But how will I kill zombies, the computer had trained me on this skill![]()
It is really boring, you would think by now people would have some sort of idea, my parents are in the 70's and have a basic grasp, anyone born in the last 18 years has had Internet access since they were born, I am 35 and did not have Internet access until I was 14.
I sense you have all the answers already, you have the meaning of life, know how business works, see it's all against you and just for the slimy guy with the Ford Probe who's a tiger, yes? You are 29, I argue you've never sat in a board room, made a decision about the direction of a business but hey, you can make a computer sing and the world needs that more than the next bloke who can also do that....or the scientist, doctor, airline pilot, account exec who all get paid vastly more but only because they are slimy and lick arses?
If I had a pound for each time I've seen this I'd have many pounds, just need a spreadsheet to work out how many but WordPerfect isn't adding it up right at the moment so I've moved to Coral Draw. Back in a minute, just on hold to Andrew in first line support, though not sure that's his real name as he sounds Indian.
My point was that IT people often (not always) have a completely misaligned view as to their real value to a business. All you have done is evidence that, to my point with your simplistic comment to my point.![]()
I'm 25. Didn't have internet until I was 13, and no broadband until I was 17. There's no reason for people older than me, in their 30s and 40s, to be any worse than me with computers (and I'm the best out of anyone I know excluding 2 of my friends who are software devs).
People just can't be assed to learn.
We all have to be multi-talented. If someone wants something remotely technical they come to us and we build it![]()
"10 years ago, a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from the maximum security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as 'Soldiers of Fortune'. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire...the A-Team."
your attitude is totally wrong,
If everyone in the world lost there skills and gain yours the world would end in famine and disease within months - (no war because no one would be able to operate anything or even have the will to fight or organise)
You only know a tiny bit of IT (compared to the hole field) you must realise it takes more than knowing a little about excel to keep our society running?
Eh?
I'm the guy in charge of the current charging model at the boardroom meeting, I'm not first or second line. However I remember my roots. It's my ideas that ensure the money flows our way, but hey, next time you can't pay for food/petrol etc because the shop's till system is down, just remember what it was that makes it all tick these days.
Whatever way you look at it, automation is a pillar core to most profitable businesses, and you don't get automation without competent IT from the those on phones to those at the very back end tweaking and developing.
Doctors are an unfair comparison, without people you don't need/have IT anyway however they need someone to do their appointment system.
Scientists err, don't get paid that much unless it's a drugs company and even then the sales exec is still probably raking it in?
Airline pilots make money?
Honestly your examples aren't for based on for profit businesses so I'm not sure how they prove your point?
Any profitable business needs good IT as they most likely do payroll electronicly, sales/stock electronicly, forecasts electronicly, and so on.