> I'd say that Networking - especially the security aspect of it -
> would be a better bet than programming.
I am not a computer pro either, but I think that the original message
mentioned IT and I was thinking of the title of the guy who oversees a
systems computers. And I said to myself, those guys probably don't do
much programing.
My take if IT was meant in a broader sense I would say that there will
be more jobs as the IT pro but I also wonder how many of the starting
jobs will pay much. I suspect that lots of offices at least start with
some worker being the computer expert with no extra pay. OTOH, a
person who applies for such a job who has the training will have a
more strait forward entre' to a job than a programmer might. And there
are probably more jobs as an IT. What I would suggest is that having
some skill in both programming AND IT pro work would be an advantage.
AND by the way, an IT Pro needs to know more than networking. They
install programs, fix problems that have nothing to do with the
network, etc.
Jim
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