Linked by David Adams on Fri 11th Jul 2008 02:59 UTC, submitted by snydeq
Internet & Networking Neil McAllister raises questions regarding Web development skills in an era of constant innovation. Sure, low barriers to entry give underdog technologies ample opportunity to thrive without the backing of name-brand vendors. But doesn't this fragmentation of the Web development market put undue pressure on developers to specialize? The result is a crisis, McAllister concludes, one in which maintaining a marketable skill set and hiring for a particular Web project gets more difficult as the state of the art changes on an almost daily basis.
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RE: Be conservative
by Clinton on Fri 11th Jul 2008 16:13 UTC in reply to "Be conservative"
Clinton
Member since:
2005-07-05

That isn't the point I was trying to make.

My point is that I'm looking for programmers who understand programming, not just someone who understands C#; even if C# is the language we're going to be using.

Edited 2008-07-11 16:13 UTC

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