Wonderful, Now, after all these skills are acquired and these newbies without any practical experience, entering a VERY limited mainframe market place are competing with experience systems programmers with years of experience...what happen?
Want cheap..hire a newbie low salary and what not. Want to get the job done pick an experience sysprog. That's my two cents. BTW where are the mainframe hot spots these days??? --- On Fri, 9/18/09, Ken Porowski <ken.porow...@cit.com> wrote: > From: Ken Porowski <ken.porow...@cit.com> > Subject: IBM Program To Help Students Gain Critical Mainframe Skills Grows To > More Than 600 Universities > To: IBM-MAIN@bama.ua.edu > Date: Friday, September 18, 2009, 3:14 PM > For the "We're not dead yet" file > > IBM Program To Help Students Gain Critical Mainframe Skills > Grows To > More Than 600 Universities > > Schools in Emerging Markets Join IBM Academic Initiative > for System z; > program now reaches students in 61 countries > > http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/28430.wss > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access > instructions, > send email to lists...@bama.ua.edu > with the message: GET IBM-MAIN INFO > Search the archives at http://bama.ua.edu/archives/ibm-main.html > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to lists...@bama.ua.edu with the message: GET IBM-MAIN INFO Search the archives at http://bama.ua.edu/archives/ibm-main.html