Posted on 12/02/2004 10:47:34 AM PST by 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.
Donna Scott, a Gartner analyst, said IT workers face a situation similar to that in the manufacturing field, which has lost jobs over the past several decades as automation has improved. Similarly, standardization of IT infrastructure, applications and processes will lead to productivity improvements and a major shift in skill needs, she said.
"There will be more room to automate, and that means there will be reduced labor cost," said Scott. "This is a long-term change."
Gartner calls this change "real-time infrastructure," which involves service-oriented architectures, the elimination of communications barriers and dynamic alignment of IT with business priorities. Technologies enabling the shift have less need for human intervention because they are more intelligent and can automatically provision services and self-heal.
IT operations, which encompass areas such as systems administration, incident response and change management, today account for about 55 percent of an IT department's labor cost, said Scott, who spoke at the Stamford, Conn.-based research firm's annual data center conference here in Las Vegas. But as companies improve automation, IT operations become "more like a factory," said Scott. Demand will grow for employees who have IT architecture skills as well as those with business and customer-liaison knowledge. Project management, for instance, will rise in terms of the percentage of IT labor costs, she said.
(Excerpt) Read more at macworld.com ...
...and reappear in India!
"As long as they don't come after us keypunchers....." Don't look behind you something is catching up.
Don't look behind you something is catching up.
Actually, the last time I touched a keypunch was 1983. My elder daughter's birth announcements were sent on punch cards. They were anachronistic even back then.
I'm a big fan of having the individual, when possible, install, monitor his/her own system. I ran into problems with my PC lately and received wonderful advice from many folks. I only ask for help as a last resort. Otherwise, I research what I need to do.
The poster "backhoe" typed up this helpful information a few weeks back.
Help for viruses and malware:
For myself, I'd much rather be working on something interesting than doing the rote, no-nothing work that comprises much of IT today.
Get out while the getting is good. I've been in the field for 20 years and am getting out to start my own business...non IT.
>>a need for garbage collection.
Nah, Java, Perl, Ruby and Python do that for you automatically nowadays. Memory leaks are a thing of the past (*snicker*)!
Oh wait, maybe you meant regular garbage (as in household refuse).
Wink, wink...
More inteligent than human's ? Then way does it need us at all ?
As long as their are idiot users out there IT jobs aren't going away!! I'm not saying all users are idiots, but most of them are hehe.
Anybody interested in buying one of these here handsome buggy whips?
The reduction in IT is bsed on current trends in improved efficiency without addressing the fact that the more you can do, the more customers want you to do.
Forth generation languages make product so fast it is incredible when compared to 10 years ago. But customers want far more than they did with character based terminals and keypunch entry.
It balances out.
The only thing that bothers me is the export of existing jobs to places like India, China, etc. We gave China our industrial jobs because we were told that they would be replaced by information jobs. OK, so what is supposed to replace information level jobs?
Somebody has to take it out of the shipping box and plug it into the wall. (But they are probably working on a way to automate that as well.)
While most outsourced occupations have lasted at least one generation, IT is not one of them. Although this is frustrating for recent grads and even seasoned veterans (10+years), it is not unexpected.
BINGO!!
hehehe...self-healing.
Of course, this is the same Gartner that declared the mainframe computer "dead" in 1991.
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