Post #72,733
1/5/03 6:01:29 PM
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Nahh
It is like the arguments my wife (Barb) and daughter (Sarah) get into.
Sarah: You promised you would get me (insert any random expensive object) Barb: I did not. You don't need it anyway. Sarah: (now having heard the 2nd part) Yes I do. I need it for (x,y,&z).
The key issue is: A) She is NOT going to get it. B) Barb can't ever end a discussion with "no", she has to get agreement, so leaves it with some type of opening that will allow the child to accept defeat "rationally", as opposed to merely because we say so. C) Sarah will never accept the argument is over, and will hammer in on the 2nd part, just annoying us more and more.
So it will escalate, screaming will occur, room will be sent too, and then, 10 minutes later,
IT STARTS AGAIN!
A) You will never get a "union". The type of work we do is far more thinking than anything else. If not, it WILL be automated.
B) You will never accept it.
C) It's STARTING AGAIN!
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Post #72,751
1/5/03 6:40:15 PM
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Right!
See? It's human nature. Some things we just "won't go there".
I hated the unions too. I cheered when Reagan screwed the traffic controllers (well, they probably deserved it). But as time went on I met people who demonstrated my errors.
-drl
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Post #72,754
1/5/03 6:43:13 PM
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Uh, I don't get this:
A) You will never get a "union". The type of work we do is far more thinking than anything else. If not, it WILL be automated. What, is the second sentence somehow supposed to be causally connected to the first?
[link|mailto:MyUserId@MyISP.CountryCode|Christian R. Conrad] (I live in Finland, and my e-mail in-box is at the Saunalahti company.)
Your lies are of Microsoftian Scale and boring to boot. Your 'depression' may be the closest you ever come to recognizing truth: you have no 'inferiority complex', you are inferior - and something inside you recognizes this. - [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=71575|Ashton Brown]
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Post #72,782
1/5/03 7:32:06 PM
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Yup
A) You will never get a "union". The type of work we do is far more thinking than anything else. If not, it WILL be automated.
What, is the second sentence somehow supposed to be causally connected to the first?
Yes. The purpose of a union is to ensure that interchangable people are not interchanged based on management's whim.
My premise is that most of the work that "IT" professionals do are either extremely repetitive pushbutton work, which is really following a series of directions or extremely complex work which requires a large amount of experience, education, and talent.
In the case of the 1st category, the work is little different than textile factory workers around 1812. When those jobs got automated out of existence, there was a lot of screaming too.
If a person with little or no experience can be trained to do your job, then no amount of unionizing can save you. First it will be given to the lowest bidder, and then it will be automated out of existence. It is easier to automate this type of work than to automate factory work because this is almost ALL software, as opposed to factory work that needs lots of robotic hardware.
In the case of the 2nd category, there are far fewer people who can do the job, and far less need for a large number of those people, so the supply and demand balance out.
I am still not sure what deSitter is focusing on here. Is he lumping in (hhmm) network install, server support, general infrastructure along with internal applications development vs external application development. Huge disparity of skills and responsibilities.
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Post #72,784
1/5/03 7:36:08 PM
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So you're assuming the second category doesn't need a union?
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Post #72,787
1/5/03 7:42:39 PM
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Yup
They are not interchangeable.
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Post #72,794
1/5/03 8:20:55 PM
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Only if
The supply and demand sorta even out only if the managers are rational about how important the programmers are to the company.
I've seen more then one project go down in flames because the company wouldn't give key techincal people raises. This causes the smart people to jump ship, and then the managers are amazed that the $10 dollar an our VB programmers they hired can't build a high performance web server.
Jay
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Post #72,803
1/5/03 8:41:30 PM
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But it's appropriate
If management can't judge the value of the employees, then the business deserves to die.
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Post #72,801
1/5/03 8:36:37 PM
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Yup
Well, there are journeyman electricians, and there are 30 year masters. They belong to the same union. Some put in runway lights all over the country/world, others rig a dome light in the shitter. It's electrical work. I claim that IT work is identifiable enough to be treated the same way.
-drl
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Post #72,806
1/5/03 8:44:47 PM
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Try it
Give a list of identifiable skills and and what you consider their value, and compare against electricians.
Also, make sure you list what each is allowed to do so they don't step into another's territory.
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