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  3. Is CP making people dumber?

Is CP making people dumber?

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  • M Marc Clifton

    SimulationofSai wrote:

    Outsourcing is deemed a successful business practice both in monetary terms and skills available now.

    I've not heard one person say that outsourcing was successful for their company, and my contacts range from technical people to managers to CEO's/CFO's. Marc

    Thyme In The Country
    Interacx
    My Blog

    J Offline
    J Offline
    JimmyRopes
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    Marc Clifton wrote:

    I've not heard one person say that outsourcing was successful for their company

    Nike :-D

    Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
    Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
    I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes

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    • M MidwestLimey

      Reminds me of the late 90's US market in which the typical recruitment went something like this. A: "We're looking for qualified software engineers .. " B: "I have a degree in BS from S-Hole college and 9 months McDonalds experience" A: "A degree? Great! You're too qualified for our entry level position, how does tech lead sound?" I had a degree in comp sci, 0 real world development experience, needed an H1 visa and had 3 offers in 2 weeks. Of course come the crash the market filtered out those who couldn't cut it ..


      I'm largely language agnostic


      After a while they all bug me :doh:


      T Offline
      T Offline
      Tom Deketelaere
      wrote on last edited by
      #23

      the you were very lucky I have a degree in comp programming, 0 real world experience and had to look for almost a year to find a job everywhere I went the wanted a 20 year old person with 100years of experience (OK a bit over the top but you get the point;P) untill I found my current work (so now I'm happy to be maken money and to be contributing to the economie (but mostly happy about the money part:-D))

      M 1 Reply Last reply
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      • S SimulationofSai

        I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

        SG

        L Offline
        L Offline
        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #24

        No but it is becoming easier for the dumb to survive. Evolution, I miss you :sigh:

        Visit http://www.readytogiveup.com/[^] and do something special today.

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        • T Tom Deketelaere

          the you were very lucky I have a degree in comp programming, 0 real world experience and had to look for almost a year to find a job everywhere I went the wanted a 20 year old person with 100years of experience (OK a bit over the top but you get the point;P) untill I found my current work (so now I'm happy to be maken money and to be contributing to the economie (but mostly happy about the money part:-D))

          M Offline
          M Offline
          MidwestLimey
          wrote on last edited by
          #25

          Yes I was lucky, I graduated at exactly the right time. By the time the economy went down the toilet I had enough experience and knew enough people to survive. You also learn a fair degree of humility when you find yourself unemployed in a recesion. Even so it only took 6 weeks to find a job with only a 1k/y cut, not too shabby :-) In my experience to date, when you have 5 or so years in the industry (and keep up with the technology) getting a job isn't that hard.


          I'm largely language agnostic


          After a while they all bug me :doh:


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          • M MidwestLimey

            Yes I was lucky, I graduated at exactly the right time. By the time the economy went down the toilet I had enough experience and knew enough people to survive. You also learn a fair degree of humility when you find yourself unemployed in a recesion. Even so it only took 6 weeks to find a job with only a 1k/y cut, not too shabby :-) In my experience to date, when you have 5 or so years in the industry (and keep up with the technology) getting a job isn't that hard.


            I'm largely language agnostic


            After a while they all bug me :doh:


            T Offline
            T Offline
            Tom Deketelaere
            wrote on last edited by
            #26

            yeah it's getting that 5 years experience that is the problem these days ah well I'm on my way now so...;P

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            • H Hans Dietrich

              Antony M Kancidrowski wrote:

              I do not see a problem with any level of question posed on forums...

              I agree. It's not the questions that are the problem, it's the answers. If I see a post that says, "Urgent! How do I write a word processor?", I respond, "Post some of your code, and we will tell you if you're on the right track." The thing that surprised me in your post was the order you gave:

              Antony M Kancidrowski wrote:

              My standard line of fire goes (Collegues, friends, internet, books)

              For me, going to people I work with for some help has to involve something serious, because I know that I'm interrupting their work and causing them to lose their concentration. So I always start with the internet, and then books (if I'm at home).

              Best wishes, Hans


              [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

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              Antony M Kancidrowski
              wrote on last edited by
              #27

              Hans Dietrich wrote:

              For me, going to people I work with for some help has to involve something serious, because I know that I'm interrupting their work and causing them to lose their concentration.

              That is true. My order is flexible and all depends on gauging if my collegues are busy. It may be my working environment that is fairly unique. There are only 4 of us who work together on this software. Three of us share an office and there are always times in the day in which we talk to each other, questions usually get asked then. It is easy to gauge if asking a quick question will not distract. Friends I usually ask via email (fairly non-intrusive). After thinking a little more about this I consult MS documentation before asking Collegues etc.. So really books (if you count MS docs as books) comes first.

              Ant. I'm hard, yet soft.
              I'm coloured, yet clear.
              I'm fruity and sweet.
              I'm jelly, what am I? Muse on it further, I shall return!
              - David Walliams (Little Britain)

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              • S SimulationofSai

                I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

                SG

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Jerry Hammond
                wrote on last edited by
                #28

                I've been a member for over 4 years(?)and this has been a regular rant for all that time.:(

                "We are all repositories for genetically-encoded information that we're all spreading back and forth amongst each other, all the time. We're just lousy with information." - Neal Stephenson

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                • S SimulationofSai

                  I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

                  SG

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Leslie Sanford
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #29

                  SimulationofSai wrote:

                  No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....

                  I wasn't aware that CP has a nasty reputation. Where does your perception come from?

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                  • S SimulationofSai

                    I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

                    SG

                    L Offline
                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #30

                    I don't think it is making more stupid - what I put it down to is that computers have become more and more accessible as have the development tools. This means there is a wider range of people to ask dumb questions. At the risk of sounding racist I have noticed a sharp incline of stupid questions coming from developers in countries we outsource to (ie they offer a cheap quote but we still end up doing the work). I am no genius and have asked my fair share of dumb questions I see your point many people now expect code on a plate (no names cough software_specialist cough). I no doubt will get lots of replies with my dumb questions quoted now :p Dan

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                    • S SimulationofSai

                      If it was not really successful, would it have lasted for so many years? I'd say it's been around for about 10 years in India now, probably more. Nor do I see any stop in the work flowing in. Sure, there are a lot of folks yelling that it's bad, and I've come across customers who plainly have said that the work was bad. But that was because they had *absolutely* no idea on how to put across a requirement, use a developer from another country and convince him to think on the his(customers's) terms. I knew a team that worked as an off-shore extension of a team in US. They were contracted for 40 hours a week, had some very good programmers, but who were barely used for about 10 hours or less. At the end of the contract, the business manager from the client cribbed that we did not work enough and was not up to expectations, when in truth, the technology manager never figured out how to make use of the team, and simply reported to his boss that the team was not good. I don't expect you to believe that we weren't at fault, but yes, we have our own arguments to put forth. And not least of all, the scale of work done and the money that flows, proves otherwise. Yes, outsourcing is dying, but instead, it's replaced by getting all the work done here from a local office. Name a big multinational software company that does *not* have a technology center here.

                      SG

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                      M Offline
                      Marc Clifton
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #31

                      SimulationofSai wrote:

                      If it was not really successful, would it have lasted for so many years?

                      If smoking is proven to cause all sorts of bad health effects, wouldn't people stop smoking or never start? The point being, businesses don't look at failures of other businesses a) because businesses don't make their internal failures public and b) because they think they know better and can do better. As to outsourcing, on paper, the financials look great, which is why the practice continues to grow.

                      SimulationofSai wrote:

                      But that was because they had *absolutely* no idea on how to put across a requirement, use a developer from another country and convince him to think on the his(customers's) terms.

                      Of course, and this is true whether it's outsourced or not. But in my direct experience with outsourcing, none of the programmers ever came back with "are you sure this is what you wanted, and can you verify I'm understanding it correctly", which happens a lot more when you can walk across the hall to the guy that wrote the spec or call the customer at a reasonable hour of the day to verify requirements.

                      SimulationofSai wrote:

                      I don't expect you to believe that we weren't at fault, but yes, we have our own arguments to put forth.

                      Oh, I DO believe you. Marc

                      Thyme In The Country
                      Interacx
                      My Blog

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                      0
                      • M Marc Clifton

                        SimulationofSai wrote:

                        If it was not really successful, would it have lasted for so many years?

                        If smoking is proven to cause all sorts of bad health effects, wouldn't people stop smoking or never start? The point being, businesses don't look at failures of other businesses a) because businesses don't make their internal failures public and b) because they think they know better and can do better. As to outsourcing, on paper, the financials look great, which is why the practice continues to grow.

                        SimulationofSai wrote:

                        But that was because they had *absolutely* no idea on how to put across a requirement, use a developer from another country and convince him to think on the his(customers's) terms.

                        Of course, and this is true whether it's outsourced or not. But in my direct experience with outsourcing, none of the programmers ever came back with "are you sure this is what you wanted, and can you verify I'm understanding it correctly", which happens a lot more when you can walk across the hall to the guy that wrote the spec or call the customer at a reasonable hour of the day to verify requirements.

                        SimulationofSai wrote:

                        I don't expect you to believe that we weren't at fault, but yes, we have our own arguments to put forth.

                        Oh, I DO believe you. Marc

                        Thyme In The Country
                        Interacx
                        My Blog

                        Z Offline
                        Z Offline
                        Zoltan Balazs
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #32

                        I understand why people are upset and against outsourcing. But there are success stories as well. I worked at a company that makes a living from outsourcing. And we worked at a product that was bought by Seagate. To be more specific our group was asked to redo something done in the states. If the company that employs outsourcing takes the time to understand cultural differences than it can and it will work. In my opinion there are some great minds in third world too. But the most important thing is correct project management and communication. Come to think Corel Draw is developed in India (and it's a pretty good product).

                        Network integrated solutions A practical use of the MVC pattern

                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • L Lost User

                          I don't think it is making more stupid - what I put it down to is that computers have become more and more accessible as have the development tools. This means there is a wider range of people to ask dumb questions. At the risk of sounding racist I have noticed a sharp incline of stupid questions coming from developers in countries we outsource to (ie they offer a cheap quote but we still end up doing the work). I am no genius and have asked my fair share of dumb questions I see your point many people now expect code on a plate (no names cough software_specialist cough). I no doubt will get lots of replies with my dumb questions quoted now :p Dan

                          Z Offline
                          Z Offline
                          Zoltan Balazs
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #33

                          The real problem is that nowadays everyone is a programmer or a system administrator. And there is the low quality of education and the lazyness from the part of the students. The result: well...

                          Network integrated solutions A practical use of the MVC pattern

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                          • S SimulationofSai

                            I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

                            SG

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Member 96
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #34

                            :doh: We've talked this to death over the last month, you're late to the game.


                            "I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon

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                            • M Member 96

                              :doh: We've talked this to death over the last month, you're late to the game.


                              "I don't want more choice. I just want better things!" - Edina Monsoon

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                              S Offline
                              Sam_c
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #35

                              i agree... --my 2 cent-- what do you expect.. there are many 'dumb' people out there so with programming becoming as pre made as it is of late no wonder more people(the Bright and Dim) find it interesting. I’m guilty of handing them code, just like how i enjoy feeding the monkeys at the zoo, its probably not the best solution but its helps and that’s why I’m here. if i know the answer i tell them. sometimes the api is enough others require the logic and yes some just require it all (which i supply in the hope they take the time to look at and understand). ------------- p.s feeding codemonkeys is funny as they come back for more then dance around crazy when no one feeds them. pp.s we need a dont feed the codemonkey sign at the top of the forum then i'll stop :)

                              Code Project Lounge 101 by John Cardinal :beer::bob::beer:

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                              • Z Zoltan Balazs

                                I understand why people are upset and against outsourcing. But there are success stories as well. I worked at a company that makes a living from outsourcing. And we worked at a product that was bought by Seagate. To be more specific our group was asked to redo something done in the states. If the company that employs outsourcing takes the time to understand cultural differences than it can and it will work. In my opinion there are some great minds in third world too. But the most important thing is correct project management and communication. Come to think Corel Draw is developed in India (and it's a pretty good product).

                                Network integrated solutions A practical use of the MVC pattern

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Shog9 0
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #36

                                Zoltan Balazs wrote:

                                In my opinion there are some great minds in third world too.

                                There are great minds everywhere. Good luck holding onto them if you're hellbent on paying bottom dollar for the work though...

                                Zoltan Balazs wrote:

                                But the most important thing is correct project management and communication.

                                Communication is a two-way process...

                                every night, i kneel at the foot of my bed and thank the Great Overseeing Politicians for protecting my freedoms by reducing their number, as if they were deer in a state park. -- Chris Losinger, Online Poker Players?

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                                • P Paul Conrad

                                  Dave Kreskowiak wrote:

                                  There simply isn't enough qualified individuals to fill those positions

                                  Sure there are, like me, and I just took a career change else wheres and am really looking forward to it. Because I got sick and tired of job hunting with 10+ years experience in IT with two degrees and people expecting me to work for peanuts. So, I found a rewarding job that starts next week :)

                                  "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

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                                  D Offline
                                  Dave Kreskowiak
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #37

                                  Awsome! I've been doing this crap for 22 years now. Does that kind of experience matter?? Nope. You ABSOLUTELY need to have a degree (I don't!) just to get in the door to show them that you know how to launch Notepad, and their HAPPY they hired you! :wtf:! Can you build an AD network, multiple sites, 1,000+ desktops??? "Sure! In my sleep!" Whoops!, no degree, sorry... I'm so tired of being a contractor, I'm ready to throw up on the next "recruiter" that calls me and tells me that 22 years experience doesn't count for a damn thing. Really?? Then how did I survive in this industry all these years??

                                  A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
                                  Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
                                       2006, 2007

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                                  • L Lost User

                                    I agree. My company's CTO told me that outsourcing is a hasty fix and not a "solution" to some of our problems. This is why we outsource very, very little, compared to other companies of our size, and we always have to check the finished product when it is delivered back to us. As far as the original question: "Is CP making people dumber?"... well, do you feel dumber? I sure don't. This is the lounge man, you're allowed to be dumb here...at least that's my opinion. As soon as I leave the lounge I have to put on my thinking cap. -- my two cents

                                    [ Don't do today what can be done tomorrow!! ;) ]

                                    S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    Steven Ashley
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #38

                                    Not only a hasty fix, its been a disaster when you consider few worth while students are entering the programming field in the U.S. for fear they'll be outsourced in the future. It was hard enough to find qualified people when I.T. was a desirable field to go into.

                                    Steven S. Ashley

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                                    0
                                    • S SimulationofSai

                                      I expect a lot of flaming in this thread, but I'd still go ahead and ask the question. Of the couple of years I've been a CP member, I've seen the standard of questions being asked declining steeply. The kind of programming doubts asked in the forums now are appalling!:wtf: Most are just very very basic questions which can be answered by any book or the myriad online tutorials out there in the web. But the saddest thing is knowledgeable members actually answer those *and* sometimes even provide the code.:( If people can't do some research before asking questions like "how do i send mail?, how do i do something on keypress?, how do i print this form?.........", they should'nt be in a IT company and programming. And to top it all, someone does ultimately answer them and many even write sample code. This will only encourage them to jump to forums for every tiny hurdle they fact, and ultimately prove themselves incapable of learning and researching. And a pitiable fact is I see a lot of my countrymen ask these dumb doubts.:sigh: No wonder we've got such a nasty reputation in CP.....:(

                                      SG

                                      realJSOPR Offline
                                      realJSOPR Offline
                                      realJSOP
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #39

                                      A lot of them are dumb when they get here.

                                      "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
                                      -----
                                      "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                                      • D Dave Kreskowiak

                                        Awsome! I've been doing this crap for 22 years now. Does that kind of experience matter?? Nope. You ABSOLUTELY need to have a degree (I don't!) just to get in the door to show them that you know how to launch Notepad, and their HAPPY they hired you! :wtf:! Can you build an AD network, multiple sites, 1,000+ desktops??? "Sure! In my sleep!" Whoops!, no degree, sorry... I'm so tired of being a contractor, I'm ready to throw up on the next "recruiter" that calls me and tells me that 22 years experience doesn't count for a damn thing. Really?? Then how did I survive in this industry all these years??

                                        A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
                                        Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
                                             2006, 2007

                                        P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        Paul Conrad
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #40

                                        So what if you don't have a degree. There is a point in time that if you accumulate enough key experience, it shouldn't really matter a whole lot.

                                        Dave Kreskowiak wrote:

                                        Can you build an AD network, multiple sites, 1,000+ desktops??? "Sure! In my sleep!" Whoops!, no degree, sorry...

                                        You got me on that. Even with my Master's Degree in CSCI :laugh:

                                        Dave Kreskowiak wrote:

                                        I'm ready to throw up on the next "recruiter" that calls me and tells me that 22 years experience doesn't count for a damn thing

                                        Go for it, man :)

                                        "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

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