Hi-tech Work Places no Better than Factories?
Anonymous Coward writes "A
tasty bit of truth.
Again, a Sociology Professor has found out what we all know. He wistfully comments on the state of geekdom in the modern corporation:
"They face the lonely insecurity of the individual entrepreneur in a marketplace and culture that stresses, with macho imagery from war and sports, that they are ultimately alone"
and adds that...
"For many this may be the shape of work in the 21st century."
You want to start a union? I mean how much is your boss making at your expense even if he did start the company long before you joined up?"
HELL NO.
Damn right! For a geek a strike would mean not touching the computer for an extended period of time. Can you imagine abstaining from games and pr0n for that long? A few days and we'd be ready for a pay cut...
"I have opinions of my own, strong opinions, but I don't always agree with them." -- George H. W. Bush
Damn right! For a geek a strike would mean not touching the computer for an extended period of time.
What a geek would one be without an own computer ?
If you work for a software company on a piece of software and go home and start writing an open source equivalent during your strike time?
:-)
Nah, I'd say that this would be significantly more influential than drinking beer at home or picketing or anything that the steelworkers did...
May we never see th
Not everyone has the skills to be a programmer either. Are you proposing that janitors be paid at the same wage as Unix sysadmins then?
We've all met computer people with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, but I've met very few who've actually lost fingers due to a computing accident (although I did cut my finger rather badly on some case sheet-metal once -- had to wear a Band-Aid for several days.:))
This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander