will be DOD (if you are in the US) related projects.
Things are looking pretty bleak for the US in the future if you ask me...The folks in Sillycon valley are still thinking the Techbubble is going to come back.
At UIUC, nearly everyone is graduating with $50K+/year jobs; a few years ago, we were having real trouble getting recruiters to come to job fairs.
Just a month ago, one of my friends, who's graduating with a 2.1 GPA, landed a $68K/year job at Microsoft.
What I've seen has shown that if you're smart and creative as a programmer, you're pretty indispensible right now- especially in the financial sector.
So I really don't know what you guys are talking about. It's not quite like 1998 down here, but it certainly doesn't feel like 2002.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ys admins, usually the last ones to get laid off, will get laid off in droves as companies move their entire server suites offshore. Why not upgrade to a cheap T1 and have someone else deal with all that hardware/electricity/upkeep. Web 2.0 apps will enable this even more.
You simply can't outsource all servers. Gaming is a good example; the financial industry is a better one. Until we manage to communicate a faster way than the speed of light, traders will always want to be able to place trades in less than 5 ms (it actually does make a difference, these days). As a result, many financial servers are always going to have to be within 500 miles or so of the exchanges.
Sysadmins are well advised to see about getting jobs at investment banks, and stop acting so doomerish! We're smarter and more creative than the Indians and the Chinese. The outsourcing trend over the past five years has been basically hiring cheap typists who can type things like for, if, and while. Few people anywhere in the world who can generate an approximation algorithm for an NP-complete problem or can build program trading software are working for less than $15/hour. In the U.S, if you can do that, it's pretty easy to find a job that pays $60K/year.
The creative and well-educated folks- most of them in the west- will design the programs; the Indians, Chinese, and maybe Russians will actually type them. That's why I think that an education that involves Theory and Algorithms is so important.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ooner or later, a lot of people will have to choose between fast Internet and Cable TV. I'll take fast internet, but most won't. This will impact all the major telcos, and anyone else in the ISP arena.