You are going to have to back that up. Certain industries certainly do. You are not going to be a doctor or lawyer without a degree. But where there is no government intervention, tech especially, such credentials are largely irrelevant.
Economics says that jobs that have a shortage of labour will be paid more. Businesses struggling to find labour will have to resort to hiring just about anyone who can show some semblance of being able to do the job. So the irony here is that in a free market, those with more education (and stick to that area) will be paid less than those with less education.
Of course most labour shortages are a result of non-free markets governed by credentialism (think health care workers, lawyers, etc.) so people are easily confused about what role education really plays.
Hemp is legal where I farm, but there is no market. That low-yielding field of corn will pay a boatload more than the best field of hemp.
Not to mention that my millions of dollars of equipment that is used for mostly food crops won't harvest hemp, but does allow corn into the rotation (farmers who try to skip on that alternate crop in the rotation generally run into trouble with their food-bearing crops). And I don't have millions more to invest in new equipment, sadly.
Do you think you could produce high-output crop yields without chemical fertilizers?
I think we could, but it would increase the costs dramatically. Interestingly, hay makes for a wonderful fertilizer (and provides many other positive attributes for the soil), but the current market push for vegetarianism and lower meat consumption has pretty much killed off the ability for farmers to economically grow it like we once did. That has brought on the rise of alternative source of fertilizers more than anything.
Napkin calculation tells me that yes, hypothetically it should be possible to extract energy from this process.
But where does the threshold lie? The anti-ethanol proponents will tell you that corn is a net loss, but the average yield in the US is only 120 bu/ac., which is surely what they are basing their calculations on. In the corn belt, 250-350 bu/ac. isn't uncommon. That is a vast difference in energy potential.
Basics of biodiesel is that it is net energy loss.
Can you provide a bit more background about this? Our best field of corn this year produced almost twice the output of our worst field, for essentially the same amount of input energy. With that, there has to be a line at which more energy is produced that what is put in. Whether or not we as humans will ever be able to develop a crop that can deliver on that remains to be seen, but what do we need to strive for to reach the level of net gain?
If we assume inputs are constant, would a 500 bu/ac. field of corn be net energy positive? A 1,000 bu/ac. field? How about 10,000 bu/ac.?
but what happens when it goes to MA, PHD for base level?
I would say that to some degree this has already started. If more people choose to obtain BA level educations, it will become more widespread. After that, some new filter will have to be found. It doesn't necessarily have to be education-based. Education has just been the easy target so far. But perhaps the educational institutions will accommodate by offering increasing levels of education, or maybe you'll need multiple degrees to even be considered?
Also what about trades like training?
Many trades built their own filtering framework outside of the university setting, typically through apprenticeship programs. From what I gather from those industries, there isn't a huge fight to fill the available spots, so it seems to serve them well. If, in the future, more people want to enter those industries, you might need a degree before you can start apprenticing as means to filter the number of applicants again.
that jobs can't say you need a BA or higher when the job does not need it.
There is no job that needs it. What asking for a BA does is provide a filter to limit the number of applicants to a manageable level. If you ask your parents, they'll probably tell you that in their day you only needed a high school education, a result of a time when many did not graduate high school. Today everyone does, so the filter has been stepped up to the University level.
In industries where labour is short, like software development is right now, you can walk in and get a high paying job without having spent any time in the classroom of any level. There is no need to apply the filter as the number of applicants are already low.
It has never been about the education, just a trick to make hiring easier.
The article says that the business model is in renting the individual antennas to the customer. So, for a more apt analogy, this would be like putting an antenna up on my neighbours home because he has a better sight of the sky, with a montly fee to cover the rental of his property, and then running the coax into my home.
In this case, the wire just happens to be the internet.
but maybe you should try to pick up a couple people with degrees, "just in case".
In case what? I have no degree, so I am curious about what someone with one would bring to the table.
Interestingly, part of my official duties at work are to guide and assist the CS grad hires. Additionally, good friend of mine recently graduated with his PhD out of the CS program and even he has come to me for advice. I'm not trying to brag or anything, I'm just not sure where your sentiment is coming from.
I guess I'm just used to being the "just in case" person, so it seems strange that you'd start adding random requirements to take on the role.
I don't know about the US government, but I see things with my local government like: You need a degree in computer science to build a webpage. CS grads are generally not skilled in producing such works, so you end up either picking from the limited group of people who are, or more likely you choose someone who is not a good fit for the job and end up with poor results.
It is hard to see what the supposed purpose of TVShack was if it wasn't to encourage its users to download copyright TV shows from the external links without the appropriate license.
The same could be said about all hyperlinks, save the TV part. Never have I obtained a license to provide or follow a link, despite the majority of all links being to copyrighted material.
Sounds like the secret is to get far away from the city, I guess. The farmers nearly 100 years ago co-oped the installation of the copper. That's been our saving grace as Bell has no intention of every doing anything with their lines. It is interesting that some of those communities haven't opted to do the same for internet access though.
I'm not talking about remote here, either, I'm talking about a farm just outside city limits.
That's rather shocking. Here in Ontario, we have had DSL on the farm, hours away from any city, for well over a decade and the telco is working on rolling out fibre to the farms now. The government also paid for rollout of microwave service for those unfortunate enough to have Bell copper. Also, the mobile carriers have HSPA+ rolled out here too. I spent some time on a remote farm in Saskatchewan this past summer and they even had microwave access. Granted, the topology works in their favour there.
Android has a larger market share than the iPhone, no question. The data for Android vs. iOS (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Apple TV) is not as well understood. I have yet to come across the data you are referring to.
That is not strictly true. I'm in Ontario and it is neither Bell or Rogers that own the last mile. It is the local independent co-op telephone company that does. While they do have a monopoly on local service, since the customers own the company, they have to look out for the customer first. I don't think anyone could really complain about internet service here.
The RTK receivers used to power much larger lawn bots (i.e. farm equipment) claim 1-2cm accuracy. They are quite expensive and require correction data from an external source; either a base station or a subscription with someone who will provide the base station date, typically over IP. With a decent budget, it's definitely possible though.
Actually, dropouts and those who did not pursue college at all outnumber those with only a bachelor degree in the high earning category. Those with postgraduate degrees are the ones who really skew the numbers.
At what age did you notice it staring to become a problem?
The OP claimed to be a techie, which probably rules out interest in engineering disciplines anyway.
You are going to have to back that up. Certain industries certainly do. You are not going to be a doctor or lawyer without a degree. But where there is no government intervention, tech especially, such credentials are largely irrelevant.
Economics says that jobs that have a shortage of labour will be paid more. Businesses struggling to find labour will have to resort to hiring just about anyone who can show some semblance of being able to do the job. So the irony here is that in a free market, those with more education (and stick to that area) will be paid less than those with less education.
Of course most labour shortages are a result of non-free markets governed by credentialism (think health care workers, lawyers, etc.) so people are easily confused about what role education really plays.
Maybe in other industries. Tech companies don't care. Not even big ones like Google and Apple.
(To be fair, Google cared about a decade ago, but they don't anymore)
Hemp is legal where I farm, but there is no market. That low-yielding field of corn will pay a boatload more than the best field of hemp.
Not to mention that my millions of dollars of equipment that is used for mostly food crops won't harvest hemp, but does allow corn into the rotation (farmers who try to skip on that alternate crop in the rotation generally run into trouble with their food-bearing crops). And I don't have millions more to invest in new equipment, sadly.
I think we could, but it would increase the costs dramatically. Interestingly, hay makes for a wonderful fertilizer (and provides many other positive attributes for the soil), but the current market push for vegetarianism and lower meat consumption has pretty much killed off the ability for farmers to economically grow it like we once did. That has brought on the rise of alternative source of fertilizers more than anything.
But where does the threshold lie? The anti-ethanol proponents will tell you that corn is a net loss, but the average yield in the US is only 120 bu/ac., which is surely what they are basing their calculations on. In the corn belt, 250-350 bu/ac. isn't uncommon. That is a vast difference in energy potential.
Can you provide a bit more background about this? Our best field of corn this year produced almost twice the output of our worst field, for essentially the same amount of input energy. With that, there has to be a line at which more energy is produced that what is put in. Whether or not we as humans will ever be able to develop a crop that can deliver on that remains to be seen, but what do we need to strive for to reach the level of net gain?
If we assume inputs are constant, would a 500 bu/ac. field of corn be net energy positive? A 1,000 bu/ac. field? How about 10,000 bu/ac.?
I would say that to some degree this has already started. If more people choose to obtain BA level educations, it will become more widespread. After that, some new filter will have to be found. It doesn't necessarily have to be education-based. Education has just been the easy target so far. But perhaps the educational institutions will accommodate by offering increasing levels of education, or maybe you'll need multiple degrees to even be considered?
Many trades built their own filtering framework outside of the university setting, typically through apprenticeship programs. From what I gather from those industries, there isn't a huge fight to fill the available spots, so it seems to serve them well. If, in the future, more people want to enter those industries, you might need a degree before you can start apprenticing as means to filter the number of applicants again.
There is no job that needs it. What asking for a BA does is provide a filter to limit the number of applicants to a manageable level. If you ask your parents, they'll probably tell you that in their day you only needed a high school education, a result of a time when many did not graduate high school. Today everyone does, so the filter has been stepped up to the University level.
In industries where labour is short, like software development is right now, you can walk in and get a high paying job without having spent any time in the classroom of any level. There is no need to apply the filter as the number of applicants are already low.
It has never been about the education, just a trick to make hiring easier.
The article says that the business model is in renting the individual antennas to the customer. So, for a more apt analogy, this would be like putting an antenna up on my neighbours home because he has a better sight of the sky, with a montly fee to cover the rental of his property, and then running the coax into my home.
In this case, the wire just happens to be the internet.
In case what? I have no degree, so I am curious about what someone with one would bring to the table.
Interestingly, part of my official duties at work are to guide and assist the CS grad hires. Additionally, good friend of mine recently graduated with his PhD out of the CS program and even he has come to me for advice. I'm not trying to brag or anything, I'm just not sure where your sentiment is coming from.
I guess I'm just used to being the "just in case" person, so it seems strange that you'd start adding random requirements to take on the role.
I don't know about the US government, but I see things with my local government like: You need a degree in computer science to build a webpage. CS grads are generally not skilled in producing such works, so you end up either picking from the limited group of people who are, or more likely you choose someone who is not a good fit for the job and end up with poor results.
I could link to CNN like this, in which case Slashdot is encouraging you to consume CNN's content without their authorization of distribution.
The same could be said about all hyperlinks, save the TV part. Never have I obtained a license to provide or follow a link, despite the majority of all links being to copyrighted material.
Not much of a newsflash, and also obviously not what I was referring to. Thanks for trying though.
I don't need a phone. All important communication happens over IP. Unfortunately, that means having an expensive mobile device.
Sounds like the secret is to get far away from the city, I guess. The farmers nearly 100 years ago co-oped the installation of the copper. That's been our saving grace as Bell has no intention of every doing anything with their lines. It is interesting that some of those communities haven't opted to do the same for internet access though.
That's rather shocking. Here in Ontario, we have had DSL on the farm, hours away from any city, for well over a decade and the telco is working on rolling out fibre to the farms now. The government also paid for rollout of microwave service for those unfortunate enough to have Bell copper. Also, the mobile carriers have HSPA+ rolled out here too. I spent some time on a remote farm in Saskatchewan this past summer and they even had microwave access. Granted, the topology works in their favour there.
Android has a larger market share than the iPhone, no question. The data for Android vs. iOS (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Apple TV) is not as well understood. I have yet to come across the data you are referring to.
That is not strictly true. I'm in Ontario and it is neither Bell or Rogers that own the last mile. It is the local independent co-op telephone company that does. While they do have a monopoly on local service, since the customers own the company, they have to look out for the customer first. I don't think anyone could really complain about internet service here.
The RTK receivers used to power much larger lawn bots (i.e. farm equipment) claim 1-2cm accuracy. They are quite expensive and require correction data from an external source; either a base station or a subscription with someone who will provide the base station date, typically over IP. With a decent budget, it's definitely possible though.
I demand nothing. If kids end up in school, fine. It is the glorification of the institution that is the problem.
I'm saying that school is a poor place to become educated.