We have web content "admins" that know absolutely nothing about web
development practices and standards.  Therefore, they use MS Word to
publish their content to the web sites.

These people don't have the slightest care about cross-browser support,
cross-site scripting attacks or the user experience.

In my opinion, the lack of these cares will come around to bite them.
Either by a loss of customers, due to poor user experience, or with
theft of insecure person data.

The last I checked, MS Word didn't prevent SQL injection attacks on a
web site.

Regardless, yes, there may be more CMS usage in the future, but those
tools still have to be created by web specialists.  As such, any company
that wants a professional appearance, on the web, will still need to
hire web-savvy developers.

M!ke 

-----Original Message-----
From: Sid M [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2007 5:48 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Web Developers soon to be extinct?

<p>OK, I know everyone is already familiar with the age old argument
stirred up once again by the <a
href="http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticle
Basic&amp;articleId=9020942">recent Computer World article</a>; the one
in which a decidedly poorly researched hack listed ColdFusion as a dying
skill (I know, which industry do these people actually work in?!)...
well, this literary slush has reared its ugly head again in a <a
href="http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/hiner/?p=514&amp;tag=nl.e124";>re
worked article</a> on the popular IT news site TechRepublic.com.</p>

<p>While there is the usual plethora of misguided opinions and the
predictable drought of fresh perspectives, <a
href="http://techrepublic.com.com//5208-6230-0.html?forumID=102&amp;thre
adID=227003&amp;messageID=2263206">one of the comments</a> that
particularly riled me suggested that web developers, as a breed, are
akin to the typing pools of the early 50s, fuelled by the demand for
people who could type when this skill was in short supply. These days,
the blogger suggests, we are all able to type perfectly well and the
need for these 'experts', complete with their comparative system of
certifications, has long since diminished.</p>

<p>Although it is easy to see that the person commenting has little
experience of what "web development" means today (i.e. very little to do
with web sites), he is not exactly the first to spot that the <i>web
site</i> is in relative decline in favour of the <i>web app</i>. The
line between desktop client and the web is becoming increasingly blurred
with the advent of a host of RIA technologies including Flex/Apollo/AJAX
and the <a
href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/APIWar.html";>migration of
traditional desktop apps to the web</a> (<a
href="http://www.virtub.com/";>Buzzword</a>, <a
href="http://docs.google.com/";>Google Docs</a>, etc). Add to that;
modern CMS are now equipping non-technical staff with far more powerful
tools with which to create web based content (and even
mini-applications) than was possible only a couple of years ago, it is
obvious the role of web developer is certainly one that is always going
to require an ever-changing skills set.&nbsp;</p>

<p>So, (and here's the discussion I'm interested in); given this
movement towards the web-based installation of client side apps and the
empowerment of the non-technical user to do much of what a web-developer
<b><i>used </i></b>to do... what do you all see our role being in the
near and/or more distant future?...<br></p> <wbr>

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