If you study a programming language or technology the knowledge is hugely de-valued when a new version comes along, or when that particar techology becomes redundant.
Ive found this to be not true. Grads might know ansi SQL but not Oracle PLSQL . They might be taught Java or an early version of VB but not .NET which is the current flavour of the month.most likely be up-to date with the latest prog language and tools
There is a risk involved in this kind of move. Note that I'm not saying it's right or wrong - just want to call out the risk.daltonr said:If you focus on what I call soft skills (Project Management, Requirements Elicitation, Requirements Change Management, Quality Assurance etc).
There may be new tools to help you, but you're not going to be forced to re-trainjust because some vendor has released a new tool. You'll still be a good Project Manager, or a Good Requirements Engineer.
There is a risk involved in this kind of move. Note that I'm not saying it's right or wrong - just want to call out the risk.
By moving to these less technical roles, you are almost certainly ruling yourself out of ever returning to a hands-on technical role, as your technical skills become more & more dated.
I think both parties will have difficulty finding suitable jobs in the years to come as IT companies shift development, R&D and Proj Mgt overseas (Eastern Europe & India).
There is a valid concern that more & more of the Irish-based companies are being taken over by multi-nationals (e.g. PMPA/AXA, Friends First/Eureko, ACCBank/Rabobank). This can result in a lot of the IT work moving back to corporate HQ in some cases.daltonr said:There will allways be Blue Chip companies like Banks, Insurance companies etc based in Ireland, if only to serve the Irish Market, and IT will continue to become MORE not less important to them.
Theres good pay for these two skills - J2EE, Oracle Database Development. High daily contract rates anyways.
casiopea said:Based on that i would not recommend someone to pursue J2EE.
What i find interesting right now are opensource technologies, i dont think companies are as anxious anymore to spend money license fees, but rather investigate opensource and spend money (which is what an account manager is interested in) on training and consulting.
Me too but I know from experience that many companies are perfectly willing to spend money on non F/OSS tools and applications especially when they are more efficient/effective and better supported. For example, on a recent project we had great intentions of using F/OSS development tools across the board (e.g. Eclipse, GCC/G++, wxWidgets, MSYS/MinGW, Subversion etc.) but eventually had to compromise - e.g. use MS VC++ on Windows (and GCC/G++ on Linux)because the development tools were so much easier and faster to use. Obviously the cost of VC++ compared to the cost (free) of the other tools was significant but was justified by the increased productivity. As it happens we are working on stuff related to the ARM7 processor and one can easily get free (e.g. GCC based) development tools for this target but they are a lot less efficient and easy to use than the de facto market leader which is the ARM RealView Developer Suite toolset and which costs between $5K and $10K for a complete embedded target solution but which most ARM7 developers can easily justify due to the increased efficiency and productivity benefits accruing.casiopea said:What i find interesting right now are opensource technologies, i dont think companies are as anxious anymore to spend money license fees, but rather investigate opensource and spend money (which is what an account manager is interested in) on training and consulting.
Gabriel said:J2EE and open source technology are very closely linked and will continue to be so in the future.
a well known operating system and application software development company
SOFTWARE giant Microsoft chose its 20th anniversary in Ireland to announce the creation of 100 jobs in a new research and development centre
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