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Although I didn't attend C3 Expo this year, I read that Red Hat CEO Matthew Szulik gave a keynote speech in which he made some comments that have left me a little miffed. If he did make the remarks, I would hope that, because he is a leader, Szulik is willing to offer solutions to the problems he cited, rather than simply moan about the way things are.
According to published reports, Szulik lamented, "My problem is not marketing or competing externally. My biggest problem is recruiting." The Red Hat chief pinned the blame on two factors: the poor state of education in the United States and the decline of government investment in technology R&D. It seems he is using these excuses to justify Red Hat's hiring two-thirds of its new employees from abroad last year.
So another U.S. technology company wants highly skilled employees and can't find them at home. Is Szulik willing to put his money where his mouth is?
I see Red Hat turned a tidy profit last year. I wonder whether the company is willing to put a portion of this back into programs that help educate and develop U.S. workers. That sounds reasonable to me, considering Szulik sees employee recruitment as such a critical problem.
He even identified a program that would probably appreciate an influx of cash from a company such as Red Hat. The Sakai Project is a community source software-development effort to design, build and deploy a collaboration and learning environment for higher education. Just as the open source community collaborates for the greater good of Linux, the Sakai Project develops courseware to be shared by colleges and universities. An investment would be a great way for Red Hat to show its support for the open source model, as well as help improve the state of U.S. education.
If Red Hat has a few dollars left over after supporting the Sakai Project, perhaps Szulik can write his next check to the Computing Technology Industry Association Educational Foundation. The foundation's mission is to develop qualified and productive entry-level IT workers, with the hopes of eliminating the industry's skills shortages. Even if Red Hat isn't hiring entry-level IT staff, the company's customers could benefit from the development of good technical people to administer all those Linux systems.
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Metzler on CIO Priorities
The top five CIO priorities based on a survey of NetScout users revealing CIOs' top priorities and what they think they should be. Also includes interviews with CIOs of large organizations.
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How to eliminate the stovepiped or siloed nature of application delivery from both an organization and a technological perspective.
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Overview of network troubleshooting that provides an assessment of where we are, and where we need to be relative to the complexities of today's IT challenges.
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