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United States Government Politics IT

Gates Calls for Increase in Tech Labor Supply 827

Randeep Igochyorjob writes "Reuters is reporting that Bill Gates is asking for the removal of quotas for guest workers by removing the caps on non-immigrant alien workers. In a mild attempt at balance, buried near the end of the story, the article also says "Undersecretary of Commerce Phil Bond, a top Bush administration technology official, pointed out that the unemployment rate for engineers is above the national average." I'm wondering if raising wages might attract the "needed" workers from domestic sources or is Gate's request "necessary to remain competitive and innovative"."
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Gates Calls for Increase in Tech Labor Supply

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  • Cashing in on ... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mfh ( 56 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:47PM (#12367391) Homepage Journal
    Gates is doing this to try and save money. It's a pretty smart move considering the average salary in the US for coders is over $90k. In Canada it's more like $35k and that's CAD! I would love to go to the US and earn $65k USD per year. But I'm pretty sure I would have a hard time in Redmond, considering I am a PHP geek.
    • by MillionthMonkey ( 240664 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:57PM (#12367486)
      I recommend that Microsoft fire Ralph Reed [nwsource.com] and replace him with one of the Iranian mullahs with which he is interchangeable. Ralph is pulling in $240,000 per year from MSFT, and while I don't know what kind of cash a mullah pulls in, no way is it six figures.
      • LOL

        I've reread that link several times, and I still can't figure out just who bought who there. It makes for a fascinating (if somewhat poorly written) little story of "You kiss my ass, I'll kiss yours."

        Nothing new to see here, move along, move along, Consumer.

        SB
      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @11:29PM (#12368290)
        H1B visas should be drastically cut with an onerous method of getting someone approved for a H1B position.

        The current method of providing a 1/2 page job advertisement with impossible skill requirments just to qualify an already know offshore worker is unethical and should be made illegal.

        Those job ads are easy to spot since they are much larger than other ads and they have 2 or 5 impossible skills only a few hundred people have.
      • I don't know what kind of cash a mullah pulls in ...

        Just give him a few chickens [worldwiderant.com] and he'll be happy.
    • by Anonymous Luddite ( 808273 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:01PM (#12367518)
      >> In Canada it's more like $35k and that's CAD!

      Do you have a source for that number? The market sucks here in Canada, but I don't think it's that bad.

      If it is, Perhaps I should shave more often and start showing up on time ...
    • Yeah, you Canadians seem to think we Americans have it good, but when you factor in higher cost of living, expensive healthcare and myriad of other costs of aggravations of living in the US of A there's probably no big difference in how far that income goes.

      I'm making 38k a year in the SF Bay Area, single with no real debt and can't afford a condo or even a car (male under 25 insurance rates are through the roof+gas+tolls+parking+inevitable tickets)

      At 35k in Canada I'm sure you're living more comfortably

    • by Thaelon ( 250687 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:23PM (#12367717)
      Last I heard the average salary starting out for coders in the US is $51k. I don't know where you got that $90k figure, but if you can remember let me know so I can tell my boss.
    • How I wish I how had your job. I finished college last May and could not find work as a programmer at all. Now I'm working in a call center for $10/hr Canadian. Somebody shoot me. There are no jobs here.
    • It is more than saving money. Gates seems to want to be surrounded by folks over whom he has a lot of control. An H-1b worker can be sent home any time their employer feels like it.
    • by sheddd ( 592499 ) <jmeadlock@perdid ... minus physicist> on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:47PM (#12367939)
      It's his job to make money for Microsoft. The dot-com boom earned some low quality workers large salaries because they were (or seemed) computer savvy.

      I do feel bad for the talented and/or hardworking ones who got taken for ride after ride with startups...

      But face it, there are foreign workers willing to work harder for less money; tech workers in the US are generally spoiled IMO (with many exceptions)... In '89 you could be virtually ensured $50k/yr with a MSCE.

      The market's adjusting, and foreign labor is generally cheaper now.

      I say let the genuinely talented or hard working into the US and give 'em a green card. I think it would make our country a better place (though defining 'talented or hardworking' would be tough).

      (I don't limit the above opinion to tech workers... construction, engineering, professor, janitor, cabbie, whatever).

      The US immigrant policies have really bad problems; politicians get votes if they're 'tough on immigrants'... they get $ if they're 'ignoring the illegal immigrant problem.'

      It's a two faced, dishonest system at the moment... immigrants can get in and when their visa expires noone looks for them... if they get pulled over for speeding (after paying 10 years of social security and other taxes), they're deported without a chance to return.

      Businesses are pushing for cheap labor, and citizens are generally pushing for less competition for jobs... the immigrants get caught in the middle :(
    • Re:Cashing in on ... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by LibertineR ( 591918 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @10:00PM (#12368074)
      I'll bet Gates is one of the first to hire those folks who are about to park cruise ships 3 miles off the coast and house hundreds off coders for hire outside of U.S. waters.

      Hell, he might just park a boat out there himself and run his own outsourcing outfit.

    • $90,000 per year? That seems really high. Are your figures current?

      You are right that he onlywants to save money, though. He can get guest workers on visas to work for minimum wage and no benefits, the robber baron! There is no shortage of American high-tech workers. We just want to be paid a fair share for what we create, not be exploited like slaves.

  • Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:47PM (#12367392) Homepage Journal
    Sounds like he wants a bunch of foreign workers who wouldn't quibble over a $20,000-30,000 salary where a US coder would expect a bit more.
    • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:52PM (#12367435)
      He also wants minions who are frightened of losing their H1B status by being fired, and are thus likely to take more grief. Also, they tend not to come up with embarassing observations, like "this is illegal" or "this is fraudulent" or "this is monopolistic", because they're more grateful for the job in the first place.

      The practice is called "in-sourcing", and I've seen it in a number of computing environments.
    • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:59PM (#12367503)
      > Sounds like he wants a bunch of foreign workers who wouldn't quibble over a $20,000-30,000 salary where a US coder would expect a bit more.

      Let's put it this way.

      Isn't it funny that even Billgatus of Borg can't convince the Administration to let in another 100,000 engineers (be they from India or Canada) to get paid and pay Social Security and income taxes on incomes between $30-50K, but nobody blinks an eye at letting in millions of workers (mostly from Mexico) to get paid $3.00/hour washing dishes and pay no tax because they're here illegally or because their incomes are very low, despite consuming tax dollars in the form of health and education costs for their families?

      I'm all for immigration -- but is it too much to ask of immigration policymakers that we import the sort of people who will be net contributors to the economy, rather than a net drain thereon?

      • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:35PM (#12367838)
        Actually, third-world illegal immigrants are frequently net contributors as well, as they are not as easily able to use state services or later draw social security with their bogus IDs and SSNs.

        Many Indian and Canadian guest workers are sending just that much more money back overseas to their families instead of spending it here.

        There are also illegal immigrant white collar workers (like a Canadian I met) who get paid under the table at good jobs the states, thereby avoiding even more taxes than the $3/hour people.

        It's a two way street and it's not always simple.
        • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Interesting)

          by quarkscat ( 697644 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @06:16AM (#12369848)
          What a load of huey!

          The Dubya regime has bent over backwards to facilitate employer hiring of illegal aliens. The net result is employers get really cheap labor, and the US taxpayers are subsidizing these employers. There isn't much money that these employers can kick into SS and Medicare for these illegal aliens, because they aren't really "here", and they aren't getting minimum wage. But a lot of states under financial pressure from the Feds "unfunded mandates" has brought their public health departments to the brink of bankruptcy.

          I am all for immigration -- legal immigration, only. Depending upon which official is asked (and how politically correct) the number of illegal aliens in the USA is somewhere between 12 and 28 million. And while millions of illegal aliens slip across our borders, they are breaking our laws (sometimes with what they bring with them). In the mean time, persons seeking legal immigration into the USA are forced to wait years (and sometimes a decade or more) for their chance to emmigrate here.

          Illegal aliens do not pass through a modern Ellis Island, and the rates of pneumonia, TB, and other diseases have skyrocketed in all the border states, as well as any jurisdiction where illegals congregate. The only way these illegal aliens can remain in the USA undetected is through identity theft and bogus identification. There is no way that Dubya or the DHS can assure the real American citizens that violent criminals, drug pushers, agents/sappers of foreign governments, or terrorists are not among those that slip across our borders.

          The ever increasing clammor amongst politicians and employers for more cheaper labor reminds me of the rationale used to justify slavery in this country 150 years ago. IMHO, the Republican Party has long ago fallen from the grace they achieved in their opposition to slavery. The more politically correct term these days is "wage-slavery", and it is alive and well. How many people today don't have (and cannot afford) health insurance, let alone having both parents working only to just barely get by? Nearly all those things most necessary for survival and betterment in the USA do not get counted in the CPI (Consumer Price Index) -- things like health care, housing, heating, and higher education have been increasing at nearly double digit rates. When was the last time that the minimum wage went up, let alone at a rate that actually keeps up with the real rate of inflation?
      • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by KingJoshi ( 615691 ) <slashdot@joshi.tk> on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:56PM (#12368044) Homepage

        Instead of moderating your post, I'll respond.

        MANY Mexican illegals have fake SSNs and pay all those taxes you think they don't. And many don't get returns or anything. A recent article in the NY Times was title, "Illegal Immigrants Are Bolstering Social Security With Billions [nytimes.com]" and that all future IRS and government income assumes that these numbers will continue to rise.

        Second, it's IMPOSSIBLE to close off or secure the border with Mexico, while it's much easier to check people at airports.

        Another, many Americans go to college and seek those IT jobs. People aren't flocking to work those fields in Idaho, do construction around Las Vegas, etc. North Carolina is growing in population largely to the illegals and the state's economy is seeing the effects.

        And they don't work for $3/hr. sure, some do. I had friends working for $4/hr for 12 hours a day for a while. but that was 10 years ago and non-taxed. But I'm working illegally for $7/hr (fast-food cashier). All on the books, and the Federal and States are getting a piece. And I know others doing the same.

        I think the immigration policy seriously needs to be looked into. But there are so many ideological blow hards (on various sides of the spectrum) that changes are taking way too long.

        Personally, on some level, I'd be happy with a change since I'm seeking a software engineering job and need sponsorship. But I don't think it needs to be increased. If companies start leaving the US to be based elsewhere, then maybe..

        • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:4, Insightful)

          by dfjghsk ( 850954 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @08:57AM (#12371051)
          I wanted to let you know why I made you a foe.

          you approach the issue logically and calmly, as if what you are doing is OK and justified. You approach it as if you should get all of the benefits of someone who is here LEGALLY - you want SS benefits, you want the benefits of our economy and political system.

          So what's the big deal? What's the problem with taking a job from an american (even if it is in the fast food industry)? So what's the problem with using the SSN of an american? ... with entering a country illegally? ... with commiting identity theft?

          Just because you don't know the name of the person you stole the SSN from doesnt make it right. It doesn't change what it does to that person. It doesn't change the effects it has on their credit and on their lives.

          Millions of people every year get their identity stolen and it costs them thousands of dollars, and sometimes years worth of their time. The loss you've already caused to the person you stole the SSN from more than offsets the (minuscule) contribution you've made in taxes.

          The fact is illegal immigrants are a drain on the american system and that includes YOU. What you are doing is a slap in the face to every legal immigrant who has gone through the process to come here legally.

          You ignore our border; you ignore our laws -- GET THE FUCK OUT OF OUR COUNTRY! (you're welcome back when you get your green card)

          • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:4, Informative)

            by KingJoshi ( 615691 ) <slashdot@joshi.tk> on Thursday April 28, 2005 @09:24AM (#12371419) Homepage
            I didn't enter the country illegally. My SSN is legit, has my name and issued to me when I was 6 (I came to this country at the age of 5, almost 6). I don't see how the fuck I'm a drain on the American System since I've paid way through college at international fees. I have been raised in this country and educated here. I'm not a brain drain on Nepal because if raised there, I would never have been this educated. What the country lost was a number because of the civil war and other strife, I wouldn't have been able to do shit there anyway.

            I am not legally allowed to work, but that doesn't mean I'm not legally allowed to be here. My legal situation is more complex than can be summerized easily in a slashdot post.
      • rather than a net drain thereon?

        *sigh*

        Do you really think we would have an open border if super-cheap labor was *draining* the economy?

        It is because, with a naive surface examination such as yours, it looks like "them damn immigrants are just SUCKING THE LIFE OUT OF AMERICA!!!" that policy makers pretend to be doing anything about it at all.

        No. They really aren't sucking our lifeblood. In fact, they are part of the reason our economy works at all. If we suddenly started to enforce all the laws current
    • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by azmeith ( 705329 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @10:05PM (#12368122)
      " Sounds like he wants a bunch of foreign workers who wouldn't quibble over a $20,000-30,000 salary where a US coder would expect a bit more."

      When was the last time you even got to know about how foreign workers on H1-Bs are employed and paid. I get tired of this typically ignorant bullshit everytime the foreign workers issue comes up. FYI, everytime a visa is granted, the applicant/employer has to get a prevailing wage certificate either from the state EDD or agencies like www.erieri.com, whoch cost about $350-$450 for a single page with three lines of typed text. These certificates state the prevailing wage for the position for which the employer wants to hire, which includes the min, median and max. The data for that is calculated every year or every other year, depending on the survey by polling employers for specific geographical areas. The applicant/employer then HAS to pay the foreign worker at least 5% more than the minimum in the certificate. Without this the application for a visa will not even get accepted. Get your fucking facts straight before you go off on the $20,000 salary.

      Moreover the very same foreign worker has to pay social security, income and FICA taxes which he will probably never get to use. H1-B terms are a max of six years (extensible under very special circumstances) and AFAIK, to collect on social security foreign workers need to have paid taxes for at least 10 years in the US. At least they come in legally and contribute to the society that provides them the opportunity, inspite of the fact that the american (for that matter most western) immigration processes are quite demeaning to most third world applicants, not to mention stupid and farcical. It considers every application an application for immigration and then they have to walk in to the interview and convince the colsulate that they dont want to immigrate (wtf!!!).

      People like you seem to like globalization only as long as it profits your fat asses at the expense of some third world or developing country. The moment it threatens you, you whine. Capitalism/free markets are a double edged sword, they can cut off your head just as easily as make a path for you to prosperity. Is it the foreign workers fault that half the country chose a self centered ass whose understanding of free markets and competition are limited to nepotism bordering on corruption? This administration is the reason why you dont have or did not have till recently a job, not the foreign worker. Its called competition, its here to stay and it can only grow more fierce. Learn to live and adapt with it.
      • Re:Gates Request.. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Alioth ( 221270 ) <no@spam> on Thursday April 28, 2005 @02:55AM (#12369185) Journal
        I worked in the US for a while as an L-1 then an H-1B worker. I was paid considerably MORE than my co-workers (I used to work for IBM). So much so I banked my entire home salary and lived off my international service allowance.

        Of course, since I'm not brown skinned I was accepted immediately. Most of these rants on Slashdot seem to be thinly veiled racism.
  • by SQLz ( 564901 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:48PM (#12367397) Homepage Journal
    "Undersecretary of Commerce Phil Bond, a top Bush administration technology official, pointed out that the unemployment rate for engineers is above the national average."

    These wouldn't happen to be faux engineers would they? The dime a dozen Ameritrain, cram all you possibly can about pointing and clicking the night before the test Miscrosoft Certified System Engineer's?

  • Trouble? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DarthVeda ( 569302 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:48PM (#12367404)
    I find it hard to believe that it is difficult to find qualified individuals within the United States. Especially after the last four years the industry has been through.
    • Re:Trouble? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by synx ( 29979 )
      I have found that the quality of the candidates that reach me (after our recruiters have filtered resumes!) for phone screens tends to be pretty pathetic. For example we generally pass 1 in 10 phone screens. Obviously we hold our candidates to high standards (wouldn't you?), but we certainly aren't looking for anything more than smarts, knows programming well (I've seen candidates misuse subclassing so many times) and can problem solve. This has nothing to do with salary because we can't even get to the
      • Re:Trouble? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by jcknox ( 456591 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:18PM (#12367678)
        Maybe you should review the process you use for screening resumes. If its anything like the one most large companies use these days, it discards anyone that honestly protrays a solid skillset or good transferable job skills in favor of idiots that know how to pad a resume with more skillset buzzwords than they could truly learn in three lifetimes.

        Of course, most of these resumes are crafted to please the ridiculous job descriptions mentioned in an earlier post. What an awful cycle...
        • Re:Trouble? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @01:19AM (#12368803) Journal
          On one hand, I will aggree that the hiring process of _most_ companies (not just large ones) is a sick joke. It's not just the bullshit requirements. (10 years experience with Windows 2000 or J2EE and the like.) It's that your average interview is just a bulshitting contest. The candidates are asked to prove one single skill: marketting. They're asked to market themselves to a PHB.

          But on the other hand, the problem is simply that there aren't as many people who are mentally fit for the job.

          I pretty much started myself from the nerd view point that programming is easy (and for that matter physics and maths are easy), and everyone even the janitor could do that if they wanted to. Enough years of working with other "programmers" just served to convince me of the exact opposite.

          I've watched someone once try every single combination of "*", "&" and nothing on every single variable in a C program, until it stopped crashing. He never could understand pointers, and some 10 years later he still can't.

          He moved to Java in the meantime, and it just illustrates that syntactic sugar can only do so much. His utter inability to understand the concept of a pointer still haunts him in Java. E.g., he has honest trouble understanding concepts like internalizing strings, or exactly how much is copied and how much is still modifiable when you pass an object as a parameter to a function.

          He's by far not the only one. In fact, the majority of "idiots that know how to pad a resume" are far worse.

          I've helped people debug some stupidity like passing an integer variable as a parameter to a function, and expecting that they can just set the parameter to 0 inside the function, to get the variable outside the function set to zero. Then do it again, because the whole "call by value" concept went right above their head.

          I've spent hours in a meeting with people who couldn't understand the concept of key-value pairs. I was already in a mood to bash some heads in, after seeing it go around in circles around "but why does that table have only two columns? What if we need a third property?"

          Etc.

          Basically there just aren't that many people who are even capable of being programmers, and even less who are capable of understanding design or security. If everyone stopped hiring "idiots that know how to pad a resume", some companies just wouldn't have any employees at all.

          Which I guess is Bill Gates's point. There _is_ a shortage of people capable of doing the job.
        • Re:Trouble? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by rmarll ( 161697 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @02:27AM (#12369092) Journal
          Maybe you should review the process you use for screening resumes. If its anything like the one most large companies use these days, it discards anyone that honestly protrays a solid skillset or good transferable job skills in favor of idiots that know how to pad a resume with more skillset buzzwords than they could truly learn in three lifetimes.

          Of course, most of these resumes are crafted to please the ridiculous job descriptions mentioned in an earlier post. What an awful cycle...


          This is a good point. A friend of mine recently told me about a coworker who applied for a position he had been doing on a temporary basis for 6 months at that point. Come to find that the HR folk tossed his resume because it didn't contain the right key(buzz) words. It would seem that the buzzword list didn't actually match what the job entailed. After a discussion with the management he resubmitted and got the job.

          I've seen it happen many times. Competant but conservative resume's are filtered out, the people with the skills listed cost too much. What's left are the people that know how to game the system.
          Not to say they're unqualified, but we're all trying to get a job. That means getting into the interview no matter what it takes.
      • Re:Trouble? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:21PM (#12367697)
        I have found that the quality of the candidates that reach me (after our recruiters have filtered resumes!) for phone screens tends to be pretty pathetic.

        Maybe the recruiters are your problem. I've recently been looking for a tech job for the first time.[*] The recruiters I've come into contact with have disappointed me in several ways:

        • They try to screen applicants based on technical qualifications. They don't know anything about technical qualifications; it's just about if you have the buzzwords they're looking for.
        • They ask some stupid questions like "are you work-oriented?" I learned it's a yes or no question; you're not supposed to give a reason. The correct answer is yes, of course. But as opposed to what? People-oriented? Vacation-oriented? Couch-oriented? Goal-oriented? It's meaningless!
        • One company's recruiter only wanted candidates who wouldn't be happy unless they were the best. Now, ignoring the fact that it's hard to judge who's the "best" anyway (we all have different skills), well...if this recruiter got her way, all but one employee would be very unhappy.
        • They don't answer applicants' questions well. One in particular really didn't listen to my questions; she just spouted off what was obviously a canned response to a sort-of-similar question.
        • They're slow! One recruiter took over two weeks to contact me and only did so after repeated pushing from inside the company - a technical lead basically saying "hire this guy! now!" It's basically a sure thing at this point, but it's taking forever. In part, because HR has tried to schedule interviews when several of the people who wanted to meet me weren't there. I had my third round of interviews today, and there's going to be a fourth. The hiring manager on Friday wanted me to come in Monday or Tuesday; I think so I wouldn't miss this last guy. But I couldn't get ahold of the recruiter soon enough for that, so now I have to wait for the last guy to get back from a trip.

        I'm told my experiences are typical, in the tech industry and elsewhere. My dad, a retired department head at a non-tech company, said HR often screened out people for stupid reasons. A few times, he'd been called by someone, learned HR had rejected them without even talking to him, and found they were good candidates.

        So the moral of the story is: don't trust your recruiters. At least make them pass you the resumés of everyone, and make them tell you why they screen someone out.

        If you do somehow manage to get a good recruiter, hold on to him/her.

        [*] - My last one was something I started as a student, so the process wasn't the same.

      • Re:Trouble? (Score:3, Insightful)

        I don't doubt what you are saying, but there are loads of I.T. people out of work, and not all of them are the dot.com-get-rich-quick people who go into it at the drop of a dime in the 90s.

        There must be plenty of unemployed quality people out there eager for a job. I just don't understand how it can be rough for the recruiters to find them.
      • Re:Trouble? (Score:3, Funny)

        by nfnstm ( 707208 )
        When you say qualified, do you mean at least 5 years of experience in J2EE, 4 years WebLogic, etc, etc, etc? or at least 3 years .NET, 2 years MS SQL, 2 years ASP.NET, etc, etc, etc?
      • Re:Trouble? (Score:3, Interesting)

        I've seen candidates misuse subclassing so many times

        It's very sad, but most Object Oriented shops that I've seen don't really use subclassing or inheritance for their own classes. I worked at one shop that had 2000 classes at the com.foo.* level, with almost no subclassing... why? Because the build system didn't support directories very well. Their software is installed at 50% of Universities, so you've probably used it.

        Refactoring? Sounds nice, but it's frequently seen as a waste of time by the decisio
    • by EmbeddedJanitor ( 597831 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:58PM (#12367497)
      One might think it makes more sense for Gates to argue this one when salaries rise again. Not so.

      At the moment, engineers are at a low point in terms of their employment prospects and hence their bargaining position. The engineers are at their weakest now, making this the ideal time to strike.

      The other part of this is that the wheels of government turn slowly. By the time this is all ironed out, there will likely be an upturn. If BG waits until then to make his request it will be both too late, and the engineers will be stronger again.

    • Reality Check (Score:3, Insightful)

      by SilentJ_PDX ( 559136 )
      A lot of people posting here need a reality check.

      I'll be blunt: If you are in the industry and don't have a job right now, you either suck, interview poorly, or are trying for positions you aren't qualified for. The industry is hot right now and there are loads of great opportunities.

      Too many people came out of the late-90's with inflated egos...
      • Re:Reality Check (Score:4, Insightful)

        by admiralh ( 21771 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @04:20AM (#12369451) Homepage
        I think *you* are the one who needs a reality check.

        The industry is hot *if* you live (or are willing to move) to the right area (and pay exhorbitant real estate prices) *and* you have the right skill set *and* you have the appropriate level of experience (not too much, not too little).

        Where are the entry level jobs? Where are the jobs for 50-year-olds who still want to program? Why do kids see the job environment for IT people (and engioneers in general) and decide, "I think I'll study Business"?

        While there are certainly some people that fit your description, most of the internet-boom-ITers who weren't any good are now out of the industry. The problems with IT unemployment go far deeper than your "blame the victim" mentality allows you to see.

        Here's a clue: Bad things do happen to good people, and your broad brush is grossly unfair.

  • by jeffmeden ( 135043 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:50PM (#12367415) Homepage Journal
    Should we be opposed to this? Considering that the alternative is shipping the jobs outside the US, if we keep the wage-earners inside the US, the residual income from the job will stay (for the most part) inside the US. Might not be as good as every last engineer drawing a top dollar salary, but its better than 100% of the spending going away from the US.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      I think the key is a balance. You need to let a bunch in, even if their wages are significantly less than Americans, just so we can (as a country) continue to attract some of the world's best and brightest. As Gates says, that helps keep our local tech industry strong. Some of them become entrepreneurs here, which puts lots of Americans to work (let's leave InfoSpace out of this discussion ;)

      And I'd rather compete against a guy here making $50K sitting next to me than the same guy over in India making $

    • by keraneuology ( 760918 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:03PM (#12367549) Journal
      if we keep the wage-earners inside the US, the residual income from the job will stay (for the most part) inside the US

      Entirely untrue. Over $15 billion is sent home to Mexico from US migrants every year - Mexico's 2nd largest source of foreign revenue (behind oil). H1B visa employees virtually invariably have family remaining in the old country and large sums of cash will be wired back home.

      There are more than enough skilled, talented tech people in the US to fill all the jobs. There are even enough to replace the slovenly incompetents who blow enough smoke to convince the non-techie managers that they need to stick around. It has been this way for years. Shortly after my position was shipped to Mexico City and I was politely encouraged to leave the building 's CEO gave a speech about how was in dire need of good, qualified tech people. I promptly sent a letter pointing out that I was willing to relocate anywhere in the world, work any shift and reminded them that I had a perfect employment record as a sub-contractor on an project, aced every aptitude/performance test they threw my way and quickly mastered every new system/process they created. My request was ignored, so I could only conclude that 's plea for capable, productive workers was just a smokescreen so they could argue for more H1B workers. Meanwhile dozens of contractors were shown the door while the ex-Xerox salesman who got a friend to make him project manager then promptly declared backups for the mission-critical database to be an unnecessary waste of resources got to pick which 80% were laid off, then collected his bonus for reducing labor expenses.

    • Who is "we"? People from all around the world read slashdot.

      Why shouldn't engineers from around the world have an equal chance to compete?

      I say [gondwanaland.com] let anyone live and work anywhere in the world, and most slashdot commenters should be ashamed.

  • by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:53PM (#12367444)
    with a Bush flunky. I feel so dirty. I'm going to take a shower now
  • by Short Circuit ( 52384 ) * <mikemol@gmail.com> on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:55PM (#12367466) Homepage Journal
    ...'cause I probably am, after thinking this one up.

    Maybe he wants to import the tech intelligentsia of other countries in order to train them to be be knowledgable in, and advocates of, Microsoft software? Give them a contract that says they'll work in the US for five or ten years, then send them home.

    Side benefits including being able to seed developing nations with pro-Microsoft software development houses,
  • What? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Deanasc ( 201050 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:55PM (#12367467) Homepage Journal
    You mean I actually have to pay my employees?
  • by ErikTheRed ( 162431 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:56PM (#12367472) Homepage
    The head of a corporation that's sitting on ~US$50 Billion in cash yet whines that it doesn't have the resources / capabilities (they really mean "financial interest") in fixing major security defects in their less-than-current products is whining that they need cheaper labor?!??

    I'm a fairly pro-immigration guy, but in this particular case Bill Gates can fuck himself in the ass with a cactus [planeterik.com].
    • Nowhere does he mention wanting cheaper labor. H1B workers are not cheaper. He does mention that he wants qualified labor. Which would better allow his company to fix major security defects in their less-than-current products.
  • Key quote. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheOriginalRevdoc ( 765542 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:57PM (#12367482) Journal
    Microsoft is having a hard time finding skilled workers within the United States, and the lack of H-1B visas for skilled workers is only making the situation worse, Gates said in a panel discussion at the Library of Congress.

    Translation: "the available labour wants more money than we want to pay."
  • Longhorn! (Score:5, Funny)

    by argent ( 18001 ) <(peter) (at) (slashdot.2006.taronga.com)> on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @08:58PM (#12367496) Homepage Journal
    Aha! This is how he plans to get Longhorn out before the end of the decade!
  • by Teckla ( 630646 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:00PM (#12367511)

    Wealthy business owners will always complain that labor isn't cheap enough or plentiful enough. This is just more of the same, and very predictable.

    As almost anyone in the software development field can tell you, there is no shortage of software developers. There is, however, a shortage of companies willing to invest in their employees by properly training them. There is also a shortage of companies that advertise open positions with reasonable requirements.

    Just hop on over to your favorite job site, and take a peek. "Candidate must have a BS in Computer Science, and 20 years of experience in the following technologies: C, C++, Java, C#, Python, Ruby, Perl, Fortran, SQL, Oracle, DB/2, SQL Server, Informix, stored procedures, COBOL, point-of-sale systems, grocery store management, garbage collection, be willing to travel frequently, and willing to divorce spouse if spouse demands too much time.

    Companies can then use the excuse that nobody meets the required qualifications to show the need for more H-1B visas, or worse, offshore outsource the work.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @11:38PM (#12368337)
      As almost anyone in the software development field can tell you, there is no shortage of software developers.

      I have a good job as an SDE, and my experience is the opposite. My team has been understaffed for months, and we've been aggressively trying to hire people. Very few make it past the phone screen. Half of candidates we phone screen cannot give a convincing answer to "what is the different between a linked list and an array?"

      Just hop on over to your favorite job site, and take a peek. "Candidate must have a BS in Computer Science, and 20 years of experience in the following technologies: C, C++, Java, C#, Python, Ruby, Perl, Fortran...

      Let me quote my office mate who was phone screening a candidate the other day. "We're not too concerned that you know the exact languages we use, we believe that smart people can pick up our technologies without too much trouble."

      I've got sympathy for you if you're out of work. But from where I'm sitting, the software developer shortage is real.
      • by tmortn ( 630092 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @11:45PM (#12368370) Homepage
        Damn it man what are you thinking posting Anonymously? Put up a link for the openings at least... sheesh.
      • by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @02:04AM (#12369007) Journal
        I'll admit, I was surprised at some of the allegedly "qualified" people I've seen on interviews.

        I've never done much in the way of interviews (the one person I interviewed was basically guaranteed the job anyway), but a company I used to work for had a very simple interview process.

        Pretty much everybody who made it past HR got a first "interview." This was with our build engineer who sat them down at a preconfigured development machine and they were given an assignment. They were told about this in advance, they were pretty much allowed to pick the time that they came in, but they had to be done by 6:00PM when the build engineer went home. If they wanted to come in at 9:00AM, that was fine. They could bring whatever books they wanted, dress however they wanted, it didn't matter because they weren't going to be meeting with anyone.

        The assignment was to create a program in straight C using a pre-built Metrowerks project which would allow the user to enter names and numbers and sort using the names and numbers. The user was given a linked-list data structure to use.

        I was constantly amazed at how many people just could not do this. There was one poor guy who came in with a bunch of books and he still couldn't do it--and he spent about 8 hours on the project.

        That said, here's a few suggestions, comments, and such.

        First, have you considered a recruiter? I will agree that some recruiters aren't worth squat, but there are lots of good ones out there. Sometimes a good recruiter who can understand your needs can help separate the knowledgeable from the resume-padders.

        Next, where are you advertising? Throwing a want-ad in the local newspaper may not get you in front of your intended audience. A posting on Dice, Monster, or some other Internet site might be a better place.

        Third, consider your real needs. As the parent pointed out, I've seen lots of buzz-words in job advertisements that are not necessary for the position. For example, a company I used to work for advertised for a person with C++ experience. It wasn't necessary for the position, but it would be nice for some possible work that might be done sometime in the future. Needless to say, the candidate was less than pleased when he discovered this. Lots of companies use buzzwords to try to intimidate the posers, but the posers just add the buzzwords to their resume and send it in. Meanwhile, the qualified--and honest--people go "Oh, gee, I've never used Ruby so I guess I won't apply."

        Finally, as some others have pointed out, where are you and what are you doing? If you're in Idaho, you may indeed have a problem finding lots of people with intimate knowledge of device-driver development and real-time video encoding. If you were in the Bay Area, you might have an easier time. In other words, your expectations might be unrealistic for the area where your company is. You might consider widening your search area and either relocating or allowing the employee to telecommute.
  • by motorsabbath ( 243336 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:00PM (#12367514) Homepage
    "I'm wondering if raising wages might attract the "needed" workers from domestic sources"

    Some work to do (and hence some jobs) would attract many of the out-of-work engineers in the US. If Gates wants to lift restrictions on non-immigrant workers, they must be cheaper than all those domestic engineers out of work?
  • Translation (Score:3, Insightful)

    by doc modulo ( 568776 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:06PM (#12367566)
    I need more CHEAP meat for my money making machine. Something which a lot of other industries seem to have achieved in the US of A. You people have one of the most working hours per week and least amount of vacation days in the world. Crap social security. Companies with a lot of power over workers etc.

    Why would that be you think?

    I suggest you make it illegal for politicians to receive money in your country. You know, as a start. Otherwise you shouldn't be surprised to be handled like cattle.

    But this is just my opinion.
  • by farrellj ( 563 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:08PM (#12367582) Homepage Journal
    The shortage is with companies being too picky in hiring!

    I know a half dozen types of Unix, but I don't know "X" Unx. Unless I lie and say I know "X" Unix, they won't even look at my resume! And knowing at least half a dozen flavours of Unix, I can probably pick up any reasonable type of Unix in a few weeks.

    Or, if you know, say Java, C, Pascal and a few otehr langauges...and they are looking for C++, chances are, you can pick it up in a few weeks.

    Companies are looking for too many "exact" matches since they have had the cream of the crop from the Dot-Busts period. Now that those who couldn't get jobs have moved on to something else, they are still too picky in recruiting...so although there is a surplus of techies, they can't find enough people to hire with the "exact" skill set they want. STOOOPPIIIDDDDD!!!!!

    ttyl
    Farrell ...one of those "underemployed" types with qualifications out the yingyang!
    • Why're you unemployed? If you're that good, you can make a living doing consulting.

      Go talk to a CPA, incorporate, and start selling your services on an hourly basis.
  • by zymano ( 581466 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:11PM (#12367608)
    It's all about raising the value of their stock. Which is the same way Jobs makes his $$$ but it kills jobs but some investors wealthy.
    http://www.h1b.info/ [h1b.info]

    Microsoft in November 2002 announced plans to build a half-billion dollar complex in Hyderabad, India. With this new development center, Microsoft can use L-1 visas to displace further US citizen employees and will not be subject to H-1B caps. Other major companies in the US are doing the same. This is why reform is needed across all US visa types and not just for H-1B visas alone. It was through the use of these "special" visas that all of the September 11th terrorists secured admittance to the United States. There is virtually no security or monitoring of these special visa holders.
  • Wow (Score:5, Funny)

    by FriedTurkey ( 761642 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:14PM (#12367634)
    When your pro-corporate agenda is rejected by the Bush adminstration, maybe it is time to get a new line of bull shit.
  • Outsource to Alaska! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by core plexus ( 599119 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @09:15PM (#12367648) Homepage
    According to this report [bizjournals.com], it's not as bad in Alaska: "Nationwide, high-tech employment in 2004 totaled 5.6 million, down by 25,000 jobs in 2003. The only states gaining tech jobs were Alaska, North Dakota and Wyoming.

    We have what I would call an emerging tech state. Even way out here in the Bush, we have DSL and wifi, and have had it for quite some time. We also have favorable government, and many other incentives. Heck, we get a check for about $1,000 just for filling out a form, and no state income taxes. Most places don't have a sales tax, either.

    -cp-

    President Bush to Liberate Alaska [alaska-freegold.com]

  • by tsu doh nimh ( 609154 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @11:32PM (#12368309)
    ...so it's only natural that Gates is complaining that there aren't enough really smart and talented techie people out there. eh.
  • Outsource Yourself! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by patio11 ( 857072 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2005 @11:45PM (#12368372)
    I can sort of understand the constant bickering on slashdot about outsourcing. Sort of. Look, the economy changes, and being able to write a webpage or due GUI work in Java is not an iron rice bowl anymore. Oh well, move on. Get yourself a skill that means you're not competing against 1 million unemployed engineers and 2.5 million entry-level college grads plus the entire nation of India for your next job.

    Take me, for example. I combined some fairly standard academic CS fields (AI, language processing, etc) with Japanese. And, presto, the number of US-based competitors I had for some positions is in the double digits. And English/Japanese bilingual engineers aren't exactly suffering a crush of supply in Japan -- thats why they brought me over here. I probably have email addresses for half of the bilingual natural language researchers in the US, and the most common way people get hired is to start with someone you already know who does it and ask "Say, give me somebody". When the hiring dynamic works like that, you don't have to slice $10k off your salary and work EA-style hours to have a chance at getting the job for 3 years before it gets moved to Bangalore sans you.

    We techies can't stay mired in the industrial production mode where we're moderately skilled labor which is essentially fungible. Any tech position which fits that description will see its salary decline asymptotically to nothing, guaranteed. And don't expect the government or unions to protect you like they spent a lot of the last century protecting the guys at the GM plant or in textiles (by the way, any time you think you've got it rough, take a look at those guys) -- the economy is globalizing and you can either get on the train or get crushed by it. There are like fifty zillion different occupational specialties which we just can't bloody find enough people to do -- I know one employer who would throw $80,000 at someone capable of designing a UI in Arabic (and being able to work in the office efficiently) if he could just find that someone.

  • by yaphadam097 ( 670358 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @12:02AM (#12368468)

    I've worked with enough knuckleheads from both sides of the world to suggest a different source for the problem. What we need is an increase in the average quality of code. If I can pay for an idiot from Bangalore or an idiot from good old USA, and either way there is a 50% chance that the code is going to suck and fail, and a 50% chance that the code will work... barely... but still suck then I'm better of paying for the cheapest idiot. If there were a way that I could guarantee good product then it would be worth almost any price. But a lot of things would have to change for that to happen:

    1. We have to stop treating coders like they are wizards who do magic. The folks doing the hiring need to understand the technology they are hiring for.
    2. You can't identify good coders by the laundry list of frameworks and tools they claim to have used. Stupid coding tests aren't much better. Good coders are problem solvers, so give them a problem and see if they solve it.
    3. Most of the best coders I've known don't have degrees in "CS or related field". Some of them majored in basket weaving and others never got past high school. A lot of the "CS or related" folks are real tools who wouldn't know good code from a digital photo of their own ass.
    4. Businesses need to catch on to agile software development. Make your developers prove to you that they are doing what you asked them to by delivering software frequently, as often as weekly. If they don't deliver then fire them and hire new ones.
    5. Locate your development offices in the suburbs. The space there is cheaper anyway, and frankly some of us are tired of commuting more than an hour each way and then working a 60 hour week. $100K+ is still not enough if I can't have a life too.
  • by WillWare ( 11935 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @12:25AM (#12368581) Homepage Journal
    It's unpopular to agree with Gates about anything, but he's right about this. When a foreign-born engineer comes to the U.S., that engineer must pay the same prices for a house or a car that I pay. Therefore they will require a salary in the same ballpark as mine, rather than the teeny salary they might live on back home. The question of whether or not an engineer was born in the U.S. is actually irrelevant to the economics of job competition. What matters is where they live, because that dictates their living expenses, and therefore their salary.

    By maintaining caps on visas, we encourage outsourcing. Here's a logical-extreme thought experiment: we remove all limits on immigration, and every engineer in the world decides to move to the U.S. As a result outsourcing ceases because there are no engineers outside the U.S. to outsource work to.

    TFA says "Congress capped the number of non-immigrant visas for skilled professionals [to] ensure more jobs for home-grown tech workers." But the economics don't work that way: by capping visas, they move jobs overseas. I'm cynical enough to believe that was the real intent, since the corporate owners of our politicians want to preserve a healthy outsourcing market.

  • by Wansu ( 846 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @12:41AM (#12368644)

    Bill Gates is right. There is a shortage of labor at the price he'd like to pay. Similarly, there's a shortage of $1/gal gasoline.

    The 5.7% figure that is mentioned is the unemployment rate for those in the CS field. This number sounds low but unemployment rates don't convey the employment condition in a particular field because those who change lines of work no longer get counted. For older, unemployed programmers, this is their best option. They no longer count as unemployed programmers but as employed retail store clerks. I know dozens of ex-coworkers who've lost jobs in their 40s and 50s. I've read many posts on slashdot claiming only 2nd rate programmers and engineers are pushed out. Those expressing such opinions seem to think their own skills are of such high quality that they will be spared such a fate. I guarantee each of these ex-coworkers I've referred to entertained similar notions. At this time, no accurate assesment exists of the underemployment problem in the USA.

    Electronic circuit design was my first career after college. I watched manufacturing being outsourced in the 80s. By the late 80s, it was clear that the engineering work would also be outsourced. I retooled myself to be a software developer and have been doing that for more than 10 years. Now, the same thing is happening to this line of work.

    When these high paying jobs leave the USA, the incomes leave too. People with lower incomes eventually have to consume less. Tough times lie ahead for many Americans.
  • by Greg_D ( 138979 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @12:46AM (#12368653)
    ... I can tell you that there are a ton of H1's who get brought into the country, not because employers can't find talent, but because they're willing to cut every corner necessary. I've seen cases where a firm will stick 5 to 6 of them in a single apartment for the duration of their contract. They take it because it's their way out of a bad situation, and I can't fault them, although it sucks for the US born worker.

    There are quite a few H1-B shops (a bunch of them in Edison, NJ particularly) which bring underskilled workers over from India and Africa in droves and stick them on projects to hope that they'll pick their skills up quick enough to perform adequately on their projects before they're fired. Then, once they get a few of these projects under their belts, they can charge just as much as US citizens because they have the experience that college grads who were born here lack.

    It used to be that an employee would be brought in at the entry level and allowed to learn and apply the tools of his trade. Nowadays, that seems to be primarily the domain of the immigrant worker.

    I spoke recently to a local employer about an entry level position. They wanted a college grad DBA with Visual Basic, Linux, PHP, MySQL, SQL Server, and C++ experience. They were offering a entry rate of $2100 a month and wondering why they had such a hard time filling a position. When I told him to look at what he was looking to pay, he seemed genuinely offended. I'm sure the position will stay open until the next wave of H1s can come through.
  • by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @03:04AM (#12369222) Homepage Journal
    MSFT stock options no longer have the same pull they did in the '90's? Finding it hard to bring in the employees when the new kid [google.com] is the one that can promise its employees that their options will make them overnight millionares? Feeling the pressure to compete with the upstart operating systems but finding that the company just can't maintain a technological erection the way it could a decade ago? Is the problem that Microsoft just isn't really getting laid the way it used to? Maybe Ballmer wasn't really the infusion of corporate viagra that your company needed. Maybe you should go back to the old mistress [ibm.com] for some advice on what to do when your company gets older and its ass gets flabby. Maybe that's the real problem here...
  • Quality Workforce (Score:3, Interesting)

    by nagora ( 177841 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @03:17AM (#12369255)
    But Gates said his company was hiring at all levels, from recent college graduates to those with more advanced skills. "Anybody who's got a good computer-security education, they're not out there unemployed," he said.

    Yep, so long as they have no pride in their work or any professional ethics, Bill will get them. I've been to university; I've seen the sort of people that apply to MS for work, and the sort that don't.

    TWW

  • by guidryp ( 702488 ) on Thursday April 28, 2005 @05:58AM (#12369777)
    "Lower the pay of US professionals to $50,000, Ballmer suggests, and it won't make sense for employers to put up with the hassle of doing business in theThird World. (Kent Hollenback, a spokesman for Microsoft, declined to say what the company pays employees.) "

    http://archives.tcm.ie/businesspost/2003/12/28/sto ry445480235.asp [archives.tcm.ie]

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