Re: Confessions of a CoBOL programmer



In article <9q9qu35lpv209ksgt2rjuiioju662okf4o@xxxxxxx>,
Howard Brazee <howard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=printArticleBasic&articleId=9062478

From the above:

--begin quoted text:

In a 2007 Micro Focus survey of its customers, more than 75% of CIOs said
they would need more Cobol programmers over the next five years, and 73%
were already having a hard time finding trained Cobol professionals.

--end quoted text

Never mind that Micro Focus is looking to sell various products... note,
once again, the 'already having a hard time finding trained Cobol
professionals'.

At what rate (or range of rates)?

(If it is true that Everyone Knows the population having (skill) is older
and Everyone Knows that older workers frequently command higher salaries
then Everyone Knows the population having (skill) may frequently command
higher salaries... on the other hand... the ability of those human-being
type folks to deny what seem to be logically valid conclusions has been
seen before... let me see... nigh a decade back, from
<http://groups.google.com/group/comp.software.year-2000/msg/da8c9f200ee62949?dmode=source>

--begin quoted text:

On what do I base my conclusion? Why... on A Story, of course...
apochryphal, perhaps, but Eminently Plausible:

A corporate seminar on drug-abuse in the workplace was being addressed by
a speaker. He began by asking 'How many of you think that drug abuse is a
problem in your community?'


The audience, suits, corner-office-dwellers and their sycophants,
dutifully raised hands... this is something Everyone Knows, right?


The speaker continued, quackity quack, woof woof... and then asked 'Now,
how many of you think that your workforce accurately reflects the
composition of your community?'


Again hands went up... as they'd damned well *better*, otherwise a hurkin'
great EEO lawsuit comes down the pike. Anyhow, the speaker then drones
on, blurbity blurble, honk honk wheet... and then asks 'Now, how many of
you think that drug abuse is a problem in your workforce?'


No hands go up.

--end quoted text

DD

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Confessions of a CoBOL programmer
    ... In a 2007 Micro Focus survey of its customers, ... were already having a hard time finding trained Cobol professionals. ... programmers under the age of 50. ... Looking around and doing a bit of guessing about ages, our Cobol programmers ...
    (comp.lang.cobol)
  • Re: Confessions of a CoBOL programmer
    ... were already having a hard time finding trained Cobol professionals. ... Never mind that Micro Focus is looking to sell various products... ... programmers under the age of 50. ...
    (comp.lang.cobol)
  • Re: Confessions of a CoBOL programmer
    ... were already having a hard time finding trained Cobol professionals. ... Never mind that Micro Focus is looking to sell various products... ... programmers under the age of 50. ...
    (comp.lang.cobol)