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Gartner: Half of US IT operations jobs to vanish
MacWorld.com ^
| 12-2-04
| Patrick Thibodeau
Posted on 12/02/2004 10:47:34 AM PST by soccer_linux_mozilla
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To: soccer_linux_mozilla
I'm staying in pure IT until I can finish my degree in business and get the heck out of this field.
2
posted on
12/02/2004 10:48:43 AM PST
by
G32
To: G32
Good thing I'm a Systems Architect!
3
posted on
12/02/2004 10:51:17 AM PST
by
dagar
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Half of US IT operations jobs to vanishAwesome news!!! Wow, technology is fantastic! First the horse and buggy driver gets replaced, then some of the manual assembly people, now half of the IT jobs. Great news! We're making progress!!!
And to think that unemployment always stays so incredibly low with this kind of thing happening... What a country!!!
4
posted on
12/02/2004 10:51:20 AM PST
by
69ConvertibleFirebird
(Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience.)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Just look at all the commercials with the theme "you don't need IT guys."
5
posted on
12/02/2004 10:51:22 AM PST
by
NonValueAdded
("We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good" HRC 6/28/2004)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Just like the improvements in automobile technology have eliminated the need for mechanics? I believe Bill Gates will keep the bugs a'comin'.
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
I hear there ain't many blacksmith jobs anymore. I don't recall the last time I saw the Ice Man coming around neither. I guess that when some jobs go away, others end up being created.
7
posted on
12/02/2004 10:53:21 AM PST
by
trebb
(Ain't God good . . .)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Read more at macworld.com ... There's the problem - MacWorld. He is greatly underestimating the amount of work Bill Gates and gang are putting into making their operating systems and applications vulnerable to hacking and viruses and keep IT people employed.
8
posted on
12/02/2004 10:53:35 AM PST
by
KarlInOhio
(In a just world, Arafat would have died at the end of a rope.)
To: DeFault User
I agree. We will always need good IT people to keep our systems clear and running. New operating updates? More bugs, viruses, and other things to go wrong. Can't be helped.
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Everybody knows the future.
10
posted on
12/02/2004 10:55:05 AM PST
by
Revolting cat!
("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
11
posted on
12/02/2004 10:55:28 AM PST
by
Rodney King
(No, we can't all just get along)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
We'll adjust and create new fields, no biggy...
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Time to concentrate on business and science skills. Life sciences look best. With more and more senior citizens in the US there will be more need for drugs!
13
posted on
12/02/2004 10:56:27 AM PST
by
Bhrian
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
As long as they don't come after us keypunchers.....
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Keyword operational jobs
Operations is considered overhead. People are always working on ways to reduce costs here. It used to take 1 full time person to support a single small OS that was used for development when I started out. And that did not include hardware support. Now you can support 100s of servers with a handful of people 24x7. It has to do with an increase in hardware quality, software quality and automation of maintenance activities.
15
posted on
12/02/2004 10:57:23 AM PST
by
ProudVet77
(Just say NO to blue states.)
To: NonValueAdded
Just look at all the commercials with the theme "you don't need IT guys." You won't need as many IT Operations guys.
There are many data center locations in IBM and other major companies that are entered by no humans, unless a machine burps.
I remember the days of large shops with eight or ten operators: one at the system console, three or four changing tapes, another two changing removeable disk drives, and another who did nothing but attend to the system printer.
16
posted on
12/02/2004 10:57:57 AM PST
by
sinkspur
("It is a great day to be alive. I appreciate your gratitude." God Himself.)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
There is a way to keep the jobs in the USA:
CLICK
17
posted on
12/02/2004 10:58:12 AM PST
by
Voltage
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
Yep. IT is bye-bye. Think about. Remember all those things most people had to pay for someone to do dozens of years ago, and now do themselves? Like plumbing? And electrical work? Mechanics?
All of those are now being done by regular people!!
Seriously, show me a company that has an under-staffed IT department, and I'll show you a company that is bleeding money from innefficiency.
18
posted on
12/02/2004 10:58:29 AM PST
by
Shryke
To: NonValueAdded
Those "You don't need IT guys" commercials are for small businesses that can't otherwise afford IT, or have no room for a datacenter. They take on the datacenter operations for the small company. However, they (the datacenter people) need IT too, to run their huge shops. Granted, not as many as if every company had their own IT, but still more than the 50% reduction talked about here.
19
posted on
12/02/2004 10:58:46 AM PST
by
Little Pig
(Is it time for "Cowboys and Muslims" yet?)
To: soccer_linux_mozilla
In an eyebrow-raising forecast, Gartner Inc. researchers said they believe that as many as 50 percent of the IT operational jobs in the U.S. could disappear over the next two decades because of improvements in data center technologies. No offense to the IT guys but this is a good thing.
20
posted on
12/02/2004 10:59:20 AM PST
by
Tribune7
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