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There would be lots of quality people from all over the region, and I'm sure this is an issue for them as well.
To take it to an extreme, if there were a two day conference before or after RDRC just for this, you might get a boatload of non-Rubyists around the region to join you -- maybe even executive types who could help advocate and implement intelligent solutions. If it's open space, it's a lot less work than a traditional conference. It wouldn't have to be large; in fact, the quality of communication is best in my experience when the group is smaller -- 100 would be plenty, and even 30 would be good.
I don't know how it is in Singapore, but in the US, in my experience at least, developers and executives/management are pretty isolated from each other. Maybe we need to build more bridges.
- Keith
This remark from Andy actually reminded me of something about students
in France. Usual disclaimer: not trying to generalize but you
typically have two types of students:
- the enthusiasts, for whom computers are a passion and who already
have some programming and networking skills before reaching the
university
- the others, who are there because "computers are the future" or
because they spend their time playing counter strike and think they
like computers
The first category is usually a minority. In the second category, many
people struggle with classes and tend to think that they will need to
just stay afloat for a few years then once their management skills are
recognized they will become project leader or manager and get their
hands out of coding. Back to France, I even read on some government
agencies orientation papers that a given course in CS would grant you
almost automatically an upgrade in your career after 3 to 5 years of
experience... I hope they stopped writing such stupid things, but then
I guess it was no surprise that we'd get so many people who thought
they didn't really need all that theoretical knowledge, because they'd
quickly climb the corporate ladder anyway.
My 2 cents,
Thomas
On 13 February 2012 09:25, Andy Marks <ama...@thoughtworks.com> wrote:
> p.s Was speaking to some computing students at NTU last week and one of
> them said they only saw doing development as being a job for 3-5 years.
> Terribly small sample size I know, but it sounds like there might be some
> influencing around this stuff happening before many hit the workforce.
>
> Cheers,
> Andy
On 13 February 2012 13:04, Thomas Kister <leand...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The first category is usually a minority. In the second category, many
> people struggle with classes and tend to think that they will need to
> just stay afloat for a few years then once their management skills are
> recognized they will become project leader or manager and get their
> hands out of coding. Back to France, I even read on some government
> agencies orientation papers that a given course in CS would grant you
> almost automatically an upgrade in your career after 3 to 5 years of
> experience... I hope they stopped writing such stupid things, but then
> I guess it was no surprise that we'd get so many people who thought
> they didn't really need all that theoretical knowledge, because they'd
> quickly climb the corporate ladder anyway.
>
3) It is the only course available since all the more popular courses
are already taken.
Anyone who have been involved in hiring fresh grads or training them
know what I mean.
You have to start to wonder about the value of a local CS degree when
it is possible to graduate without being able to program at relatively
simple level.
Koi Hin
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On 13 February 2012 14:01, Jason Ong <velv...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hiring fresh grad need not necessarily come from the CS pool? Extending it
> to folks who has the right aptitude and attitude?
Agreed, and we did. I come from an engineering background myself.
Koi Hin
You have to start to wonder about the value of a local CS degree when
it is possible to graduate without being able to program at relatively
simple level.
3) It is the only course available since all the more popular courses
are already taken.
I ask because I keep hearing of a surge in interest in CS in the US, thanks to the Social Network movie and the like*. But it isn't happening here, and I'm terribly curious to hear people's perspectives on why.
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tom
Ah, God Bless Jessica Tan and her MDship of Microsoft and MPship on the side.
No correlation of course..
.. gahmen data centres use IIS Proxy because its the best product available, right?