On Sunday 07 December 2003 16:29, Michael Havens wrote: > Okay, here is what I'm thinking.... > What is the job market like for IT people? > Here is what I am going to do. My voc. rehab counselor told me about a > school (Maricopa Skill Center) that is thinking of soon starting a prog= ram > focusing itself on training people to become slot machine technichians.= I > ask you all; what is a modern slot machine? Answer: It is a big special= ized > computer with whistles and bells! I am going to prepare myself for this > program by doing as Bob suggested and getting my A+ certs. (THANKS BOB!= ) > As I talked to my father about this further (and I whined about wanting= to > be involved with UNIX) he helped me to realize that the rerpair aspect = of > it is not the whole enchilada. It is quite possible that UNIX might be = the > OS of the casino I am working for. > It is a good thought at least. > What do you all think of my new plan? Michael, Interesting question. There are several technical areas in your comm= ents=20 that are all seeing an enormous amount of change. First, much of the "IT"= =20 area as we've known it for the past 10-20 years is now moving off-shore t= o=20 India, Russia, China and other places where labor, educated labor, is pai= d=20 significantly less than US labor. This move is happening in technical sup= port=20 as well as pure software engineering. And when I hear a technical school=20 hyping their IT program on the television, I'm starting to feel more and = more=20 uneasy about what they are selling versus what the job market may be like= in=20 the US in a couple of years. That's the minus side as I see it. Second, and not clearly a plus or a minus yet, Unix (and the variant= =20 known as Linux) is seeing a very large upswing in popularity, but the fut= ure=20 is somewhat cloudy due, in no small part, to the battles in the courts th= at=20 are now taking shape, and which lead many companies to take a "wait and s= ee"=20 attitude toward open source. While it is true that many companies, even l= arge=20 ones, have embraced it, you'll also find that those very same companies a= re=20 hedging their bets by continuing a positive relationship with closed-sour= ce=20 products. IBM is a good example because they've invested a huge number of= =20 dollars and resources into open source in general and Linux in particular= ,=20 but I dare say that the majority of their revenue from notebook computers= (to=20 pick just one part of their business) comes through paid-up software lice= nses=20 from Microsoft. It's not clear to me, therefore, whether Unix (Linux) is = a=20 "sure bet" just yet. Third, and the one clear positive in my answer, is that Linux is now= in=20 use in gambling machines. I've worked with the engineers who were buildin= g a=20 poker-playing video machine for casinos and those machines are in product= ion=20 as of about two years ago. The company, IGT, is at http://www.igt.com/ an= d=20 you can take a look at their job postings to see what they are looking fo= r. I=20 searched for "software" a few moments ago and turned up several software=20 engineering jobs (requiring a BSEE or equivalent). One of them said,=20 "Required working knowledge of MS Windows and PC-based software developme= nt=20 tools. POSIX, UNIX, RTOS experience desirable. Knowledge of crytography,=20 compression, XML, Java, and DHTML a plus." (I jokingly asked one of the=20 software engineers at IGT how to win using their machines and, in all=20 seriousness, he answered, "Don't play.") Considering all this, I think it might be worth your while to check = some=20 websites of potential employers and, possibly, use the telephone to talk = with=20 someone in their HR department and see if they currently have people on s= taff=20 doing the kinds of things you are considering. Of course, they won't be a= ble=20 to tell you what the situation will be in a year or two. For that, you'll= =20 simply have to roll the dice and see what comes up like the rest of us. Good luck (no pun intended). --=20 Ed Skinner, ed@flat5.net, http://www.flat5.net/