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The US Is Becoming a Hot Spot For Outsourcing (bendbulletin.com)

New submitter cdreimer shares a report from The New York Times (Warning: may be paywalled; alternate source) about how companies are now outsourcing in the United States, hiring from Michigan instead of Mumbai. From the report: For years, American companies have been saving money by "offshoring" jobs -- hiring people in India and other distant cubicle farms. Today, some of those jobs are being outsourced again -- in the United States. Nexient, a software outsourcing company, reflects the evolving geography of technology work. It holds daily video meetings with one of its clients, Bill.com, where team members stand up and say into the camera what they accomplished yesterday for Bill.com, and what they plan to do tomorrow. The difference is, they are phoning in from Michigan, not Mumbai. "It's the first time we've been happy outsourcing," said Rene Lacerte, the chief executive of Bill.com, a bill payment-and-collection service based in Palo Alto, Calif. Nexient is a domestic outsourcer, a flourishing niche in the tech world as some American companies pull back from the idea of hiring programmers a world away. Salaries have risen in places like South Asia, making outsourcing there less of a bargain. In addition, as brands pour energy and money into their websites and mobile apps, more of them are deciding that there is value in having developers in the same time zone, or at least on the same continent.

172 comments

  1. Do the needfull... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get these fucking amateurs off my project...

    1. Re:Do the needfull... by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      Please do the needful, and revert the same.

    2. Re: Do the needfull... by dougdonovan · · Score: 1

      what do we mean becoming...

    3. Re:Do the needfull... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      From the trend in this story, seems like the needful has been done

    4. Re:Do the needfull... by kainosnous · · Score: 1

      I hope this finds you well, Dear. Much excessive delay response making. Clients upset and are lose much profit. Kindly return outsourcing to US at soonest. Please do the needful.

      --
      There are 10 commandments: 01)Thou shalt love the Lord Thy God 10)Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.Matt22:34-40
  2. I'll hire. by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Informative

    After I'm done with most of my tools I'm told I have to 'hand it off to India' for continued development / support.

    I keep telling my manager that I'd rather hire a dozen high school dropouts that have completed some coding bootcamp. I don't need a CS major. I don't need a Software Engineer. I need someone that has shown any aptitude for a given language and has has enough initiative to want to learn.

    As long as I can talk to them in their first language and have the opportunity to fly out to show them what I need in person once a quarter the quality is going to be better.

    1. Re:I'll hire. by infolation · · Score: 2

      As long as I can talk to them in their first language... show them what I need in person... quality is going to be better.

      Exactly my experience. Not just showing someone what's needed in their native language, but also being absolutely sure that they understand what's needed and aren't just 'nodding in agreement'.

      Most importantly, if the work is submitted and doesn't do what was agreed, being in a position to say 'we both know you understood the exact requirements, this work doesn't meet those requirements, please fix it until it does what we agreed'.

    2. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except that Indian programmers are a million times better at programming and more hard working than most Americans. Americans have become fat and lazy.

      Hahaha!

      No.

    3. Re:I'll hire. by Entrope · · Score: 3, Insightful

      American programmers are lazy, impatient, and hubristic. That's why they're good programmers.

    4. Re: I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not really. I have heard that many times but I don't see it to be true. Since the ones who went to college in the US seem ok but the outsourced can never seem to get anything done or take initiative, I think perhaps it is a matter of you get what you pay for. Could be operating outside ones culture taking its toll as well, but I see no reason why that would account for everything.

    5. Re:I'll hire. by MangoCats · · Score: 1

      We outsource to Canadians, eh? Same timezone, very polite, and they don't seem to puff their resume as much as their US counterparts.

    6. Re: I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Employers force us to "puff our resumes." Every MVC app I've seen is garbage, a hundred layers of boilerplate that can't do anything else. I can run rings around them with other methodologies. But you won't interview, much less hire, me if I don't put MVC on my resume. And so it goes with every other buzzword that comes along.

    7. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. No.

    8. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More hardworking? No. Sitting in a cubical staring at an IDE they barely understand using frameworks they totally botch implementing and keep editing and compiling for hours and not getting anywhere isn't hardworking - it's called "Being Stupid".

      Get your terminology straight.

    9. Re:I'll hire. by Seven+Spirals · · Score: 1

      Buwaahahahahahahaha! *deep breath* HAHAHA! *turns red* Muahahah! *slaps knee* Whoa! HAhahahaAhahaha! *rolls on floor* Hahahah! Good one. Indian "programmers", *pant pant*. HAHAHAHAH!

    10. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sitting in a cubical staring at an IDE"

      "Get your terminology straight."

      It's CUBICLE, moron!

    11. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember when Comcast was outsourcing customer service to Canada, like 15 years ago. The agents were very polite, I could understand every word they said; they understood every word I said. However, they were 100% clueless and were never able to actually understand a problem, much less fix it. Companies like Comcast can always find a large reservoir of incompetent people. The only question is where they will find them.

      Now Comcast outsources to the Philippines. I can't understand what they say; they can't understand what I say. In all other respects, same as the Canadians.

    12. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly my experience. Not just showing someone what's needed in their native language, but also being absolutely sure that they understand what's needed and aren't just 'nodding in agreement'.

      Most importantly, if the work is submitted and doesn't do what was agreed, being in a position to say 'we both know you understood the exact requirements, this work doesn't meet those requirements, please fix it until it does what we agreed'.

      Honestly, I have no problem saying "Look, I don't give a flying fuck if you didn't understand the requirements. It is your job to get it right -ask questions until you DO understand." No payment until the work is delivered and confirmed as complete. Don't like those terms? Too bad. There are lots of job shops out there who will take the terms I am offering.

      Yes, we still suffer if the work is not delivered, even if we don't pay the contractor. We needed the work done, and if I outsourced it to a crappy Indian shop that can't deliver -it is on MY head that they can't deliver. But come the first milestone, if I don't see what I am expecting we are having a come-to-jesus discussion about responsibility and requirements -and payments are being withheld.

    13. Re: I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, fuck those lazy foreign workers! They don't deserve pay for the hours they worked unless you feel like it! Good thing they have even fewer legal rights than workers in America. =) That's why we hire them - am I right?

      So in conclusion, fuck the workers!

    14. Re: I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you, Dr Pedant, for you insightful and enlightening commentary.

    15. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck happened to the C2 wiki? It used to be plain static-ish HTML. Worked in every browser.

      Now it loads all its content via AJAX.

      (Answering myself: apparently this: https://github.com/WardCunning... )

      CAPTCHA: renovate

    16. Re:I'll hire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We're rewriting the original wiki as a single-page application."

      Uh... why?

  3. Outsourcing is just a way by fred911 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    for employers to avoid paying benefits and their part of FICA by hiring subcontractors.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B - D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    1. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Precisely. It's a good way to keep the project costs down. That's what a prudent project manager should do. When you run a company you price shop the same way you price shop for your groceries or other consumer items.

    2. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Karmashock · · Score: 1, Insightful

      People were told that the labor rules were dumb and would have undesired consequences. People didn't listen. Predicted consequences occured... and somehow the People that made bad mistakes with bad consequences retained their credibility.

      That generally doesn't happen in any mission critical environment because it is counter productive to have stupid people make choices. But that's not how politics works. If people believe in doing dumb things it doesn't matter how many times it fails... they get to keep voting for the same dumb thing. Its like communism... fails every time... idiot communists still want to try it again. The radical labor policies of the last 100 years have directly lead to the collapse of the manufacturing competitiveness of pretty much everywhere they were applied... no, the collapse doesn't happen instant... it takes decades in some cases for the policies to break an industry. But it happens.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    3. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All systems fail eventually. The better question is; how does a system handle failure and evolve? In the case of capitalism; we don't know yet. Hopefully the next system is kind to Americans of all income levels.

    4. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You wouldn't have any rights as a worker without those "radical" labor policies. The rest of your post is a ripple from the 1950s. Gotta watch out for the red menace!!! ohnoes!

      Now if your argument is *lucid*, something like "Outsourcing is a bad idea", then there's a lot to talk about there.

      If manufacturing collapsed because we started treating people better, then I think it makes it rather clear what manufacturing companies did to gain profit: they paid their staff shit and treated them like shit. Most of these people were also desperate and the plant was likely one of the only employers big enough to employ everyone. Should we be rewarding these companies for cutting corners on human treatment? Maybe we can get more Foxconns on the news. How far does it have to go before you think workers deserve consideration?

      Now that people know they have rights, it's made labor harder to get and nigh impossible to keep. People know they can be treated better, and over the decades countless companies have destroyed any incentive to be loyal to one's employer. Employers dug themselves that grave, and they'll have to lay in it.

    5. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by hai_Priesty · · Score: 1

      While you are at the supermarket example let's just say.... let's not pretend pretend the the ground "beef" is the same everywhere. And I've heard (second-handedly) that for the great bargain price of $1 the packaged hot dogs in the Dollar Tree was downright nauseating. You've bread, something that resembled a Frankfurt, something that used to be lettuce but now part shrivelled and the wetter part turning slimy. You can also look up the thousands (millions?) of horror outsourcing stories when you based your criteria on price alone.

    6. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      That's why you "price shop" not only based on price. As with your supermarket. You get the cheapest one that is just good enough for your standards.

      --
      bickerdyke
    7. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Informative

      The radical labor policies of the last 100 years have directly lead to the collapse of the manufacturing competitiveness of pretty much everywhere they were applied...

      Not everywhere. In Germany, manufacturing is about 30% of GDP vs about 12.5% in America, and their labor laws are even more socialist. On the negative side, their GDP per capita is about $42k vs $57k in America.

    8. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the negative side, their GDP per capita is about $42k vs $57k in America.

      Precisely. The Germans didn't get to save their manufacturing jobs without cost. In their case the Faustian bargain was lower wage growth and thus a lower share of GDP going to labor. This means that Germans work hard for less money and enjoy less consumption than other first world economies. This hurts not only the Germans but other economies too, especially in the Euro zone where trade adjustments are needed to put people back to work but are stymied by low imports and consumption in Germany due to the stickiness of wages. The problem is compounded by the fact that the low growth wages are not so much enshrined in German law as they are in contracts between labor unions and large employers bound by tradition. The Economist ran this as the cover story not long ago.

    9. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by johnsie · · Score: 1

      Read the reviews... pick the best priced one with the best reviews. It doesn't matter if they are American if they are getting the good reviews and can work as part of a team.

    10. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because outsource firms don't include extra costs like taxes or insurance or charge a premium for shorter terms. They just eat those costs out of the goodness of their hearts.

    11. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Keep pay and benefits low and people barely getting by....so that they can get jobs?
      That's like setting fire to your house to stay warm..

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    12. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by dywolf · · Score: 2

      once PPP is accounted for that difference in GDP per capita is less of a downside. IE, their purchasing power parity level means they can achieve a similar standard of living at a lower wage. plus their are other upsides to their system that also offsets the lower GDP (better health, better economic stability and mobility, etc)..

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    13. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by dywolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      you have that exactly backwards.
      they don't work harder for less money.

      GDP is an indicator of productivity, not economic well being or standard of living.
      their GDP per capita is lower, but their purchasing power is higher, which offsets that.
      their standard of living at a given wage level is the same or higher than the US.
      they have better pay, benefits, time off, and health, etc.

      rather, to achieve the german level of living, we have to earn more in the US precisely because we don't enjoy those same benefits.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    14. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 2

      Let's not forget lack of student debt. Free university education means grads start out without a boat anchor around their neck that can follow them around even after they collect social security.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    15. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by DigiShaman · · Score: 2

      The US debt is close to 20 Trillion, and we're about to enter - possibly another World War; catalyzed by a Pacific theater. Meaning, should we lose a city or some other world changing SHTF moment, fully expect a draft. War bonds baby!

      Yeah, this wont end well no matter what. Kiss your fantasy of a quality of life goodbye. Maybe in a generation or two?? Nahhhhh. Keep dreamin!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    16. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by lgw · · Score: 1

      GDP is an indicator of productivity, not economic well being or standard of living.

      Unless there's a trade imbalance, GDP is exactly standard of living. What you have is what you make. Sure, it's measured in some units of currency, by that's just a distraction: the goods and services a nation consumes must be equal to the goods and services it produces, or there must be a trade imbalance to explain that.

      It's as simple as conservation of momentum or energy; I don't get why people are confused by this.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    17. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      High pay with no job = 0 pay.

      Look, this is like any purchase on the market. You have a commodity that you want to sell at a certain price. If your ask is above market rate, it won't sell, and you make ZERO dollars.

      Your time... which you sell when you sell labor is gone every minute. It was there and then it is gone. Its like selling oranges or anything else perishable. If you don't sell it then it rots in the warehouse. You can't stockpile your time and sell it later. You must take the current market rate and sell now so that you at least get something.

      What has increasingly happened is that people have sought prices and benefits that push the price of employment above market rates. And that has always lead to high unemployment... or many of your oranges unsold rotting in the warehouse.

      Now how clever would you think a businessman was that was so insistent to get the high price that he ultimately sold very few oranges and made less money than he would have made if he had simply accepted the lower price and made more sales?

      You'd think he was incompetent. And that's what these labor policies are... Incompetent. Your concept will get higher wages for some. But that comes at the price of high unemployment for many more. And when you measure the higher wages for those some against the many many more that get ZERO... these polices are bad for people, bad for communities, and bad for industries. It is literally what has destroyed places like Detroit and much of the rust belt.

      Hard working union workers were sold a line of bullshit that they could get better pay and a better standard of living for their families by listening to stupid policies like this... Instead what they got was an industry that closed factories and steel mills... towns that went from being some of the most prosperous places in America to resembling post apocalyptic hell holes. Union halls full of men that could not get work. Rampant drug abuse... hopelessness... Entire towns utterly dependent hand to mouth on welfare.

      Sell at the market rate or there will be no sale. If your next idea is intensive socialism or communism... consider consequences there by looking at other countries that have done that. Possibly you're interested in Germany there or something. But also consider Italy, Greece, Spain, etc. Which of those two do you honestly think you're going to get in the US if you push that scheme. Remember Flint Michigan. This concept you're running on is a suicide pact.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    18. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Germany has gotten a lot of its productivity as the expense of the rest of Europe. Consider Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.

      Do you know there are quotas for different industries and commodities throughout Europe that basically proscribe given countries in Europe to be producers of given things and not other things?

      Look at the rest of Europe. What happened to English manufacturing?

      Everyone is so very impressed with Germany but they forget that the way it is set up. Look at countries throughout Europe where labor prices are much lower than they are in Germany... and yet manufacturing doesn't occur there. Why?

      The EU is a major distorting factor in this case which you have to appreciate if you're going to talk about Germany. Look at the rest of the EU. Why is it practically only Germany that seems to be doing well? And consider the distinct ways Germany is regarded within the EU. Do you really think its a coincidence that the country that basically controls the EU tends to benefit from the EU?

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    19. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My draft avoidance plan is to claim I'm transgender. Problem solved, thanks Trump.

    20. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Implementing the draft in this country in this day and age is political suicide. There's no such threat that requires any such manpower.

    21. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

      All systems fail eventually. The better question is; how does a system handle failure and evolve? In the case of capitalism; we don't know yet. Hopefully the next system is kind to Americans of all income levels.

      You can have mass immigration or you can have a strong safety net. At best you get one, often you get neither.

    22. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

      Unless there's a trade imbalance, GDP is exactly standard of living.

      Assuming no trade imbalance is a mighty big assumption.

    23. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      It would be reactionary to a massive event, not a proactive measure. Meaning, of SF got nuked by a N.Korean sub or whatnot, yeah, a draft.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    24. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by lgw · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, though it's usually a small % except for developing nations. Germany has a trade surplus (meaning they consume less than they produce), but it's only about 6% of GDP.

      Whether a given standard of living is sustainable, given borrowing to fund a trade deficit, is a different question, but not one particularly relevant to Germany. The US, OTOH, has been getting away with it for decades because our economic growth swamped our long-term debt. If we've fallen to socialist levels of economic growth (as seems likely), it's concerning.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      of SF got nuked by a N.Korean sub or whatnot, yeah, a draft.

      Really? If N Korea nuked the US, presumably the response would be to nuke it back into the stone age. (Well, actually probably far further back than that - e.g. not a blade of grass left standing.)

      I don't see much need for an increased military to do that.

    26. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. The war would end just like that. *snaps fingers*. Now if you excuse me, I need to practice my fire making skills with two sticks.

    27. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a lot of words just to say "I want people to do my work for free."

    28. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Meaning, of SF got nuked by a N.Korean sub or whatnot, yeah, a draft.

      No. If NK launched a nuke at America, Pyongyang would be vaporized along with the NK military bases near the DMZ. Then it would be over. There would be no need for a large conscript army, or any plausible scenario where the draft would be useful. I takes 6 months to turn a draftee into a soldier.

    29. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Right! Just in time for after the first wave has been ground down. Hey, I'm in my early 40s. If the shit-show goes on for too long, my ass will be in basic along with the rest of them young bucks. Just so we're clear here, I'm not looking forward to any of this.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    30. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are generally an asshole. But yeah agree with that.

      A conventional war could kill fifteen million civilians in Seoul. Japan is at risk too, to a stray nuke from NK. Fallout and cancer risks from nuking most of NK are not much worse than that and minimizes spillover secondary risks of a protracted engagement, especially to US civilians.

      Plus Trump can change the news from whatever his latest scandal will be.

    31. Re: Outsourcing is just a way by kainosnous · · Score: 1

      All systems fail eventually. The better question is; how does a system handle failure and evolve? In the case of capitalism; we don't know yet. Hopefully the next system is kind to Americans of all income levels.

      That depends on how you define "failure". If you exclude normal business cycle ups and downs, the Free Market has never failed, but we haven't seen it fully at work in our lifetime. As the US founders told us, once the people learn to "vote themselves a raise", they tend to destroy the framework that makes them free. Fortunately, the free market typically works to the extent it is implemented.

      I'm also not certain what you mean by "kind" in the sense that an economic system can be. In economics, kindness to one person is unkindness to another. To give somebody something that nobody wants to give him requires that somebody is forced to give up something that otherwise would have belonged to him. Overall, in more capitalist societies, there's a much greater amount of resources and luxuries available to the poor than in communist societies. For instance, I don't know any of the 99% protesters who would want to live in North Korea for better living conditions or because that economy would be more kind to them. The problem isn't an economic problem.

      Here, we are seeing the market manipulated by legislation, but the market still wins out. Higher minimum wage, tougher employment laws, health care requirements, and higher taxes made it more practical to hire outside of the country. However, because there is still competition, the consumers demanded a better product, and even though it is more expensive, have decided that it's worth the cost. To the extent the market was available, it has worked. If we were to allow the market to be more free from legislation, we would be able to have even more value and a better distribution of capital. In a perfectly capitalist society, outsourcing wouldn't be a bad word. In such a society, it would only be done as long as it is an actual benefit, and wouldn't likely have ended up with the poorly performing outsourcing we know today.

      --
      There are 10 commandments: 01)Thou shalt love the Lord Thy God 10)Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.Matt22:34-40
    32. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      While this is very true, many who've outsourced have learned hard lessons in the total cost of outsourcing (TCOO). It's not simply that I have to pay worker X twice what I pay worker Y. It's what does it cost to deliver the widget either way.

      Just a short list of additional items in the TCOO...
      Dealing with additional costs for shipping
      Language translation issues.
      Quality concerns
      Timezone difficulties...setting up conference calls at times when everyone's available.
      Additional rules/regulations from the other country, as well as or own.
      Extra travel

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    33. Re:Outsourcing is just a way by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      1099 Employees charge about the same rate as W-2 labor + burden. That's because they get double hit with FICA. Contracting houses often charge MORE because the sales person gets a spiff on each hour, often as much as $5 to $10.

      Contractors don't get paid to sit on the bench, whereas W-2 people do. So depending on the project you pick the staff that gets it done on time and within the customer's budget, and if it's short duration with little downstream maintenance you hire contractors if your plate is full.

      So before you start the "evil corporations oppressing the masses" crap take a look at reality. I hire developers and run jobs. Do you?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
  4. ARRRRGGGG! by youngone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It holds daily video meetings with one of its clients, Bill.com, where team members stand up and say into the camera what they accomplished yesterday for Bill.com, and what they plan to do tomorrow.

    Which sounds like an absolute living hell.
    I bet after a few weeks of being told they haven't accomplished enough for Bill.com today, and their plan for tomorrow isn't good enough, the really good workers leave and find a job where their boss doesn't look over their shoulder every day.

    1. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not any different from a daily 5-min 'standup' where the team-leader and the product manager aren't on the same page. Aren't they supposed to come up with tasks and schedules? If the team isn't doing the tasks fast enough, the tasks should be made simpler so that they can be done in a day. Or you have fewer meetings because you shouldn't be spending your time in meets. You should be coding.

    2. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > Not any different from a daily 5-min 'standup'

      Daily 5-min 'finger-pointing sessions', you mean. :)

      Seriously, though, for team members who aren't working on the same task, these are a complete waste of time and only serve to reassure managers that the team is keeping busy.

    3. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Kjella · · Score: 2

      Which sounds like an absolute living hell. I bet after a few weeks of being told they haven't accomplished enough for Bill.com today, and their plan for tomorrow isn't good enough, the really good workers leave and find a job where their boss doesn't look over their shoulder every day.

      Sounds to me like a daily scrum via video conference. Any decent scrum master would tell the client that overall progress is for the retrospective and priorities is for the sprint planning, the daily meeting is about impediments. As in what is causing problems delaying/blocking progress, turning out to be much more complicated than expected, any need for advice or assistance, any unresolved design issues that must be debated and decided and so on. The business owner can certainly be there to stay informed and maybe clear up a few things but it's not the place for debate or replanning. At least not in theory, maybe this is one of the very few true Scotsmen.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If they're a waste of time for you, you're not doing scrum right. It's a time for people to raise issues and coordinate dealing with them.

    5. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Reverend+Green · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apparently no one - anywhere, ever - does scrum right. Or maybe it's time to admit scrum is just a shittastic methodology.

    6. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be honest, just about every organization or process structure falls to pieces the moment human greed (i.e. the profit motive) enters the equation. The same could be said of many other things, but organizing people in particular. Business types don't have real people skills. They have manipulation skills.

    7. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Educate yourself - giving a cool methodology a name and a set of rigid activities doesn't help.

      We had team meetings daily before this scrum bullshit and I've developed a lot of stuff. What the fuck is a "scrum master" apart from sounding like some BDSM thing?

      Where are your clued in technical managers and developers with domain knowledge?

    8. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      But we have Dailys!!

      --
      bickerdyke
    9. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by swilver · · Score: 1

      Agreed, they lost me at "What did they do for X yesterday..."

      There's nothing more boring than hearing what happened yesterday and where everyone gets a turn to speak...

      My ideal stand-up goes:

      "Anyone currently blocked? No? Get back to work."

    10. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by swilver · · Score: 2, Informative

      A big part of Scrum is actually to find what works for your team. So if daily standups are not working or taking too long or whatever, then after your iteration you re-evaluate and try something different in the next iteration.

      In this way, by re-evaluating our process critically we changed many things, including how we keep track of progress, what things can be worked on at the same time, when something is considered "ready to be worked on", even how the stand-up works, what time it will be and what is considered on-topic. Anything is up for discussion, including what tools are used (some QA tools are more trouble then they're worth), how much management should be involved (stupid decisions affect your product) and how things are delivered.

      Of course, this requires competent people that want to work as a team and can work without supervision. This requires trust from the management that the team will strife for the best results -- too often things fail because half-baked features are being pushed through on deadlines that the team would never agree on under normal circumstances.

    11. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look over their shoulders every day? My boss drops by for status updates 3+ times a day, plus status emails, plus status meetings.

      Glad the managers are getting something done, because I certainly am not.

    12. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Entrope · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, the classic No True Scrum argument. If Scrum is not working for you, it's because you are not doing Scrum right! And you even combine it with the Right Scrum Team argument. If your team needs management, Scrum isn't for you. Your team must be coherent, driven, and self-directed for Scrum to work. (Never mind that every other process in the world will also work with such a team.)

    13. Re:ARRRRGGGG! by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Status reports are common in the industry; done them for many orgs. However, they are usually summarized and weekly because nobody wants to hear about specific widget properties and fiddling one typically has to do every day. That's a waste of most people's time. Sure, there are exceptions when there's a logjam, but for the most part managers don't have the time for day-level details. I suspect this particular situation will end up the same way in the longer term.

    14. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but there is an actual objective content and yardstick to Scrum and Agile.

      If necessary, once can restate the extensive conceptual framework and metrics for quality of implementation down to its core purpose.

      That is:

      "Work faster."

      It tends to remove the obfuscation of whose process and objectives it is imperative to maximize, such obfuscation being essential to personal buy-in of the suckers... er, developers, but occasionally clarity needs to be acceded to.

    15. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the classic, I don't know how to work well with others, so I'll blame it on management, process, or whatever else can get me out of being held responsible.

    16. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      This argument has worked for every political policy for 100 years...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    17. Re: ARRRRGGGG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should try acceding to clarity one of these days.

  5. I briefly consulted for an "near shoring" firm by plague911 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their pitch was basically "We are not complete and utter shit like Infosys or Wipro." Which provided a startling level of value to customers.

  6. So...mr. Trump... by MindPrison · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...was actually onto something?

    Keep jobs - American. Well played, sir!

    --
    What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
    1. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think we have to give Trumpo some credit. He shook the overseas-based outsourcing market by introducing fear, uncertainty, and doubt into it such that companies are less likely to want to depend on it exclusively or heavily.

      His most effective strategy has been the bully pulpit. Getting legislation passed has been a bear for him, and Executive Orders have had relatively limited impact compared to other newly elected Presidents.

      In addition to overseas outsourcing, border crossings appear to be down, possibly on the threat that he'll make life difficult for undocumented visitors.

      Some also give him credit for the alleged stock market surge by promising to cut taxes and regulation, although the stock trends have been arguably the same for about 6 years if one ignores smaller bumps and dips.

      USA has a new 4th branch of gov't: the Shouting Branch...or the Twitter Branch.

    2. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      His most effective strategy has been the bully pulpit.

      I don't think Trump is the definition of "bully" that Teddy had in mind.

    3. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to suck my own cock like Steve Bannon.

    4. Re: So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That guy must be pretty proud of himself. Not many go from outcast critic to top of the heap insider like that.

    5. Re:So...mr. Trump... by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      I think we have to give Trumpo some credit. He shook the overseas-based outsourcing market by introducing fear, uncertainty, and doubt into it such that companies are less likely to want to depend on it exclusively or heavily.

      Did he?

      You don't need people to cross borders to do software development for you.

      --
      bickerdyke
    6. Re:So...mr. Trump... by johnsie · · Score: 0

      Not sure why Americans magically deserve work more than anyone else. What makes you so entitled?

    7. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure why Americans magically deserve work more than anyone else. What makes you so entitled?

      By the same token, what makes you think foreigners are entitled to work for American companies?

      You can always work for some shitty Indian company you know.

    8. Re:So...mr. Trump... by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      ...was actually onto something?

      Keep jobs - American. Well played, sir!

      Trump doesn't get credit for this. We've known this for decades. I'm working at a company where major chunks of the application were written by contractors and H1-B visas. Guess what? The house is on fire with design flaw tickets flying in left and right. Customers are pissed and escalating tickets left and right. Employees are leaving left and right. You get what you pay for.

      --
      We'll make great pets
    9. Re:So...mr. Trump... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Hard to say on this one. The tide was already turning against off-shoring due to low quality and other problems. Maybe Trump accelerated it, maybe it's just being reported differently because it's something he promised to do.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:So...mr. Trump... by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 0

      You mean like those jobs at Carrier that ended up not going to Mexico because the government provided millions in tax incentives so they can open an automated plant in the US? The jobs are still gone. Mission failed, same as every other Trump claim.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    11. Re:So...mr. Trump... by bravecanadian · · Score: 0

      I think we have to give Trumpo some credit.

      hahahaha... no. I mean, unless you can point to something he actually accomplished? Besides twitter rants?

      As usual, people vastly overstate the figurehead's ability to influence the economy.

    12. Re: So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, 30 years of liberal ideology lies in ruins thanks to Trump and our new Supreme Court Justice.

      Keep shilling on, Barbra. You lost.

    13. Re: So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because we created the modern computer revolution. If your shithole socialist nightmare of a country had created it, you'd be riding the wave. You didn't. We did. Sorry.

    14. Re:So...mr. Trump... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      There is a whole boatload of executive orders that he signed on a variety of things. Like on Health Care, asking the IRS not to pursue people who hadn't been paying their Obamacare fines. Or an EO requiring that for any new regulation added, 2 had to go (actually, in effect, it's been 1:9 or something). Or the EO allowing the extension of the Keystone & Dakota Access Pipelines, w/ American Steel. Aside from tax cuts, regulations have been a major eyesore for the economy, and it's here that POTUS has had the most effect. Also, his public statements alone have really dented the number of illegal border crossings, and morale at ICE is at an all time high.

      Bottom line - everything that the president could do himself, he has done. It's where he's required Congressional support that the ball has dropped, whether it's on Repeal Obamacare or other things. Leftist Activists have done what they can to try and sabotage him via the Judiciary. On the travel ban, their efforts have been set back by the Supreme Court, and on Sanctuary Cities, it's as likely that it'll be approved by the 9th and overturned by SCOTUS. The Congress has its priorities in order - can vote 98-0 for Sanctions on Russia, which is veto proof, but can't repeal Obamacare. The idea that the GOP controls all branches is a myth, as the Senate showed.

      He shouldn't have to, but the president needs to, via the RNC, conduct an internal purge of all the rebel senators, and primary the loose cannons, such as Dean Heller, Lindsay Graham, Jeff Flake, Ben Sass, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski... Some of them don't face re-election until 2020 or 2022, so best thing to do is start recall campaigns against them in their states. The problem isn't the 60 votes vs 51: the problem is GOP renegades within his own party. Susan Collins needs to be expelled - she can follow the examples of people like Arlen Spector, Lincoln Chafee, Jim Jeffords, Chuck Hagel & other former RINOs who switched parties to join the Dems.

    15. Re:So...mr. Trump... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      True. But compounding this was what was perceived to be his policy - cracking down on H1B visas. As it is, companies have problems w/ the offshore work done, and now, to compound that, if they can't bring in those workers to train them live, it forces them to look within the US. Serves right those Indian companies who mainly focus on hiring Indians, like Tech Mahindra, Syntel, Infosys, et al

    16. Re:So...mr. Trump... by bravecanadian · · Score: 1

      None of those executive orders will have, or have had enough time to affect much of anything economically.

      If what he is trying to do is crazy enough that even the "we've completely lost our minds"-GOP won't follow through with it then I'd say that isn't a problem, that is a feature.

      Checks and balances and all that.. something those of us watching your dumpster fire from afar are pretty happy about right at the moment.

    17. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Did he?

      You don't need people to cross borders to do software development for you.

      It's not just the illegals though. He is also pushing restrictions on work visas and a very strong "america first" message. This causes FUD across the board. Noone wants to spend money on outsourcing to India just to see the rug pulled out from under them. And let's not forget that India has a large muslim population. It currently isn't being targeted but that introduces more FUD if all of a sudden you can no longer travel between the USA and India for training, etc...

    18. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      The big picture here is not entirely about Trump and Trump's signature. His election win has proven that trade (including services) and visas/immigration may not flow so easy across borders in the future for geopolitical reasons. Thus, businesses decided to be less dependent on them on average.

    19. Re:So...mr. Trump... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      It's not about the time it's been in effect. It's about the effect it has had on businesses, who now make plans in anticipation of those regulations going away. As an analogy, the rise in the stock markets, even though tax reform is yet to happen, is a result of the expectation that it will happen. So that when it does pass, a lot of the effect would have been factored in already into the price. However, if it doesn't happen, one could see the markets tank

    20. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hehe, yes, Republicans and Trump are onto something. You can hire someone in the US without giving them any insurance, holiday or pension... :-D

      And they want to make the position of the employers stronger still! LOL

    21. Re:So...mr. Trump... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Back then "bully" was sometimes slang for "good" or "friendly", but detractors of the President still used or implied the "mean" interpretation. Bad overloading is not just done by lousy API designers.

    22. Re: So...mr. Trump... by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      In case you haven't noticed, the larger corporations are finally taking on their corporate responsibilities and pushing back. They want the Paris Accord, they want non-discrimination against transgenders (as does the military), they want an end to coal. They want Obamacare.

      As for the Supreme Court, you mean the current one that told Trump to shove his executive order up his arse?

      Trump is doing exactly what I expected and predicted - forcing a swing to the left. Even the Republicans are coming on board, or they would have repealed the ACA by now. They know that if they do, they will not be re-elected, and if you don't get re-elected, you don't get all the perks and status and lobbyists sucking up to you any more.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    23. Re:So...mr. Trump... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      I guess he didn't do this too...
      http://www.businessinsider.com...

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    24. Re:So...mr. Trump... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Because we're spending our tax dollars, we should be investing them in our own economy as much as possible. If you're spending tax dollars overseas, and at the same time having to pay unemployment to people capable of doing that work, then you're doing it wrong.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    25. Re: So...mr. Trump... by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      Dream on.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
  7. Those high school grades will eventually want by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    better working conditions and pay. So no, you can't have them. See, the people in charge are in it for the long game.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Those high school grades will eventually want by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Good for them. Once they have enough knowledge they're too expensive for what I need.

      No one stays an apprentice forever in plumbing, hvac or electrical either. But there's a ton of apprentice level work to be done.

    2. Re: Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      This! Holy crap this!!!!!

      Are you a construction worker? Because you hit that nail on the head!

    3. Re:Those high school grades will eventually want by unixisc · · Score: 1

      better working conditions and pay. So no, you can't have them. See, the people in charge are in it for the long game.

      Same goes for the Indians. Once they have stayed anywhere long enough, they have 'experience' to show for it, regardless of whether they've actually achieved anything, and can move. If they've actually achieved anything, they become as expensive as people here.

    4. Re: Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Must be a plumber, sounds like a pipe dream to me.

    5. Re: Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's just flush with ideas

    6. Re: Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you basin that on?

    7. Re: Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A flood of shitty feedback.

    8. Re:Those high school grades will eventually want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, plumbing and hvac are not areas of expertise that change anywhere near as quickly as coding. If you stop being a plumber for 10-20 years, you can pretty much step right back into it. Try not keeping up with tech for a couple of years, and you've got some major catching up to do.

    9. Re:Those high school grades will eventually want by PlaynBass · · Score: 1

      And sometimes the journeymen and master plumbers and electricians still do the work that apprentices do when called on to do it: For instance, when it's a small, one-person owned shop, or when there is a shortage of apprentices.

      The advantage of hiring a journeyman is that they require a lot less supervision to get the job done, leaving the master-level person free to do the planning and job-costing for the entire project while one advantage of hiring an apprentice is that of making a long-term investment in hopes of eventually producing an in-house trained journeyman who is familiar with the work-culture of a particular business.

      I suppose that might also be true of the software industry?

      --
      PlaynBass
    10. Re:Those high school grades will eventually want by PlaynBass · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, there are some Master electricians who do some pretty boneheaded things that no well-supervised apprentice would be allowed to do, all to cut corners, or even due to outright fraud or just plain laziness.

      --
      PlaynBass
  8. It's Michigan by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    they don't have a lot of options.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:It's Michigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would be surprised. Michigan has more engineers per capita than any other state. Real engineers too, not glorified programmers.

    2. Re:It's Michigan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they don't have a lot of options.

      Says the guy who obviously knows nothing about Michigan.

    3. Re:It's Michigan by SScorpio · · Score: 1

      Nope, he's right. Nothing of value here.

      Stay in SillyConValley. Michigan is a horrible place with snow, and you get attacked daily by a roving pack of wolverines.

  9. new submitter my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    You've already posted several stories from him.

    Why don't you just post his blog on the sidebar and help him earn money as an Amazon Associate?

    1. Re:new submitter my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you sound bitter, honey bunny

    2. Re: new submitter my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Odd, creimer has used that phrase before.

    3. Re:new submitter my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creimer, I'm going to need you to fully engage these trolls to fulfill my night's entertainment.

      -sent from my iphone, with head in oven

  10. I worked for an "on shoring" company by garcia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In 2012, I was hired at a company which did on-shoring, mainly COBOL and RPG programming for healthcare and insurance companies still running on AS400. They were trying to expand into a new vertical, SAS programming for analytics firms, which I was hired to lead.

    After being acquired by a large multinational which was mainly doing offshoring, it took less than 2.5 years to kill the onshoring and continue on their merry way with the traditional offshore work.

    Yes, onshoring is a great idea and needs to be sold more often, it's just going to be difficult with the offshoring companies buying them up and shutting them down.

    1. Re:I worked for an "on shoring" company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Heard from someone COBOL programming was a "for life" type of job.

    2. Re: I worked for an "on shoring" company by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      You heard wrong

    3. Re:I worked for an "on shoring" company by deKernel · · Score: 1

      Oh GAWD....the thought of COBOL code coming from India makes me crawl back into bed!

  11. "Offshoring" in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Further reinforcing the idea that the states that don't have coastlines are colonies.

  12. #winning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet another Trump victory!
    APK for communications director!

    1. Re:#winning by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Can't - Mueller is looking into whether Trump staff spoke to APK as part of the Russia investigations. If APK is hired, McCain, Graham, Rubio & the other 'Islam-is-not-the-enemy-Russia-is' Senators would sink him to the bottom of the Black Sea

  13. You don't taking India Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can u do that? No its wrong. That's our jobs for Mumbai.

    Fuck shiting to amercian.

  14. near shoring is the winner by dave4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not so much the distance or the timezone that is a problem with India, or even the culture. It's the companies that run scam like business models by putting low quality engineers into place and training them on your clock. Recently Tata consultancy had a large round of firings of senior staff because engineers that are actually good at what they do would be expensive to retain and thus make less profit. There are many good engineers in India. But they work for the companies that pay well like Google or they become managers. If you buy cheap, you get what you pay for. One problem however is that there are not enough people going into software development and at one point the only way to get people is to look over the border.

    1. Re:near shoring is the winner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      there are not enough people going into software development

      There's not a shortage of candidates. There's an inflation of employer desires. They want nothing but the absolute best and will not settle for someone rough around the edges but enthusiastic. Employers aren't interested in investing in employees. They will continue having labor and work quality problems until they change their perspective and value employees again. Their work doesn't happen without employees.

      Some, like myself, read all about how colleges and universities are these days, consider their demographic (in my case, white and male), and a big "NO" sign pops up. Of all demographics, mine will be chosen *last* for any sort of scholarship or even employment in software dev. Then the stories of all the BS CS grads that "don't know even FizzBuzz" further destroys my confidence in the educational system. So I do what I can and contribute to libre software, learning from those more experienced than me when I get the chance. I'd like to think that's the way a real craft should be taught: just start doing it and look for the smart or wise people who can tell you how to get better.

      I'd love a career in software development. A career that's rewarding, has interesting problems, and a workplace that makes me feel like my work matters and has value. I don't think the industry has that, but even if it does, that's only going to the rockstars at startups. I want something stable and dependable. I will then be stable and dependable in return.

      That doesn't really exist these days, in just about any industry. I'd rather just wait until robots start taking over for labor and then be a repair guy or something. I have no incentive to try.

    2. Re:near shoring is the winner by dave4 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that companies should hire trainees. I bet that is actually being done already, but you would not earn much. Also, one of the most expensive things is bad programmers adding hidden bugs to your system. So most companies don't want to deal with that headache and either want good people, or push the problem to some external party. I actually also learned coding on my own and had to work for low wages the first few years. But it helps if you have some other engineering degree to prove you have a minimum level of competence. It is quite an investment, and if you produce nothing, or even break things even a low wage is not enough. Why don't you start with working on some opensource project, or make a few apps. Then you would have no problem getting an entry level software job, I'm sure.

    3. Re:near shoring is the winner by lgw · · Score: 1

      There's not a shortage of candidates. There's an inflation of employer desires. They want nothing but the absolute best and will not settle for someone rough around the edges but enthusiastic. Employers aren't interested in investing in employees. They will continue having labor and work quality problems until they change their perspective and value employees again. Their work doesn't happen without employees.

      This is certainly true at the entry-level. Every employer tries to have higher standards than everyone else, resulting in a few people getting hired at the big companies at near six figures first year, and most potentially competent young coders left out in the cold. Tragedy of the commons, really.

      But that's only entry-level. Mid career and senior engineers need to bring the proven skill at coding (in some vaguely-related language and problem domain, but the big employers are actually pretty flexible on that). And there's definitely a shortage of experienced candidates.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  15. What does this mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe this means that the US minimum wage is at the same or equivalent level as the poorest countries in the world.
    Or maybe they need qualified workers, but that also means that the number of jobs could be less than I hope.

  16. Inshoring by mentil · · Score: 4, Funny

    more of them are deciding that there is value in having developers in the same time zone, or at least on the same continent.

    Why not fly those Indian outsourced workers to Mexico, or Nunavut? Same time zone. If the workers act up, threaten to maroon them there. Better yet, North/South Pole, they're in EVERY time zone, simultaneously!

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
    1. Re:Inshoring by swilver · · Score: 1

      You sound like those companies haven't considered that already...

      In my experience those outsourced workers are treated very poorly (wage slaves) that can get in big trouble if they don't live up to customer expectations. It's really sad actually that companies that treat their workers with the highest regard turn to outsourcing so they can indirectly treat workers like shit.

    2. Re:Inshoring by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Both would be an improvement over India. Mexico has flush toilets. Nunavut has public health care that works for all - and you can always leave for any other part of the country.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    3. Re:Inshoring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GREAT idea! If we could ship creimer to Nunavut, he could provide sustenance for a hunter-gatherer family, and his hide would make great shelter!

    4. Re:Inshoring by plague911 · · Score: 1

      They do that already.

      There are stories of ships floating off the east coast filled with cheap programmers working in international waters.

  17. Tor Browser 7.0.3 is released (Linux users only) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tor Browser 7.0.3 is released (major security bugfix release for Linux users only)

    "This release features an important security update to Tor Browser for Linux users. On Linux systems with GVfs/GIO support Firefox allows to bypass proxy settings as it ships a whitelist of supported protocols. Once an affected user navigates to a specially crafted URL the operating system may directly connect to the remote host, bypassing Tor Browser. Tails and Whonix users, and users of our sandboxed Tor Browser are unaffected, though."

  18. In shoring / On shoring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's really just hiring consultants to handle maintenance so your engineers can focus on R&D, isn't it?

  19. rofl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's like freelance.com but much more expensive lol...

    1. Re: rofl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But maybe they manage to produce actual working software?

  20. No one told my company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Apparently my large company didn't see the memo, all new hiring is in India.
    Personally I have nothing against Indians they are trying to earn a livelihood like everyone else, although I will say there is often a language barrier which is not helped by shoddy network connectivity and network dropouts on calls, conference video, interviews, etc. and who has to deal with it, well not the CEO making the decisions! It's often not worth it.

    All companies that offshore should start with the administrative assistant to the CEO, let them feel first hand the reality off offshoring.

    My real problem though is with these large companies not wanting to invest in America. The CEO's have nice salaries and a great house/lifestyle, they want to live and do business in America and sell to Americans, well so do we, we are here hire us.

    I am not a fan of Trump but if he could usher in an era of "inshoring" that would be euge!

    1. Re:No one told my company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the onshoring has zilch to do with trump and if anything is happening DESPITE the uncertainty trump creates. the reality is companies are businesses and they are their to make money, to start with the minor lose of rep and bad publicity of off shoring was well and truly offset by the cost savings, now though those cost savings are rapidly shrinking as the 3rd world pay gap for developers and IT in general has shrunk. CEO's are not their to invest in "America" or whatever country they are in, they are their to make a profit for the business and help it grow and they will make decisions (if they are competent) that achieve that goal.

  21. Good Reads from C.D.Reimer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, Steve Jobs built a computer once. In "Molesting Children from San Jose" by CDReimer, he explains how he's currently reading about Steve Jobs, building a computer. If you enjoy gripping tales of reading about Steve Jobs, you will enjoy Molesting Children from San Jose.

    1. Re:Good Reads from C.D.Reimer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creimer may post some annoying and inane things, but you are a truly messed up individual.

    2. Re:Good Reads from C.D.Reimer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you sound bitter, sis

  22. Worng link? by OneAhead · · Score: 1

    Your link doesn't appear to support the claims in your post.

    Also, while life as a manufacturing worker in Germany isn't great, it easily beats the same in the US. Bear in mind that GDP per capita is an average. The fact that it's higher in the US doesn't mean all segments of society can spend more (leave alone have a happier, less stressful life). You'll find the inequality-adjusted Human Development Index paints a more nuanced picture...

  23. Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by sabbede · · Score: 5, Informative
    Debbie Wasserman-Schultz decided to outsource her IT support, bringing in someone from Pakistan to handle her's and the Party's. Because why pay an American to work in Washington when you can overpay a foreigner?

    I'm sorry, but I'm steamed that a representative of the American people decided not to hire Americans for her staff. Or her Party's staff. She could have created 4 million dollars worth of jobs here in the US, but hired someone from Pakistan to do a job that I'm pretty sure half of the American citizens reading this article could have done. I call it a betrayal of the people she is supposed to represent.

    1. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Funny thing is that she paid that Paki FOUR TIMES the salary of an IT worker: that guy got $160k/year. Doesn't that defeat the whole purpose of offshoring? For that money, she could have hired anyone here at Slashdot who isn't a Bernie or a Trump fan

    2. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The actual story: what she got in return.

      We still don't know.

    3. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Well, DC has the highest cost of living in the nation, so I'd need $80-$90k before I'd move up there. That's still big savings for the taxpayers though.

    4. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by unixisc · · Score: 1

      How is paying a foreign IT specialist FOUR TIMES the average salary for the profession saving taxpayers money? And no, DC doesn't have the highest cost of living: that's still shared b/w Manhattan and San Francisco

    5. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by unixisc · · Score: 1

      My suspicion: he's helping her cover up the murder of Seth Rich, if he wasn't the one who actually did it. Only that can explain why she continued to pay his account in Pakistan even after she had fired him

    6. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by sabbede · · Score: 1

      No, paying ME $80-$90k/year would have saved the taxpayers money. As for the cost of living, I see what happened. I searched for cost of living in DC and got a map with CoL by State. So, while you're probably right (I assume you are, I just don't want to verify it right now), according to that map the CoL in DC is higher than the average CoL for any State.

    7. Re:Someone should tell Congressional Democrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cite?

  24. An an employer, 'near shoring' is better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know most of the people posting here are looking at the issue of offshoring through the lens of a worker, who risks losing his job to someone in a low-cost labour jurisdiction, most likely India.

    Well, there's another angle to the issue, but the conclusions are surprisingly the same.

    I'm an employer - I have dozens of developers working for me, plus QA, doc, customer support, etc. We serve many large corporations, many of whom have outsourced some or all of their IT, usually to Indian firms.

    The results are *awful.* Indian IT talent is singularly incapable of accomplishing work.

    Before some of you start laying accusations of racism, let me first say a few things:

        * We have some folks from India in our team in North America. They are totally fine.
        * Some of the Indian folks we deal with in India are very smart.
        * Probably the smartest person I've ever met (during grad school) was from IIT in India.

    So I'm pretty confident in saying that yes, I'm biased against Indian IT outsourcing, but not against Indian people per-se.

    So what's the problem?

    I think it's culture. I'm definitely biased against Indian work culture, based on long experience dealing with its problems.

    What's wrong with that culture?

    #1. Extreme labour mobility. People who are smart and skilled tend to change jobs every 6-12 months. That means that by when they've learned to do a particular job, they stop doing it and move somewhere else for a 20% or 30% pay hike. This means that the smart ones never get any work done. Conversely, the not-so-smart ones stay in the same job for longer ... but they aren't productive because they aren't the best talent.

    #2. It's all about blame. Indian IT workers hate making decisions, because if they make a mistake, they might get fired, and they need the income to be steady - no social safety net as far as I can tell. So they don't make decisions. They don't sign off on design documents. They aren't decisive, not because they are personally incapable, but because the culture punishes risk takers. Instead, they escalate and blame, escalate and blame, never contributing or taking ownership. This is a huge productivity killer.

    #3. Brain drain. Life in India is hard. Brutal weather, shitty infrastructure, large cities with congestion and pollution, corrupt politics, security problems in the streets, poor sanitation and therefore disease. The best minds can and do leave. You'll find better Indian talent in the West than in India, because it's possible to move and desirable to move away.

    So why do firms keep off-shoring?

    a. Decisions are made by clueless accountants who think that hourly wages are a predictor of total cost and that people in different work cultures and time zones are functionally interchangeable. This is all nonsense, but decision makers believe it.

    b. Kickbacks and corruption in the West. I haven't personally seen an Indian firm pay off decision makers to send them business, but I have to assume it happens.

    c. Lemmings. Many decision makers are clueless so they just follow trends to cover for their own ineptitude. It's trendy to off-shore.

    d. Scale. If you need to hire 1000 people next week, you could probably do it in Bangalore, but you certainly can't in Boston. They'll be 1000 minimally productive people, but you can hire them.

    So why is 'off-shoring' turning into 'near-shoring'? Because some decision makers are waking up to the incessant disaster that is Indian IT outsourcing. Instead, it's better to send things to Romania, or Latin America, or the US rust belt, or Canada. Of course, none of that is easy, because you can't hire 1000 people at a go and there aren't huge IT outsourcing businesses that can quickly take on your needs, but on the other hand when you do finally get things going, you might actually get work done.

    One can only hope that (a) the Indian IT business figures out how to solve its intense dysfunctionality and (b) firms learn to off-shore to less awful jurisdictions.

    1. Re:An an employer, 'near shoring' is better by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      Thank You this is all very spot on and why we gave up on India and went into Eastern Europe.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
  25. He Was Wrong Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope. He's wrong again.

    I'm still not tired of all this winning.

  26. Carrier by unixisc · · Score: 4, Informative

    Carrier manufactures both heaters & air conditioners. The heater jobs were saved, while the Air Conditioners went to Mexico. I forget the numbers, but the bulk of those jobs were saved. There is no way Carrier would pull a fast one, since Trump is willing to wave the existing government contracts & threaten them w/ losing those should they renege on their promises.

    1. Re:Carrier by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I forget the numbers

      Translation: The numbers look bad, so I'm going to gloss over them and claim success.

    2. Re:Carrier by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no way Carrier would pull a fast one, since Trump is willing to wave the existing government contracts & threaten them w/ losing those should they renege on their promises.

      Unless he's too busy saving his own butt from the special prosecutor and doesn't give a darn about promises he made to some middle-class smucks during his campaign.

    3. Re:Carrier by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      Those jobs were saved for a year or two. Carrier plans to automate the portion of the workforce they "saved" with a grant of $7million from the tax payers paying for that automation. In the end the Tax payers will have ended up paying millions for a few dozen jobs after the rest are automated out of existence.

      You are ignorant if you don't understand that.

    4. Re:Carrier by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      It's worse - the workers actually paid (through taxes) for the robots that will replace them. Same as Uber drivers are paying for the development of self-driving cars that will replace the drivers. The only difference is that Carrier managed to get the public to subsidize its' switch to a more automated facility, thanks to then-governor Pence.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    5. Re:Carrier by unixisc · · Score: 1

      The issue was Carrier jobs going to Mexico, not them being automated. The president did what he could to prevent the former. As far as the latter goes, there is no policy on either side that deals w/ automation. I do think there should be, but it's disingenuous to conflate automation and offshoring

  27. "warning, paywalled"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a submission from creimer, our resident Shakespeare and content creator and copyright protector, is providing a way to get around a paywall???

    creimer, you fat stupid lying hypocritical sack of fermented horse manure!

    And now, the animal kingdom interprets this creimer submission.

    PS: Oh, and "new" submitter, slashdot? This digital yeast infection has been around for years!

    1. Re:"warning, paywalled"??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you sound bitter, lollypop

  28. "...upper management written all over him." by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

    Hmm...techie refuses to change with the pace of technology, wonders why they are unemployable. MVC is the hot new thing of twenty years ago, what rock have you been hiding under?

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
  29. Not as far noth as Michigan, but by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    For a time, a previous employer (or was it my current one?) outsourced to a company in rural (very rural) northern Missouri. (Yes, I realize the redundancy. There's one county near the Iowa border that has fewer people than my high school had students.)

    It seemed to work OK, but it came to an end for some reason I don't recall. Probably bureaucracy.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  30. Advantage US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Memo to US Execs who outsourced in the past 10 years: The cost advantage does not live in perpetuity. In the 1960s, the lowest cost place on the planet to do business was Japan. As their productivity increased, so did their costs. The US can bring a small % of the jobs back with automation.