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Half of Recent College Grands Under/Un-employed


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2012 Jul 23, 6:43pm   33,489 views  85 comments

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http://www.cleveland.com/business/index.ssf/2012/04/half_of_recent_college_grads_u.html

While there's strong demand in science, education and health fields, arts and humanities flounder. Median wages for those with bachelor's degrees are down from 2000, hit by technological changes that are eliminating midlevel jobs such as bank tellers. Most future job openings are projected to be in lower-skilled positions such as home health aides, who can provide personalized attention as the U.S. population ages.
............
Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University who analyzed the numbers, said many people with a bachelor's degree face a double whammy of rising tuition and poor job outcomes. "Simply put, we're failing kids coming out of college," he said, emphasizing that when it comes to jobs, a college major can make all the difference. "We're going to need a lot better job growth and connections to the labor market, otherwise college debt will grow."
............
In the last year, they were more likely to be employed as waiters, waitresses, bartenders and food-service helpers than as engineers, physicists, chemists and mathematicians combined (100,000 versus 90,000). There were more working in office-related jobs such as receptionist or payroll clerk than in all computer professional jobs (163,000 versus 100,000). More also were employed as cashiers, retail clerks and customer representatives than engineers (125,000 versus 80,000).

According to government projections released last month, only three of the 30 occupations with the largest projected number of job openings by 2020 will require a bachelor's degree or higher to fill the position -- teachers, college professors and accountants. Most job openings are in professions such as retail sales, fast food and truck driving, jobs which aren't easily replaced by computers.

College graduates who majored in zoology, anthropology, philosophy, art history and humanities were among the least likely to find jobs appropriate to their education level; those with nursing, teaching, accounting or computer science degrees were among the most likely.
........
Any job gains are going mostly to workers at the top and bottom of the wage scale, at the expense of middle-income jobs commonly held by bachelor's degree holders. By some studies, up to 95 percent of positions lost during the economic recovery occurred in middle-income occupations such as bank tellers, the type of job not expected to return in a more high-tech age.
........
After earning a biology degree last May, the only job he could find was as a construction worker for five months before he quit to focus on finding a job in his academic field. He applied for positions in laboratories but was told they were looking for people with specialized certifications.

"I thought that me having a biology degree was a gold ticket for me getting into places, but every other job wants you to have previous history in the field," he said. Edwards, who has about $5,500 in student debt, recently met with a career counselor at Middle Tennessee State University. The counselor's main advice: Pursue further education.

"Everyone is always telling you, 'Go to college,'" Edwards said. "But when you graduate, it's kind of an empty cliff."

A pretty good article for the most part, not too much pro status quo fluff. One of the things it downplays though is the fact that even for people with a STEM (Science, Tech, Engineering, Math) degree things are getting pretty tough right now. Paid internships are vanishing rapidly to be replaced by neo-slavery unpaid internships which do little to educate or advance employees, they mostly end up doing the bottom rung work that normally OJT's would be doing, only for free.

Which of course is driving down wages...just like I expected years ago. This will only get worse as time goes on.

If you follow Derek Lowe's blog he talks about this often, though from a bio-tech perspective. http://pipeline.corante.com/archives/2012/07/09/scientist_shortage_the_media_starts_to_catch_on.php

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41   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 1:05am  

Just for some closure on this topic, concerning medicine as a second career, a decent option is to attend either one's state program or go to eastern Europe [provided that the foreign school is listed, so that its graduates are able to sit for the US foreign medical licensing exam back home]; that'll lower the costs from $250K to $60K. If one takes the foreign path, assuming no slots in the state med, it pretty much excludes one getting into an elite surgical residency at a Hopkins or Mayo or an extremely selective program like Dermatology but there are plenty of lesser renown residencies for non-US school graduates. In addition, unlike internationals, you won't need to apply for a work visa, once you're back from Romania.

Also, as an older person, one can still work 3 days per week in medicine or even just *moonlight*, keeping the hours in the 28-32 hours/week but still earning close to $100K. As an engineer, it's virtually impossible to be a lifelong contractor and find work, for a continuous 10-11 months per year like a doctor, given the lack of prowess in corporate America to maintain R&D and production facilities stateside, along with rampant age discrimination.

A part-time doctor beats working at a Home Depot or Bed & Breakfast, when corporate America decides to take one into the back shed.

In my case, I have the $250K from my hedge fund P/L already, but still, I'd choose eastern Europe over a private US med because I'm not so concerned about the prestige clinics or ultra competitive residencies. I simply want to be a productive person & I don't think trading is a meaningful endeavor in life.

42   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 1:35am  

CaptainShuddup says

Hey man come on, you haven't provided any data you've shown pictures, graphics in an article to support the authors assertions. Data is what I do. Good data is most always presented as is, it is only dirty extrapolations that the presenter has to play dress up with, and present it as charts.

Captain, can you provide a description of how recruiting happens in your sub-specialty? You can use aliases and such, to keep your companies' and individual names' private.

In general, the folks I knew in your shoes tended to have worked on specialized govt/defense projects, where they're always re-hired on a contractual basis, to keep let's say a satellite system going, for years or even decades at a time. In general, no new persons gained enough experience, to replace the old timer contractors in these types of arenas. But still, these fellows do have some sort of undergrad experience, like an associates degree, even if they didn't bother to get a full BA for the HR losers.

43   zzyzzx   2012 Jul 25, 1:44am  

Rin says

Just for some closure on this topic, concerning medicine as a second career, a decent option is to attend either one's state program or go to eastern Europe [provided that the foreign school is listed, so that its graduates are able to sit for the US foreign medical licensing exam back home]; that'll lower the costs from $250K to $60K. If one takes the foreign path, assuming no slots in the state med, it pretty much excludes one getting into an elite surgical residency at a Hopkins or Mayo or an extremely selective program like Dermatology but there are plenty of lesser renown residencies for non-US school graduates. In addition, unlike internationals, you won't need to apply for a work visa, once you're back from Romania.

What about the language barrier? In Romania even the alphabet is different. You would be better of going to Croatia, Slovenia, or Poland where at least the alphabet is the same? I've been thinking about stuff like this sine I could easily get Polish citizenship, I assume that would help?

44   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 1:47am  

zzyzzx says

What about the language barrier? In Romania even the alphabet is different. You would be better of going to Croatia, Slovenia, or Poland where at least the alphabet is the same?

Well, these are the English programs at those schools, basically designed to make 'em more International and attract UK and Commonwealth students. And yes, you do need to spend more time there, since there are a couple of added years, to learn some of the local language, for the clinical rotations. But the costs, even with the added time, is still less than $70K overall.

45   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 1:50am  

zzyzzx says

I've been thinking about stuff like this sine I could easily get Polish citizenship, I assume that would help?

All the power to you, just check to see if you can take the foreign medical licensing exam from whatever program you're interested in, when you're back home.

46   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 1:52am  

I wonder why people are still loading up on debt and get college degrees. Sounds like a bad investment to me.

Perhaps erudition should replace education?

47   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 2:02am  

Peter P says

I wonder why people are still loading up on debt and get college degrees. Sounds like a bad investment to me.

Perhaps erudition should replace education?

Well, here's London Univ's distance program for a low tuition:

(http://www.londoninternational.ac.uk/courses/undergraduate/lse/bsc-economics)

It is possible to work internships and do a UK program, like above, and then, fulfill the HR requirements, when you switch jobs.

48   zzyzzx   2012 Jul 25, 2:20am  

Rin says

Well, these are the English programs at those schools, basically designed to make 'em more International and attract UK and Commonwealth students. And yes, you do need to spend more time there, since there are a couple of added years, to learn some of the local language, for the clinical rotations. But the costs, even with the added time, is still less than $70K overall.

Can't you work and go to school there, to help defray the costs?

49   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 2:27am  

zzyzzx says

Can't you work and go to school there, to help defray the costs?

I can't see how that would be possible, without a type of telecommuting gig back at home.

50   zzyzzx   2012 Jul 25, 2:31am  

Rin says

I can't see how that would be possible, without a type of telecommuting gig back at home.

OK, so if one goes to one of these schools, it not possible to get a job locally because unemployment is so high?

51   mdovell   2012 Jul 25, 2:37am  

tts says

Is a college degree necessary for work that was done by OJT's for decades just fine? Not really no. However if the employer decides that it suddenly is necessary, then that no gets changed to yes. Which is exactly what has been happening for years now but has particularly become prevalent recently, the Great Recession has drastically accelerated the credentialism trends.

But at the same point if that's what the market wants...

Competition still exists for employees. OJT means time, money and energy and frankly not all employers want to do that. An organization could have a standardized test to weed some weak applicants out but that would cost money and time as well. So a degree is the baseline standard (undergrad usually).

Let's say one company decides it wants better employees. So it hikes requirements and hikes salaries. People from other companies leave to go to it. Eventually the heat is felt by others who do the same. Repeat for a few decades.

Meanwhile you have other checks that creeped in since the 80's. By the 90's most did drug tests. Now they have criminal background. Pepsi got in trouble for not considering those that were arrested...not tried but just arrested even on a bad charge. Soon it will be credit checks if you work in finance or even to be a cashier.CaptainShuddup says

I laugh at your chart that suggests that Computer Science jobs start at 34K. Photoshop novice make more than that, designing Facebook pages.

Huh? Ever hear of elance.com Computers are world wide and so is the internet. Offshoring pretty much eliminated much of the IT sector starting a decade or so ago. What specifically can be said about code made in the USA vs that of India, South Africa, Russia or Brazil? It is non physical work and as such does not require it to be performed in the USA. You can get programming work for probably 66% less than what you see in the USA. And there is no social security, medicare, health insurance, 401k etc.

52   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 3:06am  

zzyzzx says

Rin says

I can't see how that would be possible, without a type of telecommuting gig back at home.

OK, so if one goes to one of these schools, it not possible to get a job locally because unemployment is so high?

I think it goes a bit beyond that. For the most part, our collective experiences are designed to move from let's say Rochester NY to Houston TX, and find some equivalent types of jobs, given a location change within the US or Canada. The other aspect is the color of the local industries; Rochester is a part of the upstate NY 'rust belt', whereas Houston is the up and coming energy town, and thus, relevant experiences at let's say Eastman, may result in a major pay hike, upon getting hired by Exxon-Mobil in TX. That's a huge boost for one's career in petrochemicals. The USA still has this type of career mobility, if you're adventurous.

In much of Europe, however, one generally needs a contact on the inside to get hired. The place typically frowns upon newcomers, at least in terms of the whole white collar hiring space. Now, this isn't saying that US based multinational corps may not hire you, but if your focus is medical school, I can't imagine how one could fit together an ex-pat job with that of a demanding full time program.

53   Tenpoundbass   2012 Jul 25, 3:23am  

mdovell says

What specifically can be said about code made in the USA vs that of India, South Africa, Russia or Brazil?

Wrong, that sentiment was so 2001, America tried that. The problem with off shoring IT work is the programmer that actually knows about the project is at home sleeping off the full day's work of coding he did while we were sleeping in the US. The folks available for QA and support in their Wee hours which are our prime office and meeting hours. Are not the on top of their game.
The result is the useless auto check out cashier machines that make you take every thing out of the bagging area and start over. And ultimately a live cashier physically scanning your order anyway.

Foreign developers don't worry me, American business men are now willing to pay more to have their developers in the same country if not the same building. So at any moments notice, they can have that person present to defend, fix or enlighten them on the project at hand.

They want results NOW.

I spent a year out of work, while corporate America figured out they can't have their domain schema developed in India. Software that you intend to package yes that works. But not for software than runs the enterprise and manages jobs and data tasks.

54   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Jul 25, 4:56am  

B-b-but, what about the 1 Billion customers and the "High Tech Jobs of the Future?"

Do you mean the Politicians and Corporations that pushed for NAFTA, WTO, and Offshoring and Lowest Tariff Rates in History lied to us? They only wanted to move abroad for cheap labor to sell back to the US, not to sell US goods abroad?

Seems to me salaries have stagnated for more than a decade while benefits got slashed, work hours grew longer, and jobs became more scarce.

Looks like the policy ain't working for the general welfare. But it is working for the top 1%, and that makes the Republicans and Democrats very happy.

BTW. Apple only employs 80,000 worldwide, and how many of them are working at the Genius Bar or are working the mail room below middle class income levels?

Compare that to any auto maker, today or back then, in number of jobs and median wage.

Manufacturing is wealth. Porn, Donuts, Financial Fraud, and Copyrighted Animated Characters can not support 310M people.

55   Rin   2012 Jul 25, 5:01am  

CaptainShuddup says

, that sentiment was so 2001, America tried that. The problem with off shoring IT work is the programmer that actually knows about the project is at home sleeping off the full day's work of coding he did while we were sleeping in the US. The folks available for QA and support in their Wee hours which are our prime office and meeting hours. Are not the on top of their game.

Captain, the reason why that 1st round of IT offshoring failed was that corporate America, like a herd of lemmings, did exactly the same thing w/o considering the risks. They all poured their collective capitals into turning Bangalore-India Inc, into the next South Korea or Taiwan, but for software instead of firmware. Well, that was a joke as India, being a former commodities player for the British Empire, was never an end-to-end solutions provider. Instead, it was a body shop and that aspect of their business culture hadn't changed since Queen Victoria's time. Naturally, software is a value added service, code by itself, is not a *silk or dye* business and thus, it was destined to fail, circa 2006-2009, just as quickly as it had taken off before then.

Today, other Asian players have woken up and realized that in order to win the big global contracts, they need value-added services, not cheap labor. For instance, recent Filipino call centers have not only been taking calls but have been using bulletin boards and chat rooms to categorize problem tickets, gathering more data from alternate sources, and providing more complete follow-up solutions to customers, using text messages, etc, to add greater value to the customers' business concerns.

So I don't exactly see this trend ending anytime soon as the former India Inc will be replaced by other nations which want to cross the digital divide.

56   freak80   2012 Jul 25, 5:42am  

thunderlips11 says

Apple only employs 80,000 worldwide, and how many of them are working at the Genius Bar or are working the mail room below middle class income levels?

And how many of them are working in sweatshops? How many of them committed suicide on the job?

57   freak80   2012 Jul 25, 5:43am  

thunderlips11 says

Manufacturing is wealth. Porn, Donuts, Financial Fraud, and Copyrighted Animated Characters can not support 310M people.

AMEN.

I nominate the above for "quote of the week."

Of course, manufacturing is also pollution. When the Democrats abandoned the working class in the late 60's and embraced environmentalism, it was the beginning of the end of manufacturing in America.

58   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 6:17am  

wthrfrk80 says

Agree 100%. But how can that happen when those same people own our politicians?

unions. you can't outsource everything. if the on site network engineers and the systems administrators and the desktop support specialists unionized and went on strike when outsourcing increased there would be no more outsourcing.

59   freak80   2012 Jul 25, 6:22am  

omgbacon says

unions. you can't outsource everything. if the on site network engineers and the systems administrators and the desktop support specialists unionized and went on strike when outsourcing increased there would be no more outsourcing.

But the Democrat party no longer represents unions or average working people. It represents urban pseudointellectuals, environmentalists, feminists, gays, and Chicano Studies professors. It's been that way since 1968.

And we wonder why the country has been steadily getting worse (economically) since then.

60   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 6:30am  

and tech workers don't want unions for some reason.

but all their complaints about 80 hour weeks, working weekends, understaffed 24x7 coverage and so on could easily be solved by unions.

as long as you're at-will you're at-mercy. doesn't matter how much you're paid or whether or not your company gives you free sodas.

programming jobs can be done from anywhere, at any time, and they usually are. just because the programmer is local doesn't mean he's ever actually in the office working 9 - 5. they don't do time in the office, despise meetings, like their independence and then they wonder why their job gets moved 12 time zones away to be performed by someone who also works odd hours (compared to the hours kept by everyone else in PST) and also communicates poorly through email. yeah there can be a quality issue, but those quality issues become very easily rationalized when you look at the cost savings on salary and benefits.

but the rest of the IT world can't easily be outsourced. if those on-shore network engineers and systems admins stopped plugging in cables and racking and stacking systems guess what happens?

61   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 6:41am  

Ever heard of IaaS?

62   tts   2012 Jul 25, 9:47am  

CaptainShuddup says

Let's just say, companies that don't have your traditional HR departments, live a different reality than that of those that do.

Perhaps but this sounds like a corner case. Most companies, even small ones have a HR of some sort. Even if they don't they still often do what every one else does, instead the manager or owner just does it directly instead of having a HR stooge do it for them.

CaptainShuddup says

And aren't the companies you describe, the ones posting quarterly losses, since 2007, and keep adding States Warn notices around the country?

No, they're doing quite well actually.

CaptainShuddup says

Hey man come on, you haven't provided any data you've shown pictures, graphics in an article to support the authors assertions. Data is what I do. Good data is most always presented as is,

This amounts to, "its not data unless I say it is" which is ridiculous. Whether in paragraph form or a Excel spread sheet or a pie graph data is data. I choose to often post charts because they make complex issues easily understandable, there are ways to be deceptive when doing this but you haven't demonstrated that I'm doing so at all, you're just making the claim wholesale.

Never no mind that I didn't generate those charts, I found them, and that many times the source data is often posted on the charts themselves along with the chart author's name.

CaptainShuddup says

I laugh at your chart that suggests that Computer Science jobs start at 34K. Photoshop novice make more than that, designing Facebook pages.

Apparently not, going by the chart which is relevant since you haven't actually discredited it in any way.

Even if you want to ignore that chart the other charts noting college grad. income in older age groups and worker income since the 70's clearly show large drops in progress and that is from 2 different sources. You haven't even tried to show differently at all, just made claims.

CaptainShuddup says

We're all too fat, lazy and stupid and no one is qualified to the jobs, because they are so low wage, no one would want them anyway.

Oh wait a minute, wages are now so low for most jobs no one would want them but its laughable for CS jobs to start at 34K?

CaptainShuddup says

You can do anything in this county besides Practice medicine or law, by just cracking books, and Googling the subject.

This is essentially "BOOTSTRAPS" all over again. That clearly can't work in a rigged job market or economy which is what we have.

63   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 10:22am  

and yes, entry level comp sci jobs start pretty low these days.

64   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 10:29am  

What is a computer science job anyway? Does it require formal methods on computational theories? Or just plugging cables around?

65   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 10:35am  

it's doing science with a computer, duh. you know, where you copy answers off the internet and use wikipedia as an authoritative source.

ha ha ha ha.

no, really it's where they teach you how to gamify things.

66   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 10:37am  

Huh?

67   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 10:41am  

my guess is that any job that involves any kind of programming or system administration is categorized as a computer science job.

68   mdovell   2012 Jul 25, 10:56am  

CaptainShuddup says

Wrong, that sentiment was so 2001, America tried that. The problem with off shoring IT work is the programmer that actually knows about the project is at home sleeping off the full day's work of coding he did while we were sleeping in the US. The folks available for QA and support in their Wee hours which are our prime office and meeting hours. Are not the on top of their game.
The result is the useless auto check out cashier machines that make you take every thing out of the bagging area and start over. And ultimately a live cashier physically scanning your order anyway.

Foreign developers don't worry me, American business men are now willing to pay more to have their developers in the same country if not the same building. So at any moments notice, they can have that person present to defend, fix or enlighten them on the project at hand.

Ever hear of elance.com ? Your argument is a bit weak as not all jobs have a 8-5 schedule. Many companies are national and have to deal with time zones. I had a job on the east coast and often times it would be slow until the pacific coast woke up. Furthermore there are plenty of places without a time zone difference that are cheaper. It isn't that hard to get online access these days.
Most of South America is three hours or less of a time difference relative to the USA (at least the east coast). Going from CA to eastern Brazil is only a five hour difference.

So why is JC Penny getting rid of cashiers?
http://ktar.com/22/1560630/JC-Penny-opting-for-selfcheckout-over-cashiers

Why are box stores scared @%$&less out of amazon.

Here's a little thing to think about. You know those debates about sales taxes online? Basically in that online companies don't have to pay and some in the physical world do so they complain. Well Amazon basically is giving up on the sales taxes. Now why would a company worth tens of billions of dollars WANT to pay more in taxes? Because the argument is weak now. The reason why taxes weren't collected is because amazon didn't have a physical entity. Ok fine so you want us to pay taxes...we'll open up warehouses all over the country
http://www.slate.com/articles/business/small_business/2012/07/amazon_same_day_delivery_how_the_e_commerce_giant_will_destroy_local_retail_.html

The one in CA is going to have 10,000 employees. There's one targeting the NYC market. If a online company can get same day delivery then I know plenty of people that will just shop online. It was never really about a measly sales tax. It was about product selection, price and service.

As for unions in IT there are some in Vermont that work for IBM but I think that's about it. Maybe one could consider the phone company unions as IT as well. The last verizon one didn't even last a month for a strike. Unions don't exactly work. If you have a closed environment with a specific skill set that no one else knows then it can work. But when everything is open...heck high school students are learning programming these days if not middle school..I remember hashing out a few lines of basic code during 5th grade.

Ever see Pawn Stars? The logic of value breaks down to this
Either

1) Something is so common that the value is nil. Everyone has it everyone can do it etc

or

2) Something is so rare that it makes it impossible to price it. Maybe someone that can code assembly in their sleep. But it makes demand so little that it again is pointless.

When it comes down to it we see less and less work to go around because frankly there is just less to do. Automation freed up more time for people to do what they want and that created more inventions. Now we have marginal gains because frankly it isn't that big of a deal for the internet to be 20% faster. If a song takes 20 seconds to download instead of 30 who really cares? Much of what the modern western world buys is disposable and bought with disposable income. That can be fine to a point but we aren't seeing major gains here. Who doesn't have a cell phone at this point? I've personally met people that live in public housing that gets wifi and even they have high speed internet. Who doesn't have some mode of transportation? If you live in a city you can walk, take a bus, cab or rail. If you cannot afford a car there are zipcars and other sharing sites. That brings this to another issue is that people are sharing goods rather than hoarding them. This brings down demand further.

If you examine bubbles in the past usually there is a liquidation of assets and "something" sparks demand. But since we know on this board about the shadow inventory we know that isn't the case.

69   Dan8267   2012 Jul 25, 10:59am  

CaptainShuddup says

The idea is to take what was behind the current door, and use that experience to guide you through the next open door, and have the knowledge to know how to utilize what you find there.

Good in theory, but not applicable in the real world. "Paying your dues" does not get you anywhere. Companies today look at tech workers as day laborers. They want a PHP guy, a JQuery guy, and a .NET guy for three months. Then they want to cut payroll.

Companies do not long term employee tech workers, so they don't care how many times you've payed your dues taking low wages for experience. And experience that is over five years old is nearly worthless anyway. Over ten and it's completely worthless.

In tech, you have to prove yourself at every job and that's just to keep a short-term contract 6 months to 3 years. So you better be getting a high rate.

70   freak80   2012 Jul 25, 11:04am  

omgbacon says

my guess is that any job that involves any kind of programming or system administration is categorized as a computer science job.

A Computer Science job is one where you are paid to create lol-cats:

71   omgbacon   2012 Jul 25, 12:01pm  

a computer science job is a job in which you do technical things at the direction of a non-technical person and have to constantly attempt to find an excuse for why you weren't able to do the impossible in an unreasonable amount of time.

72   everything   2012 Jul 25, 12:40pm  

Two words..

Employment agencies.

I see them springing up all over the place.

73   Tenpoundbass   2012 Jul 25, 12:57pm  

Dan8267 says

Good in theory, but not applicable in the real world. "Paying your dues" does not get you anywhere.

Oh it's not theory.

If you're looking for rewards for the fruits of your labor, then you're missing the whole point of the effort.

Experience is cumbersome collective junk, you're never sure why have it, until you use it.

74   MershedPerturders   2012 Jul 25, 1:15pm  

CaptainShuddup says

Oh it's not theory.

If you're looking for rewards for the fruits of your labor, then you're missing the whole point of the effort.

Experience is cumbersome collective junk, you're never sure why have it, until you use it.

I've got a shitload of experience that tells me the Boomers, who are now withering old senile coots- think the whole country should shape their economic policy around their sense of self-entitlement and accomplishment.

My EXPERIENCE also tells me that your golden years are likely to be completely miserable.

75   MershedPerturders   2012 Jul 25, 1:17pm  

omgbacon says

a computer science job is a job in which you do technical things at the direction of a non-technical person and have to constantly attempt to find an excuse for why you weren't able to do the impossible in an unreasonable amount of time.

It's gotten so bad I had to drop out of the field.

They EXPECT this kind of attitude these days.

76   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 1:29pm  

Software is mostly about soft skills. A trained ape can almost take over the coding part nowadays. :-)

77   MershedPerturders   2012 Jul 25, 1:40pm  

well well well, if it isn't Peter P himself.

'Soft Skills' = bullshit artist and yet another sign that our economy is in a self-destruction phase. It's become part of the culture of California.

78   Peter P   2012 Jul 25, 1:41pm  

MershedPerturders says

well well well, if it isn't Peter P himself.

'Soft Skills' = bullshit artist and yet another sign that our economy is in a self-destruction phase. It's become part of the culture of California.

"Communism doesn't work because people like to own stuff." -Frank Zappa

I do not dispute that. Self-destruction may be a little strong, but it is becoming increasingly zero-sum or negative-sum.

79   freak80   2012 Jul 25, 2:25pm  

MershedPerturders says

'Soft Skills' = bullshit artist

Classic! +1.

80   lisalisa   2012 Jul 25, 10:52pm  

I.T is like any other skilled job. Never needed a seepskin.
Hardware nowadays is throwaway after the warranty expires. Code is written where the best deal is made.

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