Wednesday, August 17, 2005

LPI Exam, Objective Changes Underway

CertCities.com has an article which talks about how the LPI will be changing some of their exam objectives. I think I've heard about this before but for the moment I can't find where that article is.

In other LPI news it looks like Evan Leibovitch has left LPI. I know Evan worked very hard for LPI and even had a chance to talk with Evan about the LPI exams in the past.

I'm sure LPI will continue being the premier world wide leader in Linux vendor-neutral certification.

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

I.T. Staff Shortage Looming

Top Tech News has a good analysis of a possible IT shortage that may be on the horizon. I do have a couple of questions fromthe article though. If this shortage is looking where will the shortage be most pronounced?? I believe two of the areas will be related to networking and open-software support. After that I'm not sure where demand will come from. This will be something that will be critical to properly prepare oneself for the next ten years.

The next question I have coming from this article is to question their idea that 60% of corporate IT professionals will assume business-facing roles. this is a key assumption for this whole scenario to take place. Their math goes along the line that in a 100 man operation during the course of the next 5 years there will be a 33% drawdown in demand for IT jobs. So the 100 man operation is going to be reduced to a 66 man operation. Of the 100 men located in the operation 60 people will take on more business-facing roles. Also, of the 100 men located an additional 10 -15 will drop out of the field. The article also spends considerable amount of space discussing the lack of young people moving into the IT field. So now our 100 man operation is turning into something closer to 25 - 30 men. This creates a deficit of 36 - 41 people.

Plenty has been written about how automation is going to cut jobs within the IT sector. One thing that has not been written is what effect does promotion have within the IT sector. In my mind that is the larger quesiton that is looming.

On a similar note Redmondmag.com has a good article titled "Taking Control of your Career." Which lists some other factors that go along way towards improving an IT career.

A final note is a good story from news.yahoo.com which covers the possibility of indian call center reps collecting user information and selling it on the black market (Australian police probing Indian call centre fraud claim). I don't think corporations were thinking of this type of security concern when they decided on outsourcing services overseas.

Monday, August 01, 2005

Novell launches Linux training programmes

Computerworld Malaysia talks about Novell's new training program: Novell's Academia Training Partner (NATP) which follows along with the Novell Certified Linux Professional. Back towards the end of May, Novell announced their program to donate 1.5 million dollars towards Linux education.

From what the article was implying this part of the program is aimed at institutions in Malaysia, though I'm sure a similar program is in the works for here in the United States. From what I've seen here in the US, a big supplier of Collge based materials is Thompson Learning. These are the same people who bought SAIR Linux and then let it slide a slow death without ever updating any of their material.

Another place to look for Linux training materials is the Novell Learning Channel. They have some nice material listed here too.