I'm seeing more and more tech companies that are headquartered in the Bay Area, and hiring mostly remote workers. With the right kind of team leader, and the right workers, a remote team can be nearly as effective as an in-house team, and costs are not as high.
I wonder if these stats are skewed by remote workers, since they are technically not in the "Bay Area", even though the HQ may be?
I miss the days of using simple graphicals toolkits to get the job done. Now we're in the middle of a mess of HTML/CSS Javascript (Choose your Framework), write a REST API, and then write the back end in some other language, and don't forget to make it all secure.
I miss the days when things were simpler.
I'm seeing more and more tech companies that are headquartered in the Bay Area, and hiring mostly remote workers. With the right kind of team leader, and the right workers, a remote team can be nearly as effective as an in-house team, and costs are not as high. I wonder if these stats are skewed by remote workers, since they are technically not in the "Bay Area", even though the HQ may be?
I miss the days of using simple graphicals toolkits to get the job done. Now we're in the middle of a mess of HTML/CSS Javascript (Choose your Framework), write a REST API, and then write the back end in some other language, and don't forget to make it all secure. I miss the days when things were simpler.