paul barnes-hogget had an argument about supply and demand in the
flex/flasharena which i thought is very apt. he stated that as flex and
flash is such a hot technology the demand is very high, thus with normal
market factors wages tend to rise. big companies want to use the technology,
but due to the cost and lack of supply they struggle to use it, thus making
them consider other alternatives.

personally we have started hirring developers who are skilled in other
areas, upskilling them into this one via peer programming and code reviews
in order to try and meet some of this demand, this unfortunatly is a slow
process, but one most companies have to do if they want to expand.

On 9/12/06, Zeh Fernando <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>> I have been on this list for years and have seen all the job postings
and
>> have posted some myself. I am looking to hire 5 Flex 2.0 and 3 flash
>> developers. I have tried posting on dice and monster and have yet to
get
>> resumes that come close to the qualifications that I need. So I have to
>> ask
>> where are people finding flash and flex guru's? If you are a flash or
>> flex
>> guru please email me your resume, we pay well!

I live in another world, but I can say the same about our (Brazilian)
market
aswell. There's an absurd lack of competent people, and trying to find
someone with the level you expect and that you can trust is an exercise in

frustration. I have to refuse almost daily, and inevitably I have to
repeat
the same choir over and over again - "No, I can't do your specific job but
thanks, and no, I don't know anyone who could that I can point you at, I'm

sorry, that's the truth". I get baffled replies at best; people usually
think I'm bullsh*tting them.

Unfortunatelly it seems much of this is due to the nature and the history
of
Flash. Sure, there's a lot of people working with Flex and Flash from all
the walks of the design/IT life, but differently from other technologies
like, say, Java, the technology isn't seen as being integral part of a
dedicated field. Take as an example the school (university) I go to: we
have
design/interface design/multimedia bachelor degrees, as well as computer
science degrees. On the computer science courses, they learn C, C++,
Python,
Java, and stuff like that; on the other design courses, they learn basic
Flash (and I mean, *really* basic flash).

Sure, I'm not the one to trust blindly in school degrees (I've worked for
12
years and never had a degree) and I sure hope someone will come out of
graduation with 100 design patterns memorized. But the fact that no
university course around here sees Flash as a 'serious' programming field
speaks a lot when you see the absense of good professionals on the market.
You usually have a lot of 'hacks' that come from, say, the creative/design

area, and think they're good because they can tween a banner, but it's
hard
to someone that go a little further and actually wants to get better at
coding, or people from the 'cold coding' market moving into what's seen as
a
designerish tool. Sad but true.


Zeh

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