Tech Segments Facing Turbulence In 2016 (dice.com)
Nerval's Lobster writes: David Foote, an analyst who accurately predicted the tech industry's job growth in 2015, is back with some new predictions about which segments will do well in 2016 (Dice link). At the top of his list: DevOps, cloud and software architects, and cybersecurity experts. Those that won't perform well? SAP specialists, storage 'gurus,' and network managers could all face some headwinds. 'Companies are continuing to outsource infrastructure and that will reduce the need for network specialists except for network security which will remain in-house,' he says. Whether or not he's right about which parts of the tech industry will do better than others, there are also increasing signs that things could get very tight from a funding perspective for startups, as even the so-called 'unicorns' risk seeing investor money (and customers) dry up.
Bullshit and buzzword titles rise to the top. It has always been thus.
Not designers, or system analysts, but the code cutters working from specs. You're all facing replacements from India, where vast coding pools using those with limited skills will do your job for <10% of your salary. The crap that comes back will then be beating into shape by the few local coders before being deployed.
Anyone else having strange issues with your Slashdot account? Like certain pages say you aren't logged in... but you can't login. BUT when you go to a story, you're logged in?
Some kind of new cache change or something?
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
The experts in the flavor of the month technologies (i.e. the buzzwords of which have arrived at the C-Level table) are in demand, the experts in the flavor of last year technology not so.
That's really astonishing. Who would have thought? How insightful, how unexpected!
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Please hurry, I am so sick of Dicedot
Don't worry, PHB's and hypsters will invent some new fad or gimmick that will create new "standards" or product categories that F everything up and create security gaps, requiring engineers to fix.
Chaos is your friend.
Table-ized A.I.
Prediction: some place like Reddit or code.org will buy up Dicedot. Not going on any real evidence, just a hunch.
At any rate, hopefully the site will stop wonking out for a day or two every other month. Either that or it would be the tipping point for a mass migration to the red site (maybe even a bump for the blue site, too).
Can I post this one while logged in? Let's see!
CS departments are pumping out graduates like a mill.
Corporations are pushing hard for H1B visas....
Outsourcing still going strong....
Massive consolidation into data centers.
Tech field is a total disaster. Anybody studying in it right now should switch ASAP to another field.
There is some money left to be made however it's going to be the extremely rare exception rather than the rule.
Tech industry in slump because tech startups discovered everything they planned to design or build in 2016 is now illegal. However, rental properties, mortgage backed securities, and marijuana farming all looking promising in the coming year.
It means your company rents the network or wifi from a 3rd party.
There are different variations (some where you own the hardware, to them owning the hardware) and they manage it for you with their expertise.
Thing is is the network was large enough to require a full time person on it, this requirement will not change. So you will be stuck paying full time worker + overhead of 3rd party who needs to profit. Also at the end of the day you will pay the hardware costs many times over because again the 3rd party is there to make a profit, not be your friendly business partner.
However, if these mega service corps properly lobbied their local gov for some special tax exemptions, this might actually be cheaper in the long run than paying a person directly. But it comes at the expense of service (you have an SLA, if you have to wait, you wait, they will not prioritize you business over others, unless of course you are willing to pay much more).