Posted on 07/21/2009 5:31:52 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
One of the challenges of working in the IT field is staying on top of emerging technologies - while letting go of those that are becoming obsolete. This Global Knowledge article lists 10 areas that are fading into obscurity.
There are some things in life, like good manners, that never go out of style. And there are other things, like clothing styles, that fall in and out of fashion. But when an IT skill falls out of favor, it rarely ever comes back. Heres our list of 10 dying IT skills. If any of these skills is your main expertise, perhaps its time to think about updating your skill set.
1: Asynchronous Transfer Mode
ATM was popular in the late 90s, particularly among carriers, as the answer to overworked frame relay for wide-area networking. It was considered more scalable than frame relay and offered inherent QoS support. It was also marketed as a LAN platform, but that was its weakness. According to Wikipedia, ATM failed to gain wide acceptance in the LAN where IP makes more sense for unifying voice and data on the network. Wikipedia notes that ATM will continue to be deployed by carriers that have committed to existing ATM deployments, but the technology is increasingly challenged by speed and traffic shaping requirements of converged voice and data networks. A growing number of carriers are now using Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS), which integrates the label-switching capabilities of ATM with the packet orientation of IP. IT skills researcher Foote Partners listed ATM in its IT Skills and Certification Pay Index as a non-certified IT skill that has decreased in value in the last six month of 2008.
2: Novell NetWare
Novells network operating system was the de facto standard for LANs in the 1990s, running on more than 70% of enterprise networks. But Novell failed to compete with the marketing might of Microsoft. Novell tried to put up a good fight by acquiring WordPerfect to compete with Windows Office, but that move failed to ignite the market, and Novell eventually sold WordPerfect to Corel in 1996. Novell certifications, such as Certified Novell Engineer, Master Certified Novell Engineer, Certified Novell Certified Directory Engineer, and Novell Administrator, were once hot in the industry. But now, they are featured in Foote Partners list of skills that decreased in value in 2008. Hiring managers want Windows Server and Linux skills instead.
3: Visual J++
Skills pay for Microsofts version of Java declined 37.5% last year, according to the Foote Partners study. The life of J++, which is available with Microsoft Visual Studio 6.0, was not a smooth one. Although Sun Microsystems licensed Java to Microsoft to develop J++, Microsoft failed to implement some features of the official Java standard while implementing other extensions of its own. Sun sued Microsoft for licensing violations in a legal wrangle that lasted three years. Microsoft eventually replaced J++ with Microsoft .NET.
4: Wireless Application Protocol
Yes, people were able to browse the Internet in the late 90s before Apples iPhone. Web site operators would rewrite their content to the WAPs Wireless Markup Language, enabling users to access Web services such as email, stock results and news headlines using their cell phones and PDAs. WAP was not well received at the beginning because WAP sites were slow and lacked the richness of the Web. WAP has also seen different levels of uptake worldwide because of the different wireless regulations and standards around the world. WAP has since evolved and is a feature of Multimedia Messaging Service, but there is now a new generation of competing mobile Web browsers, including Opera Mobile and the iPhones Safari browser.
5: ColdFusion
ColdFusion users rave that this Web programming language is easy to use and quick to jump into, but as many other independent software tools have experienced, its hard to compete with products backed by expensive marketing campaigns from Microsoft and others. The language was originally released in 1995 by Allaire, which was acquired by Macromedia (which itself was purchased by Adobe). Today, it is superseded by Microsoft .NET, Java, PHP, and the language of the moment: open source Ruby on Rails. A quick search of the Indeed.com job aggregator site returned 11,045 jobs seeking PHP skills, compared to 2,027 CF jobs. Even Ruby on Rails, which is a much newer technology - and which received a major boost when Apple packaged it with OS X v10.5 in 2007 returned 1,550 jobs openings on Indeed.com.
6: RAD/extreme programming
Back in the late 90s and early 2000s, the rapid application development and extreme programming development philosophies resulted in quicker and more flexible programming that embraced the ever-changing needs of customers during the development process. In XP, developers adapted to changing requirements at any point during the project life rather than attempting to define all requirements at the beginning. In RAD, developers embraced interactive use of structured techniques and prototyping to define users requirements. The result was accelerated software development. Although the skills were consistently the highest paying in Foote Partners survey since 1999, they began to lose ground in 2003 due to the proliferation of offshore outsourcing of applications development.
7: Siebel
Siebel is one skill that makes a recurring appearance in the Foote Partners list of skills that have lost their luster. Siebel was synonymous with customer relationship management in the late 90s and early 2000s, and the company dominated the market with a 45% share in 2002. Founded by Thomas Siebel, a former Oracle executive with no love lost for his past employer, Siebel competed aggressively with Oracle until 2006 when it was ultimately acquired by the database giant. Siebels complex and expensive CRM software required experts to install and manage. That model lost out to the new breed of software-as-a-service (SaaS) packages from companies such as Salesforce.com, which deliver comparable software over the Web. According to the ITJobsWatch.com, Siebel experts command an average salary of GBP52,684 ($78,564), but thats a slide from GBP55,122 a year ago. Siebel is ranked 319 in the job research sites list of jobs in demand, compared to 310 in 2008.
8: SNA
The introduction of IP and other Internet networking technologies into enterprises in the 1990s signaled the demise of IBMs proprietary Systems Network Architecture. According to Wikipedia, the protocol is still used extensively in banks and other financial transaction networks and so SNA skills continue to appear in job ads. But permanent positions seeking SNA skills are few and far between. ITJobsWatch.com noted that there were three opening for permanent jobs between February and April, compared to 43 during the same period last year. Meanwhile, companies such as HP offer consultants with experience in SNA and other legacy skills, such as OpenVMS and Tru64 UNIX for short-term assignments.
9: HTML
Were not suggesting the Internet is dead, but with the proliferation of easy-to-use WYSIWYG HTML editors enabling non-techies to set up blogs and Web pages, Web site development is no longer a black art. Sure, theres still a need for professional Web developers, but a good grasp of HTML isnt the only skill required of a Web developer. Professional developers often have expertise in Java, AJAX, C++, and .NET, among other programming languages. HTML as a skill lost more than 40% of its value between 2001 and 2003, according to Foote Partners.
10: COBOL
Is it dead or alive? This 40-year-old programming language often appears in lists of dying IT skills. But it also appears in as many articles about organizations with legacy applications written in COBOL that are having a hard time finding workers with COBOL skills. IBM cites statistics that 70% of the worlds business data is still being processed by COBOL applications. But how many of these applications will remain in COBOL for the long term? Even IBM is pushing its customers to build bridges and use service-oriented architecture to transform legacy applications and make them part of a fast and flexible IT architecture. About the author
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Linda Leung is a senior IT journalist with 20 years experience editing and writing news and features for online and print. She has extensive experience creating and launching news Web sites, including most recently, independent communities for customers of Cisco Systems and Microsoft.
LOL
bump
Ha. Our company’s business system is written in COBOL. The IT guys joke they have to recruit programmers at the local rest homes.
Yes and yes.
We had an Acrnet network with a 4-user Novell server running on a 286 machine back in the day. The Arcnet cable looked like Coax. We ran a QuickBasic application with Dbase2 as the database. Everything was MS-DOS.
I must be old now.
Ah yes...
But did you get the
g=c800:5
When nobody knows that one, I’ll know I’m old.
That’s right. RI instructions don’t have a place for an index reg.
I never gave it a lot of thought since the last time I used SAP was in a company where we converted from MRP to SAP and it actually went really well. At the time our switchover was the greatest success story for SAP switch overs. It took us something like 2 years to do it, but the new system (SAP) was much better once you forgot everything you knew before in MRP.
SAP basically runs the company I work at now, except for some legacy systems we used for manufacturing traceability (I am in manufacturing engineering on the electrical side). Scuttlebutt is that we will be going to SAP for all of our transactions on the production floor, so I will have to re-learn how to use the system because it has been about a decade since I last used it.
So I guess to answer your question; I think they make too much at more than twice my salary, so I would say it’s worth more on the order of perhaps 80-90K to be a SAP expert (meaning you can program and manipulate the system).
How any executive could look at that outrageously defective and hideous interface, that plainly showed the incompetence of all involved with it, and say "sure let's pay a few million up front and a few million a year more a year for that" is way beyond me.
I don’t know how it has changed over the last ten years, but when I used it, there did seem to be an inordinate amount of drilling up and down, navigating away from what seemed to be intuitively the correct place to head to in order to get information.
Apparently it wasn’t as bad then as it is now - of course I have no idea since I’ve been able to avoid using it for a long time. I remember that we needed to switch from MRP because our system had become so customized that we just couldn’t get any support for it anymore. Supposedly SAP fixed all that, but now I hear whole hosts of people telling me that our SAP system is pretty heavily customized.
I don’t know, because I don’t program business systems. I just program ATE and the like, some databases, some HTML, some scripting, VB and dabble in other things like C++. I’m an Expert electronics tech, so I don’t have a lot of call for most of the so called IT skills - other than knowing how to fix PCs and having more knowledge that most of the up line tech support personnel do also.
Carefull, you might reveal the secret code of ‘the over the hill gang’, LOL.
Oh man! I wrote a disassembler for the Z80 (TRS-80) back in ‘79. Is no one using that any more? I’m bummed, now. What am I going to do with all these cassette tapes?
Have you heard of the programmer who dies in the shower?
He was grasping the shampoo bottle that says:
lather,
rinse,
repeat
Arcnet Cable IS coax. RG6, I think.
There ya go. Haven’t seen that stuff in a few years myself.
Not if you can design a vacuum tube that is about .002 inches in size:).I personally like the audio tubes produced compared to solid state and digital, but that is just an old ham talking I guess.
Yup...ATM is a lifesupport technology. It’s lingering but there’s nothing new for it as MPLS and IP is all the rage. Why use a bastardized bit system with 12% overhead when you can use a system that has only 2% and protocol support to match ATM reliability?
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