Is Today's IT an Undervalued Asset?
mwillems asks: "I work in the technology industry, as a CTO. What I have increasingly seen in the last year, both in North America and Europe, is that IT has ceased to be a valid way to spend corporate money. IT spending used to be looked at as a way to gain competitive advantages. Since the .com bust, the arguments I hear everywhere is 'IT has now been proven to be a waste of money'. At many companies it is now easier to get a corporate account at a strip club than a new PC. Or a budget to develop a much-needed corporate app. If any spending is done it is on hardware - at least that is 'real'. Do Slashdot readers recognise that? Are there going to be many techies left ten years from now? What can we do to keep the spirit of innovation alive while this 'IT is bad' era lasts, and how can we make it end? And, how do you prove the value of IT? This is not as simple as it seems. Try it with a spreadsheet: as your typical CTO has to do so, every day."
How do you feel about the cost benefits of IT? Is it worth what your company spends on it, especially if the advantages can't be reduced to a simple dollars-and-cents figure?
How about you stfu? I wasn't making a 'we are undervalued - switching off the network should make em understand' gripe - I was trying to point out that the network has become so reliable, it is rare for my college to experience any downtime - and I would be interested to see how they reacted if it was to go off for a day or something.
Though I find it amusing that you choose to use the electric supply as a reference - our local electric company is complete toss, and we end up with about 3 or 4 powercuts a year..
"Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"