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Dismantling the Myth of IT Being a Dead-End Career

Lam1969 writes "Robert Mitchell says CIOs and other IT managers continue to bemoan what they claim is a shortage of good technologists. He suggests beefing up salaries and convincing young people that IT is a viable long-term career path would help to change this sentiment. Mitchell also says the threat of offshoring is overstated; rather, the problem is industry and the media have been 'complicit in propagating the myth that IT is a dead end.' From the story: 'First, the dot-com crash shattered the illusion that those in high-tech jobs would always emerge from economic turbulence unscathed. Now, students are hearing that a four-year degree in programming or engineering doesn't matter because all of those jobs will eventually go offshore to foreign workers at very low wages. A generation has been dissuaded from pursuing what is in reality a very promising career choice.'"

3 of 649 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Well Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    You might be shocked to hear this, but I'm a slashdot regular and I get women insanely easy.

    My secret? I actually talk to women.

  2. Re:Yeah yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    One of our guys has worked with distribution and supply chain stuff his entire career and has a business degree, while another is a full-fledged accountant. Neither of these areas of expertise were learned through self-study, nor do I think they could learn it through a couple of Dummies books.

    and they are failures.

    Bill Gates dropped out of college and he is a better businessman than anyone you know with a Doctorate in business, let alone "one of your guys"

    I'm with lumpy, there are thousands that are extremely successful that either never went to college or dropped out. They certianly are much more skilled than your people.

  3. It's zombie war by Baldrson · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What's going on is actually warfare. Zombie money is being killed. Unfortunately, there is a lot of zombie money being created all the time because of the way the tax system subsidizes property rights. So the zombie money can kill a lot of people before it finally dies, and if the death rate of the zombie money isn't higher than the rate the government creates it, it can keep killing the people for a very very long time.