Hey wk!!!
You have touched upon a VERY sore nerve...believe me, as a 50-something IT professsional with almost 30 years of experience, I am very worried about my ability to continue in the field as an independent consultant (especially at my rate, which is NOT cheap - hey, I'm good! LOL). I know that I am lucky to have a (seemingly) open contract for my services with the City of L.A. - however, because I have been here so long (since 2001), I have pretty much lost all of my network in the business. I do my best to keep up with current techologies (I am certified in everything from Java application development to almost any Microsoft technologies you can think of), but with the stupidly rapid pace of change today,there really is no way to be a generalist anymore. The demise of programming in the U.S. (at least by the native-born) is one of the saddest things that has ever happened to this country, and very few outside of our field even have slightest idea why.
I recognize that my formative years in IT were similar to what historians might label as 'pre-industrial' times - by that I mean that every application that was created usually was 100% unique, only superficially borrowing from work previously performed. Although highly inefficient, you had better believe that the gratification one received from implementing a massive system (which I have done many,many times over 30 years) is matched by few other experiences. It's YOUR concept, YOUR creation, and you made it real, useful, and worthwhile (hopefully), after working your fingers to the bones! Still to this day, few things make me feel better than making my clients' work easier through the IT solutions I provide them. Unfortunately, the trend is to outsource EVERYTHING related to IT (at least in the corporate world) to consulting firms, usually from India or China. This is the way it goes...but I don't have to like it!
Mamas - don't let your children grow up to be IT pros...
Perfect example of the pernicious (at least to Americans) outsourcing syndrome: Back in the Cretaceous Period, the L.A. Times had a beat reporter that covered ALL games, home and away...no more, though. Check the byline on this story:
http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-lakers14feb14,0,4153965.story?coll=la-home-sports Dang...the L.A. Times covers the predominant local team with AP stories when they are on the road. This sucks - I can read a generic AP story in the 'Podunk Press'! Ricko, Dabods, does the Philly Inquirer do this? Reality, the S.D. Union with the Clippers (LOL)? I've got to believe that it wouldn't cost the LAT too much more than the fee the AP charges them for the say-nothing article the AP generates than having their own sportwriter present at the game to provide a "homer's-eye view of the hapnins'. Come on!!!
-RB
Shaq #1