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Post Follow-up to this messageIn article <9q9qu35lpv209ksgt2rjuiioju662okf4o@4ax.com>, Howard Brazee <howard@brazee.net> wrote: >http://www.computerworld.com/action...906247 8 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... =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
Post Follow-up to this messageOn 28 Mar, 18:32, docdw...@panix.com () wrote: > In article <9q9qu35lpv209ksgt2rjuiioju662ok...@4ax.com>, > Howard Brazee =A0<how...@brazee.net> wrote: > . > > 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)? =A0 > Where I work (yes someone gave me a job) they can not get Cobol programmers under the age of 50 (I am the youngest at 50).
Post Follow-up to this messageOn Fri, 28 Mar 2008 18:32:16 +0000 (UTC), docdwarf@panix.com () wrote: >(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...=source > I see your point, and I love your story that I started to quote below. But I'm not sure that I get the same definitive lesson. For instance, everybody raising their hand to accept the premises but not the logical conclusion could be because they were wrong in accepting the premises. Or it could be that the definitions of "problems a community has" and "problems that a company has" are related. Of course, that might be your point. >--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?'
Post Follow-up to this messageIn article <ac5d2762-1789-4696-8918-8b00948bc141@s12g2000prg.googlegroups.co m>, Alistair <alistair@ld50macca.demon.co.uk> wrote: >On 28 Mar, 18:32, docdw...@panix.com () wrote: > >Where I work (yes someone gave me a job) they can not get Cobol >programmers under the age of 50 (I am the youngest at 50). Have they tried doubling their rates? Have they offered programmers in other languages training in COBOL... with a bonus and pay-rise upon completion of the course so they don't get hired away? DD
Post Follow-up to this messageIn article <cfgqu3tl6n58nukfgug5lvsqpjbqsfvurf@4ax.com>, Howard Brazee <howard@brazee.net> wrote: >On Fri, 28 Mar 2008 18:32:16 +0000 (UTC), docdwarf@panix.com () wrote: > > >I see your point, and I love your story that I started to quote below. >But I'm not sure that I get the same definitive lesson. > >For instance, everybody raising their hand to accept the premises but >not the logical conclusion could be because they were wrong in >accepting the premises. Mr Brazee, that would appear to indicate that they misrepresented their thoughts - 'how many of you think' - or that their thoughts had changed during the short course of the presentation. 'How many of you think that all men are mortal?' (hands up) 'How many of you think that Socrates is a man?' (hands up) 'How many of you think that Socrates is mortal?' 'Uh..... maybe I was wrong when I said I thought all men are mortal... or maybe Socrates isn't a man now.' > >Or it could be that the definitions of "problems a community has" and >"problems that a company has" are related. > >Of course, that might be your point. What I attempted to demonstrate, Mr Brazee, was that the logical abilities demonstrated by some folks in Corporate America can reach levels of refusing to accept things which 'follow of necessity'. (note - Aristotle, Prior Analytics, Book I, Part 1, paragraph 4, sentence 1: 'A syllogism is discourse in which, certain things being stated, something other than what is stated follows of necessity from their being so. I mean by the last phrase that they produce the consequence, and by this, that no further term is required from without in order to make the consequence necessary.' - http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/prior.mb.txt ) DD
Post Follow-up to this message>>> On 3/28/2008 at 12:47 PM, in message <ac5d2762-1789-4696-8918-8b00948bc141@s12g2000prg.googlegroups.com>, Alistair<alistair@ld50macca.demon.co.uk> wrote: > On 28 Mar, 18:32, docdw...@panix.com () wrote: >http://www.computerworld.com/action...intArticleBa... > said > > Where I work (yes someone gave me a job) they can not get Cobol > programmers under the age of 50 (I am the youngest at 50). Looking around and doing a bit of guessing about ages, our Cobol programmers fall in the following age groups: 30's - 5 40's - 8 50's - 4 60's - 2 Something interesting to note is that nine of us were in other areas of the company prior to joining the programming department. All nine fall in to the under-fifty group. Frank
Post Follow-up to this messageIn article <ac5d2762-1789-4696-8918-8b00948bc141@s12g2000prg.googlegroups.co m>, Alistair <alistair@ld50macca.demon.co.uk> writes: > On 28 Mar, 18:32, docdw...@panix.com () wrote: > Where I work (yes someone gave me a job) they can not get Cobol > programmers under the age of 50 (I am the youngest at 50). What's wrong with programmers over 50? bill -- Bill Gunshannon | de-moc-ra-cy (di mok' ra see) n. Three wolves billg999@cs.scranton.edu | and a sheep voting on what's for dinner. University of Scranton | Scranton, Pennsylvania | #include <std.disclaimer.h>
Post Follow-up to this messageIn article <655fquF2dfn1uU1@mid.individual.net>, Bill Gunshannon <billg999@cs.uofs.edu> wrote: [snip] >What's wrong with programmers over 50? That depends on one's criteria for 'wrong', Mr Gunshannon. Some people might say that the ability to look a Corner Office Idiot in the eye and say 'Your 'wonderful innovation' is something I saw at (othercorp) a couple of decades back; it failed then because of (etc)' is something so very Wrong that such a person should not be employed by the organisation. Other people might say 'a person under 35 increases the company's insurance premium by ($n) less than a person over 45; hiring Just Another Programmer who'll cost the company more is wrong.' And, of course there's always what was mentioned earlier in the thread, along the lines of 'older workers have more experience, people with more experience cost more money, spending more money is wrong.' On the other hand... if Everyone Knows that hiring older workers is a good, profitable manuever, benefitting both the worker and the organisation so that the organisation gains enough from the worker's experience that the extra amount spent is well-rewarded... ... then the Free Market would not have required anyone to even *think* of passing laws like the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) of 1967 or the Age Discrimination Act of 1975 or the amendment of the ADEA in 1986 or... need I continue? There's so very much seen as 'wrong' about hiring and retaining older workers that cases go to the United States Supreme Court about it. DD
Post Follow-up to this messageOn 28 Mar, 21:47, docdw...@panix.com () wrote: > In article <ac5d2762-1789-4696-8918-8b00948bc...@s12g2000prg.googlegroups.=[/color ] com>, > > > > > > Alistair =A0<alist...@ld50macca.demon.co.uk> wrote: > a... > > > id % > > , > > > > Have they tried doubling their rates? As a man who has consistently avoided promotion to management you should realise that that is a no-no. ?=A0Have they offered programmers in > other languages training in COBOL... with a bonus and pay-rise upon > completion of the course so they don't get hired away? > The java programmers aren't interested.
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