Am 11. Aug, 2008 schwätzte Josh Coffman so: > Best advice I can give about IT, is don't do it for the money. You won't be > happy as it is really draining and there is no guarantee the money will > always be there. That's true about anything really, but I think its > especially true in tech. Excellent point! Many jobs and industries have really bad downsides. Teachers don't get paid or treated well and the administration puts considerable effort into interfering with the education process. Nurses are overworked, underpaid and often have to deal with people who are not on their best behavior. Tech isn't that bad, but you have to learn a lot and keep learning a lot. If you don't like what you're doing, you won't keep current and you'll stagnate. Tech fields change quickly and Free Software accelerates that change. No one needs to justify their interest to the group. It's an internal decision. Doing tech stuff for work or not does not imply interest or lack of interest in Free Software or PLUG. In other words, we don't need any judgemental posts. There are areas in tech where the learning curve isn't quite so high. Many of them are non-tech jobs in tech groups or sometimes tech jobs in non-tech fields. There's also the possibility of being highly specialized or in a field that has large barriers to entry. You could also make your own job by starting your own company. The current economy is ripe for small companies that can produce good results at a low price. Free Software gives you many advantages in that arena :). As to specific fields that might be doing well, I see more and more need for networking, VoiP ( start playing with Asterisk ), java programmers and security. Database admins are still in demand, but I mostly see requests for Oracle. I think it's because Oracle is a pain and you have to keep searching and searching for Oracle DBAs in this market. MySQL and PostgreSQL admins seem to be fairly easy to find, so you don't see those jobs since they actually fill. PHP jobs might also be in the 'fill quite easily' category. Finding outstanding candidates for most any field is difficult, but most jobs don't require someone who's in the top 2% in the field. ciao, der.hans -- # Learn OpenOffice.org - http://www.LuftHans.com/Classes/BPC110.html # "I have seen the enemy, and it is shiny." -- Benjy Feen, 22Jun2001