April 19, 2008: Traveling to Syracuse

Today’s quote comes from Blaise Pascal: “If our condition were truly happy, we would not seek diversion from it in order to make ourselves happy.

I was up and moving before five thirty this morning. Today is a busy day with me covering the early shift at work and putting in more than a half day in the office and then I will be driving up to Syracuse at noon to go to Onondaga Community College for a panel meeting. Once again for yet another combination of origins and destinations I will be driving the northern section of i81. No matter what I do that road is my road. I wonder how many non-teamsters have driven any significant length of that highway as much as I have.

US Interstate 81 is an interesting highway – it is one of the few highways in the US interstate system that really has little to do with any major cities. US 81 starts at the Thousand Island Bridge in northern NY at a remote crossing point into Canada. It is a popular destination for vacationers looking to visit the beautiful Thousand Islands region an the St. Lawrence Seaway and it is the main crossing for traffic coming from the US Eastern Seaboard bound for the Canadian capital but in general it is not a heavy traffic area as it is so far removed from any major metropolitan area and Ottawa is a small and not tourist heavy city.

At the southern end route 81 stops in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is hard to imagine the traffic pattern that involves the Canadian capital, central NY, the Appalachian watershed and Knoxville, TN. I have no idea what they were thinking when they designed this road. No one from either end who gets on this road and drives it for any length of time ends up where they would imagine that they should. The only major cities, if you can even call them that, that exist along the route are Syracuse and Binghamton (fourth and sixth largest New York cities), Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and Harrisburgh in Pennsylvania (Harrisburgh being the most important city along route 81 and the linchpin of the route) and then nothing in Maryland or Virginia until arriving at Knoxville which is the third largest city in Tennessee and about the same size as Syracuse.

I was planning to leave around noon but didn’t manage to escape the office until twelve thirty or so.  I headed west on route 78 and hit McDonald’s for an “on the road” meal.  I made good time heading north and got to Onondaga Community College around four thirty – a little under four hours of drive time.

The meeting went really well and lasted about three and a half hours which is about what it was last time that we got together about eighteen months ago.  I hung around for a little while talking to Tim after the meeting was over but we both needed to get home so I left around eight thirty.

The drive home seemed to take no time at all and I barely noticed the drive.  It was almost exactly midnight when I rolled into Newark.  I walked in the door and Oreo got out of bed to see who it was.  When he saw it was me he moved onto the futon in the living room so that he could keep an eye on me in case I didn’t go right to bed.  But I did.  I have to be up in just five hours and I haven’t gotten a full night’s sleep all week so I am pretty tired.

Do IT: Breaking In – College and University

Academic experience is the most common way of entering most professions. In Information Technology it likely remains so although it is probably the lowest ratio of such of any technical profession. Collegiate level IT studies suffer from a number of factors that together create a unique situation for the IT industry. The key factors include high income rates for professionals, rapid pace of technological change, easy technology access to younger students and a poor understanding of the field outside of the industry which has resulted in high schools often guiding talented students away from the IT fields from an unfounded belief that there are few and decreasing job opportunities regardless of the continuing vacuum existing in the American IT workforce even after increased off-shoring and professional immigration.

Because of these issues colleges and universities have faced an unprecedented challenge in attempting to prepare the IT workforce. Information Technology, drastically more so than even Computer Science, has possibly the greatest disparity between what the collegiate system is turning out and what industry, and often students, are expecting. Students entering IT programs will often range from novices looking to get their first taste of IT in the hopes of making career decisions to students with more than a dozen years of amateur programming experience, several years of professional experience or work on open source projects, hands on experience with a range of technologies and an in-depth knowledge of many technologies exceeding many long-term industry professionals and professors. While any gifted student can exist in any program in any field it is nearly impossible to find an education student or a medical students or a law student that enter, at age eighteen, into college with years of experience behind them and with having had access almost equal to that of top professionals and researchers! Because of this disparity colleges and universities have a new challenge to deal with that they have never had to deal with previously.

All people learn differently and for some people collegiate work is the easiest or best way for them to obtain new knowledge. Information Technology is an industry based on change and one of the most critical skills that any IT professional will have is the ability to learn and knowledge as to how they learn best as an individual. Students who are self motivated and that can learn without external pressures or resources will have a significant advantage as individualized learning allows one to focus more, advance faster and learn more flexibly than students who, for their entire careers, will require classroom settings for educational enrichment. Most students will benefit most from a blend of educational opportunities.

While continuing academic is a traditional method of entering a profession student in IT related fields should consider this decision more strongly than in other professions because of the abundance of other resources. Academic work in the IT field is often best used as a supplement rather than a comprehensive educational solution. Students using only academic work for their studies will generally find that their knowledge is far too shallow for real world work – even entry level – and that key technology areas have been missed.

Students in academia generally also face the challenges of mounting debt from the college programs themselves. This should not be discounted as that debt could not only be disadvantageous in its own right but could also cause the student to later be unable to take key opportunities that come with higher inherent risk but offer greater career growth rather than sticking with slower growth, more stable positions. IT rewards flexibility more than most fields and students should be considering this early.

I have long suggested that students use collegiate work as a means to “fill in the gaps” between other things. College level work should never take precedence over real work experience. If college is considered to be more important than work than clearly there is a discrepancy between reality and the stated goal of an extended education. If the purpose of college is not to get work and not to advance in your career then by all means spend as much time in college as possible. But if college is not the goal but your career is the goal then college should be treated as a tool in a set of tools that can be used to forward your career.

I suggest that college work, whether done solely or if done while working in the field or while participating in other studies, be done in as “stepped” a manner as possible. By this I am specifically referring to the Associate Degree available in the United States. This is typically a two years degree. A good, accredited “junior college” will offer an array of two year degree choices that will transfer easily then to a four year school. Even if you intend to go directly on to a four year degree there are many benefits to a two year degree but the most important is that you will have obtained a full degree and could then leverage it to get a professional position or a promotion at a current position. And if anything goes wrong and you are unable to complete, in a timely fashion, a four year degree you will have the two year degree in place. Some four year universities like the State University of New York’s Empire State College offer mixed two and four year programs where you take a single program but receive an Associate Degree halfway to your Bachelor Degree.
I heartily recommend college educations because they, like all forms of education, will encourage broadening and may point you in directions that you would not have gone on your own. There are certainly people who will do better with no college level work at all but they are the minority but perhaps not as small a minority as you may think. Some people absolutely need college work and cannot function without it. But for the average hopeful IT professional my stock recommendation is to take classes when they don’t interfere with work or the potential for work (i.e. you don’t have to give up interviewing and contracting just because you have to go to class.)

College and university studies in IT are currently best utilized by professionals in the early portions of their career but after having entered the field. Often It professionals have an opportunity to take college classes part time fully and principally funded by their employers. This changes the picture dramatically as you will not take a break from experience while going to school, you will get the obvious advantage of the degree itself and you have an employer who is likely to appreciate that you were willing to take advantage of their continuing education program.

Because of college’s extremely high costs both financially and in its requirements on your valuable time it is a very high risk when compared to other methods of breaking into IT. While it has its place and should, in time, begin to become more useful as the pace of IT change begins to slow and schools begin to adapt to the rigors of IT college work is still currently not the panacea that it appears to be in other fields and should not be thought of as such. Potential students should consider their options carefully.

Once having entered the field and having begun to amass experience young IT professionals should begin to look at college as a supplement to their ongoing learning and work.  The earlier in your career that a degree is obtained the more time that it will work for you and the more meaningful the material will be.  But if it is done in lieu of actual work experience it is unlikely that even by the end of your career that a college degree will ever manage to pay for the time that it will cost you let alone the money that it will likely cost.

In conclusion, college and university studies are very likely to be highly valuable to you during your career especially in lean economic times and when you look to make a move into management.  But college is not necessarily a good tool for “getting your foot in the door” of your career but is better used as a growth tool after a year or two of consistent work.  Most people seriously interested and dedicated to moving into IT will probably find that three to six months of independent study and working on learning “at home” will be enough to land that first entry-level contract or job which is far sooner than college work will help with the same objective.

April 18, 2007

I woke up on my own at half past four this morning. Apparently my body has adjusted to the early shift. I forgot that this coming weekend is a big work weekend. I have to go into the office early on Saturday and work all day. It could be as much as sixteen hours. At least the overtime will be nice. With the mounting college bills I can’t really complain although I would like to have some time to go home and enjoy the new stereo system that we just got assembled. Tomorrow is busy enough with me running up to Syracuse and back. And tonight running into Manhattan. It is going to be a long week.

Now there is contamination from rice protein in pet foods. Kudos to Natural Balance who were smart and responsive and pulled products from the market without any way to know that they had been contaminated. Their preemptive move to pull questionable food from shelves undoubtedly saved many pets lives.

Today was our day to find out if we still had jobs. We have a large round of layoffs going on at the office and today was my department’s day under the magnifying glass. But we came through and I am still working for another day. I think that dad and Dominica were a bit more worried than I was.

I got home and relaxed watching some Full House while waiting for Dominica and Oreo to get home. I am taking it easy tonight. Just a little homework to be done and then off to an early bedtime. Tomorrow is going to be an exceptionally long day so I want some rest. I haven’t had a full night’s sleep all week so I need as much as I can get tonight. I have been getting four to six hours every night which isn’t bad and I am not complaining but I have to get up just after five tomorrow and won’t be getting back home until after midnight I expect and then have to be up early again on Friday morning so I am expecting to be tired.

I was supposed to go out with a buddy from London who is in Manhattan for coffee tonight but I guess he got stuck at the office late as he never called.  He was pretty busy when I left the office so I kind of expected it.

Min didn’t feel like going anywhere tonight so we ordered in Italian from Nino’s in Harrison and just watched more Full House.  We discovered tonight that the new Marantz receiver is not going to work in the television cabinet.  It just generates too much heat to be squeezed in there without any ventilation.  Now we have no idea where we are going to put it.  That is going to be a real problem.  We had hoped to put a computer in there as well but that definitely isn’t happening either.  So now we have a challenge to figure out where to put this stuff that it will be attractive and not take up too much space.

I did my homework around nine and we went to bed at ten.  Oreo is in for an exhausting week as he isn’t getting a single day at home with me all week.

Do IT: Breaking In – College and University – Degree Programs

In most fields the most simple and obvious means of breaking into the industry is through higher education. In many fields a degree from an accredited college or university is not just required from a practical sense (automotive mechanical engineers will get nowhere without a baccalaureate or higher degree in mechanical engineering) but require it legal (hairdressers, doctors, etc.)

[In the United States the terms college and university are widely used interchangeably. Technically a college is a school of study while a university is a collection of colleges. For example, the State University of New York consists of many colleges as well as a few “sub” universities all within a single university. But in Canada a college is similar to a junior college in the US and university is what we call “four year schools.” This can be confusing as in the US being accepted to a college means that you are definitely accepted to its associated university but not necessarily vice versa. But in Canada a university is considered to be the more serious degree and college is a “less than” baccalaureate program.]

Collegiate level work, regardless of the level, can be a good means of getting a foot into the door of the IT industry. This can be done through social networking with other students, contacts from professors and staff or simply by the fact that when you are finished you carry a degree or certification from the school.

At this time there are two principle degree programs that are available to a prospective student: IT/CIS and CS. IT/CIS is the most problematic because every school seems to have their own name for this program. The most common at Information Technology or Computer Information Systems. Some schools inappropriately call this MIS or Management Information Systems but MIS should be a specific field of study within an IT/CIS program. Some school use the term Information Systems but many schools shy away from this as it was common for some time to use that term to create false resume value by passing off Library Science graduates and technology professionals often without ever having providing a single technology resource. This is not limited to small schools but some major universities in the US have taken this tact to keep costs low (librarians are very cheap and IT professionals cost as much as the most senior collegiate staff) while turning out large numbers of graduates (as people unable to handle the rigors of a true IT program flocked to these school to “buy” their degrees.) The names vary but IT/CIS programs are, or should be, targeted at the skills used by the IT industry. The field of study, like the profession, is extremely broad and will often encourage a high degree of specialization within the program.

The other popular degree program is CS or Computer Science. Computer Science grew out of Electrical Engineering which used to be the training ground for IT professionals before the field gained its own recognition. The IT field started academically as being integrated with computer and hardware design and then with programming. When Computer Science became a field of study in its own right it was widely recognized that computer engineering was an electrical engineering discipline and that computer science was its own field focusing on the programmatic needs of computational machinery. The IT field has grown and most professionals within IT are not based on programming and computer science has been able to become the field that it should – the study of the theories of programming. Computer science is not a strictly IT disciple. A simile that might explain the relationship between CS and IT is like the separation between being a physicist and an engineer. Engineering relies on physics to discover new principles in many cases but physicist rely on engineers to actually create and maintain real world devices. Engineering is a gigantic field whereas physics research is relatively small.

Because of this separation programs in computer science are focused on preparing students for algorithmic research and most jobs are in companies pushing software boundaries like operating system, database, video games, compiler and high performance computing vendors or in academia. Computer science is a niche field related to but not truly IT although IT does need CS to survive. Students interested in a career in IT should not be taking CS degree programs as this leads them down a path of study that does not give them the skills necessary to work in IT. Only students in software development have the option to choose between the two areas of study and only with extreme rarity is there benefit to the CS path over a dedicated software development path in IT. IT’s focus on software development is generally targeted towards created real world business software in business environments. It is about using tools, working in teams, being aware of available technologies, etc. CS will often focus on low level languages, algorithms and math.

It is so common for students interested in IT to choose collegiate work in CS that it poses a real issue for the field. Students are expecting training in their chosen field while taking coursework in a different field. Colleges and universities should do more to educate their students coming into these programs but students need to take responsibility to entering programs designated for their intended career path. CS is an important and very difficult field of study but it is not a path into traditional IT and with rare exception should be avoided and should always be avoided, in my opinion, by anyone not intent on achieving at very least a Master’s (five year graduate study) if not a Doctoral degree. CS is the theoretical physics of the computer world.

As this is an article series on Information Technology I will continue in future article only speaking of IT and CIS collegiate programs.

Some larger IT schools are beginning to offer highly specialized degree programs that can also be considered IT or CIS programs such as Rochester Institute of Technology’s Masters of Networking and Systems Administration within the IT and CS school. These specialized degrees can be really good for students interested in a single, concentrated career path but are probably not as beneficial for students with broader interests or hopes of switching from a dedicated technical into management later in their careers.

April 17, 2007: Tax Day

I got home yesterday and talked to the BMW body shop. The BMW is finally done but they don’t have the invoice ready for us yet so it is going to be another day before we can pick up the car. 🙁 Dominica and I made plans to get it tomorrow. It is no simple task to pick up a car from a shop that is only open during the working day and is located in the middle of nowhere. I have to leave work early and drive all the way out there and Dominica has to take a long lunch and drive down to meet me at the airport so that we can drop off the rental car then drive to the shop and have me drive home from there. It is a lot of effort.

I took a short nap just before Oreo and Dominica got home. Then we spent the evening watching Angel. We are almost to the end of the fourth season. I think that there are only two more episodes left.

It is another early morning for me. Up at twenty after five and off to the office. The weather has improved and the rain has stopped. People were all predicting snow for last night but that never came. Everything is fine this morning.

I checked with Amazon and our new Marantz receiver is in Elizabeth so there is some chance that we will have it today. Which would be great except that we have no cables at all for it so all we can do is put it into the cabinet and look at it until we get some cables.

I left work and drove out to Newark airport and turned in the Pontiac G6 rental that I have now had for nine days. That wasn’t cheap. At least my new insurance definitely covers this type of thing so the cost of renting should be a lot lower in the future. Dominica got to National Car Rental at the Newark Airport just minutes behind me and then we drove down to Iselin and picked up the BMW from Garden State Auto Body on the Lincoln Highway. The work looks great and the car is as good as new. Luckily it was just a plastic piece that had to be replaced so there was no real impact to the car.

Dominica had to return to the office as she is the only person who covers there late in the day. I drove back to Newark in the underpowered Mazda PR5 (mostly because it is getting old) and signed back on to work from home which I did until almost six.

I took a walk over to Radio Shack on Military Park before they closed and grabbed some cheap speaker cable, an optical audio cable (Toslink) and another HDMI cable to hook up to the new Marantz. I started getting the receiver ready before Dominica and Oreo got home. There is just enough space in our “entertainment” cabinet to fit the Marantz. That is going to be a problem. It is a 7x80watt receiver so that is a lot of power to cram into a very small space. We only use two channels out of all of that so we don’t drive it nearly as hard as we might but it still needs air and there is no circulation at all where it is. We might not be able to keep it there. But the apartment is cold compared to most places where a receiver would be used so it might not get warm at all.

I hooked up the Samsung DVD player through the Marantz’s HDMI switcher and hooked the PlayStation 2’s optical audio connection to the receiver as well. I don’t have enough cables at the house to have the receiver do the switching for the component video from the PS2 but it doesn’t matter as the television would have to switch between HDMI and component inputs anyway and since we only have two things to hook to the receiver it is all the same.  We are using the Totem DreamCatchers in the little apartment.  They work perfectly there.  They don’t shake anything but it is easier to hear dialogue.

Dominica went over to Food for Life and got take away for dinner.  We ate and watched the last three episodes of the fourth season of Angel.  We weren’t tired so then we watched a little from the middle of the first season of Full House.  For people who have cable it may seem strange that we bought Full House on DVD but since I have never really had cable I have never seen the show in reruns except when I am in a hotel somewhere and that is pretty rare and I have never seen some of the later seasons.  It was a decent show but was ruined by being played in reruns so often.

There are holiday pictures of Oreo and his gang posted at Doggie Paradise now.  I copied the two of our boy for our Flickr feed.