programming languages 2007 skills survey
Skills Survey 2007: Industry falling out of love with IT grads
News While working at IBM, Rose says he had to learn three different programming languages that he hadn't used before - something he found wasn't "that difficult". The quality of computer science graduates is falling, according to results from the... [01 Oct 2007]
Skills Survey 2007: Banks hardest hit by staff crisis
News When it comes to specific IT skills shortages, the FS industry and the public sector are finding it hardest to locate staff with programming languages, followed by workers with database skills. In the retail sector programming languages, database... [28 Aug 2007]
Skills Survey 2007: Staffing crisis deepens
News For the fifth year running, programming languages such as Java, C variants, HTML and XML are in shortest supply in the workplace, followed by web services, SOA skills such as J2EE and .NET, and then IT management skills (around systems, storage... [07 Aug 2007]
Skills Survey 2007: Techies don't fear offshoring
News The preliminary results also show programming languages are the IT skill in shortest supply in the workplace while the corresponding non-technical skill that's hardest to find is project management. Fears of tech jobs being offshored appear to be... [20 Jul 2007]
Brampton Factor: Ageism myths
Comment For example, third generation programming languages have hardly changed in the last 30 years. Tell us what you think of the IT workforce in silicon.com's 2007 Skills Survey. Take silicon.com's annual Skills Survey today - and enter to win a half... [22 May 2007]
Skills Survey 2007: Tell us what you think
News We are asking for your opinions on business skills such as project management and leadership plus technical areas such as programming languages. silicon.com would like to know and to find out we have launched our ninth annual Skills Survey. [10 Apr 2007]
Pay hike on the cards for contractors?
News The survey also found more than 15 per cent of contractors have no knowledge of the popular programming languages C and JavaScript. Skills shortages still exist in the IT market and contractors with sought-after skills will expect a pay rise in the... [22 Jan 2007]
Keep updated for stories matching programming languages 2007 skills survey via RSS
