Comment by jeffbee

Comment by jeffbee 13 hours ago

13 replies

It's because journalists are still big mad that the internet wrecked the newspaper business, therefore the news constantly reports lies about how the tech industry is collapsing. The more news you watch and the less personal contact you have with the industry, the more likely you are to believe that techies are jumping out of office windows in despair (hi, Mom).

tayo42 11 hours ago

The job market is terrible, pay is stagnate and remote work is being taken away and the biggest companies despite profits are laying off large amounts of people. I don't think that's fud

  • parineum 11 hours ago

    > the biggest companies despite profits are laying off large amounts of people.

    Hi is the need for employees related to profit?

    • tayo42 11 hours ago

      The decision to layoff has side effects beyond net income on a balance sheet.

      • parineum 10 hours ago

        What's your point? If there's no work for 10k people to do, should companies just continue employing them to do... nothing?

  • jeffbee 11 hours ago

    I don't see how you can hold that this job market is "terrible" in a frame of reference of the last 50 years, unless you were born fully-grown in a vat exactly 4 years ago.

    • tayo42 11 hours ago

      Have you looked for a software job in the last few years?

      It's worse then 10 years ago. Idk why everyone who comments on the job market only looks back to the covid year

      • jeffbee 10 hours ago

        No, and no individual person can rely on their personal experience to gauge the job market, including you. However if you wish to assert that it is currently more difficult to get a job as a software developer than it was in late 2015, aggregate data suggest this is false. Also, looking back a mere 10 years does not dispel the general impression that you lack context.

        If you look at employment in, for example, NAICS 518 "Computing infrastructure providers, data processing, web hosting, and related services" which is one of the larger BLS categories for our industry, the numbers are at all-time highs, having doubled since 2011. An example of a bad job market for software developers was 2001-2011, when this sector shrank by a third.

        • tayo42 10 hours ago

          Which numbers are at all time highs.

          Is that really representative of what people mean by tech? Or does that include companies that happen to make software?