[Tfug] OT: Proposed increase in H1B visas
Harry McGregor
micros at osef.org
Mon Mar 17 21:23:13 MST 2008
Hi,
I am not going to get into details on the H1B Program, and if it's good
or not, but I can provide several levels of insight.
IT consultants are idiots:
As an IT consultant, I can tell you that many of the people in our
industry are a disgrace to the industry. I have seen servers setup with
RAID0, 30 computer windows networks with a Linux Domain Controller setup
with XP Home instead of Pro, thus no domain auth. I have seen telephone
systems installed (VoIP/Asterisk based) that you could not even return
missed calls on, as the dial plans were not built properly.
Customers are idiots:
I have seen my support contracts (at very reasonable $/month) dropped
due to stupid issues (took too long to fix the owner's secondary home
computer, or change the name on a phone), then the replacement company
actually thought they were have to restore from backup when the server
did not reboot properly (raid id's got replaced), they experienced days
of down time vs virtually zero down time, and had to pay more to get it.
Another previous customer never notified us of an on-going issues
(echo), and then won't let us resolve the issues, nor will they pay for
the work done, or equipment that has been installed.
I actually had to sue the company my dad works for, as they would not
pay for my time recovering a double drive failure in their raid 5. The
president of the company thought I would do it as a "favor" for their IT
manager. We got their data restored (company would not authorize $ for
additional backup tapes, and the one set had not been brought back
onsite for about 4 months). Who does the company send to represent them
in small claims court? Their accountant? Owner of the company? No, my
dad, who had nothing to do with the transaction or work being done.
Trying to hire is a PIA:
I have hired for numerous positions, both at U of A and else where.
Finding qualified IT personnel is almost impossible. I was recently
hiring for a Windows/Linux server position, and had one of the three
finalists properly describe RAID0, and then go on and say it was
appropriate for a server!
Training is available, but never enough:
I teach classes for Pima, mostly centered on Linux and Unix. I end up
going into routing technologies, switching, vlans, windows domains,
basic dns and ipv4 concepts, and general hardware. It's not that the
students have not been exposed to it before in one way or another, but
it's just not enough. Now we are going into virtualization
technologies, and teaching the classes via VMWare server, on a debian
base. I actually took most of a class explaining how virtualization
works, and how it applies to the class. We just started getting into
virtual network interfaces, and setting up routing and firewalling
between two interfaces on the virtual linux box to permit a virtual
windows box to get internet access.
I have of course had good students and bad students over the years
(including one that would always keep his hand on the mouse, even though
we were at the command line, and I had not had the students setup GPM,
think what that will do to your typing speed). I know of several that
have gone on to have very successful IT careers, and others, no matter
how talented they were just give up on the industry (one is in a nursing
program now, and he is in his 40s)
So in summary, it's difficult to find people willing/interested/have a
love of technology that want to go into the industry and who do well,
while at the same time you have people that should not be touching a
computer over charging clients, and the clients liking it. It's really
hard to cut through this. For some reason people seem to think that IT
is a cash cow, it's not, it's a lot of work, a fair amount of stress,
and it has ups and downs, and the pay can be good, but generally not
"high" end. Most entry level nurses in Tucson make more than even the
server related IT people in Tucson.
Harry
keith smith wrote:
>
> Hi fellow tech people,
>
> Seems we have a sort of problem locally with our own congresswoman
> Gabrielle Giffords. <http://giffords.house.gov/contact/index.shtml>
>
> I first learned of this problem on the PLUG list.
>
> Seems she wants to double the amount of H1B visas from 65,000 to
> 130,000 per year and remove the student H1B visas from 20,000 to
> unlimited. The legislation would increase the H-1B cap to 180,000 in
> 2010 to 2015 if the 130,000 cap is reached the year before.
>
> In part the article states:
>
> The Innovation Employment Act, introduced by Representative Gabrielle
> Giffords, an Arizona Democrat, late Thursday, would increase the cap
> in H-1B visas from 65,000 a year to 130,000 a year. In addition, there
> would be no cap on H-1B applications for foreign graduate students
> attending U.S. colleges and studying science, technology and related
> fields. Currently, there's a 20,000-a-year cap on visas for graduate
> students in all fields.
>
> http://www.cio.com/article/197100/Bill_Would_Double_Cap_on_H_B_Visas
>
> I called her office and complained. I think everyone on the list
> should do likewise. Phone: (520) 881-3588.
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------
> Keith Smith
> (520) 207-9877
> PHP Programmer <http://www.netcodeman.com/>
>
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