[ale] .NET considered harmful
Wolf Halton
wolf at wolfhalton.info
Thu Mar 31 08:29:14 EDT 2011
Did you look at the jobs section of their site? Jerald, I think you are
on target. These people want to hire creatives who create in lots of ways.
On 03/29/2011 09:09 AM, Jerald Sheets wrote:
> Some of this falls under the failure of education, though.
>
> I worked at a small webhosting concern in Baton Rouge that eventually
> got to the point that we refused to hire graduates from LSU's CS
> department for much the same reasons.
>
> LSU was turning out Pascal programmers in 1996 with no knowledge of
> networks (but a limited understanding of protocols) and couldn't
> troubleshoot anything. They could program you under the table in
> Pascal, but had no knowledge of any other arena of programming
> (Assembler? VB? C?...these were reserved for engineering majors and
> were unavailable to CS students except as electives) Sure, with some
> work they could pick up the ColdFusion work and the PHP work our
> developers were doing, but chances were slim (based on our
> experience). It had been proven time and time again they were
> one-trick ponies with blinders on, unwilling to change and unable to
> be employed if they didn't...USUALLY demanding huge salaries just
> because they graduated college.
>
> I think the issue more lies in substance.
>
> For instance, I'm a SysAdmin. I have done a fair amount of ksh/bash
> and, thanks to Weather.com <http://Weather.com>, was introduced to
> Perl and have been very happy with it since.
>
> If I come to you for a Sysadmin job, one of the primary distinguishing
> characteristics of a "Senior" level admin is that they have a language
> or two to their credit. No, not necessarily C or Pascal (although
> they may), but you certainly expect there to be Perl, Shell, perhaps
> Python, maybe even PHP and other "admin-y" sort of qualifications on
> there. If I didn't, wouldn't you consider something to be not quite
> right?
>
> All I think the author is saying is, if I've got a person who is a
> true-blue programmer, a "maker of things", chances are extremely good
> they will have core languages where the sky is the limit, and if they
> really love programming and do it all the time, will ultimately become
> annoyed at "cookie-cutter" environments that lay everything out in
> pre-fabricated ways. Not because those ways are particularly *bad
> *but because it isn't the nature of a programmer of the type they are
> searching for. One who works from the ground up in core programming
> rather than platform development. There is a difference, and it is
> not small.
>
> I'm not saying I agree or disagree, but I am saying I can see where
> he's coming from and its not all that strange.
>
> When we hire systems people, we look for guys that dig Linux/UNIX.
> Those who have a little network at home and are versed in multiple
> flavors of the beast. Those who belong to clubs and have friends in
> the business; who go to seminars or installfests because it's fun and
> this is as much their hobby as it is their career. These guys will
> ultimately be more valuable, informed, happy, and long-lived in the
> position than someone who isn't of this ilk, and only got into UNIX
> because it can "pay the bills".
>
> That, unless I'm sorely mistaken, is what he's looking for at his
> company. It has very little to do with .NET or Microsoft and very
> much to do with the character of the people he's looking for.
>
>
> #!/jerald
> Linux User #183003
> Ubuntu User #32648
> Public GPG Key: http://questy.org/js.asc
> Geek Code: http://questy.org/code
>
> On Mar 29, 2011, at 2:33 AM, Brian Schenken wrote:
>
>> No wordsmithery could make his silly prejudice reasonable. He may be
>> looking for what you accept is a different breed, but he needs to
>> figure out how to articulate it without delving into his own emotional
>> bias. Having written in .net is not evidence of some sort of
>> weakness.
>>
>> Yeah, there's a tremendous market for worthless certs that has
>> polluted IT's and other's talent pools. The quality of education out
>> there has nothing to do with the value of any given technology.
>> That's apples and oranges...
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Ale mailing list
> Ale at ale.org
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.ale.org/pipermail/ale/attachments/20110331/d0d52054/attachment.html
More information about the Ale
mailing list