本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛I agree with you to some extent.
6 years ago when I was still in university. My neighbor was a graduate
of Beijing university in physics. He was a master student in physics
at the univesity. He had a interview with Nortel at that time. But he knew
nothing about C. The night before the interview, he came to my apt. and
I went with him the book: K & R C Programming language. Amazingly,
he remembered eveything I went through with him. He got the job and
excelled in IT bussiness.
I also see some people, after express training in computer science,
pick up the job at the hot time. It is disappointed to see that a Java programmer for internet of several years has no idea how to set up
a home network. Some of them, after passing the steep learning curve,
found there is no effective way to improve the productitity and have little interest in what he/she is doing on daily basis. I also heard some programmers trained by express programs say something like that
"WIndows is good enough, why people keep developing something new
like UNIX and LINUX?"
In long term, good and bad time do not matters that much. I saw many IT
workers lost job they got in the good time. Some companies now are still
hiring top-notched IT professionals.
I agree that IT, as a emerging industry, have more oppportunities that others. I am here not appealing to IT professionals. What I try to is to give
more thought to the non-IT people with background in other areas when
they are wandering.
Thanks for you thoughtful reply.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
6 years ago when I was still in university. My neighbor was a graduate
of Beijing university in physics. He was a master student in physics
at the univesity. He had a interview with Nortel at that time. But he knew
nothing about C. The night before the interview, he came to my apt. and
I went with him the book: K & R C Programming language. Amazingly,
he remembered eveything I went through with him. He got the job and
excelled in IT bussiness.
I also see some people, after express training in computer science,
pick up the job at the hot time. It is disappointed to see that a Java programmer for internet of several years has no idea how to set up
a home network. Some of them, after passing the steep learning curve,
found there is no effective way to improve the productitity and have little interest in what he/she is doing on daily basis. I also heard some programmers trained by express programs say something like that
"WIndows is good enough, why people keep developing something new
like UNIX and LINUX?"
In long term, good and bad time do not matters that much. I saw many IT
workers lost job they got in the good time. Some companies now are still
hiring top-notched IT professionals.
I agree that IT, as a emerging industry, have more oppportunities that others. I am here not appealing to IT professionals. What I try to is to give
more thought to the non-IT people with background in other areas when
they are wandering.
Thanks for you thoughtful reply.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net