Leave it to a politician to explain how the IT field is going to disappear. "As we move toward the cloud and technology gets easier to use", and who supports these technologies Mr. Mayor?
He's not saying it will disappear, but that it's changing. IT jobs will continue to exist, but they'll be moving to service providers rather than being kept in-house.
And, frankly, this makes sense - if you pay provider X to host your mail server, you're paying them for both the hardware needs (which they can buy in bulk because they're bigger than you) and their expertise (as they're spending their days exclusively maintaining mail servers, while you may be building a webserver one day and fixing a printer
That's great. Trade people who work for you for people who don't work for you at all. They have their own boss and interests that completely conflict with yours. Unless you're really good a negotiating contracts with companies much larger than your own, you are likely just going to get screwed over.
Trade your IT department for one which is much larger and even less responsive that has a contractual firewall and a corporate air gap separating it from you.
Just like the local computer repair shop keeps a mechanic on staff just in case the company truck breaks down, right? And the dentist keeps a roofer on staff in case the roof leaks, right? Or he keeps a handy man on staff to handle the truck and the roof, but probably doesn't do either particularly well, because he doesn't do any particular thing all that often. This is the same thing. We have a commodity service that we can outsource for less money and almost certainly get better service. Not everything can be managed remotely, and there are concerns about quality of outsourced services vs. insourced services, but this isn't new. Humans have been "outsourcing" forever. It's called a business relationship, we do it all the time. The "cloud" just gives us a more standard and reliable framework for doing it relative to IT tasks.
Hah (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
He's not saying it will disappear, but that it's changing. IT jobs will continue to exist, but they'll be moving to service providers rather than being kept in-house.
And, frankly, this makes sense - if you pay provider X to host your mail server, you're paying them for both the hardware needs (which they can buy in bulk because they're bigger than you) and their expertise (as they're spending their days exclusively maintaining mail servers, while you may be building a webserver one day and fixing a printer
Re: (Score:5, Informative)
That's great. Trade people who work for you for people who don't work for you at all. They have their own boss and interests that completely conflict with yours. Unless you're really good a negotiating contracts with companies much larger than your own, you are likely just going to get screwed over.
Trade your IT department for one which is much larger and even less responsive that has a contractual firewall and a corporate air gap separating it from you.
Re:Hah (Score:2)