Hey folks, my wife is a speech language pathologist who specializes in stroke rehab, I sent her this post and this comment section and she sent me this to share:
As a stroke/neuro rehab speech-language pathologist that is married to a web dev/engineering manager (that obviously sent me this blogpost), everyone reading needs to listen to this author's sound advice for prevention of CVA as well as for post-stroke management. We are seeing younger age strokes more frequently, especially those with jobs that are high stress and low physicality (read: you folks!). Thank you to the writer for spreading this info and awareness… I can confirm it is not as niche as one might think and for best outcomes you have to respond FAST (look at Face, Arm weakness, Speech difficulty, Time to call 911). PSA of the day!
As you can see from our examples, the main approach is not tool search. Instead, Strata guides your AI agent step by step, going from server to categories to actions to action details so that the model does not get overloaded. We actually have 1000+ tools for some of the integrations (e.g. GitHub) and this approach works better than traditional methods.
Think of it as a search engine vs. a file explorer. But we do provide documentation search as well. So you get the best out of the two worlds.
I don't think there's actually a shortage of tech workers in the US. I think there is probably a shortage of tech workers in the US that are willing to work for the wages that companies want to pay.
One of the "problems" companies have is that it's hard to find skilled workers in the US with good experience who are not demanding SF wages. And recent graduates aren't that useful so while they might technically be "tech workers" in the sense they would like to fill open roles, companies don't really want them.
So for most companies if you want to hire the most experienced and qualified for the role, and do that at a reasonable cost, you'll need to consider the H1B route.
h1b is not "reasonable cost". there is not a shortage of highly experienced tech workers. every big tech is shortchanging USA workers in favor of H1Bs to make a racket. what a joke
How do you reconcile that with developers over 45 finding it impossible to find jobs, are all of them asking for "unreasonable" pay?
I mean, if you are senior, you probably have a family and possibly kids. Even with a part-time RTO position that means more than a three-roommate setup, you need a house or 2b/3b in SF/SEA/NY. That works for industries where you dont need to be in the most expensive cities, but how does it work for tech workers with families?
> How do you reconcile that with developers over 45 finding it impossible to find jobs, are all of them asking for "unreasonable" pay?
What's "reasonable" depends on perspective. Truth is it makes relatively little sense hiring tech workers in the US today. I'm not saying I'm happy about that, but unlike a few decades ago, the majority of tech talent in the world today is overseas, and increasingly in low-labour cost countries like India which previously didn't have the internet access or education to compete.
Given this today a reasonable cost to a business for software development is lower in the same way a reasonable cost for manufacturing is lower because of low-cost manufacturing in places like China.
I'm just pointing out what's happening. For a while now people with an education thought the reason they could find good work and were doing okay relative to uneducated people was because of effort. And while this was somewhat true, it's probably better explained by much lower levels of international labour competition from low-wage countries. It takes skill to be good at manufacturing too, but that skill doesn't protect you from extremely low cost labour which doesn't quite have comparable skills, but can do the job almost just as well.
People should be thinking about this. Economists will argue (perhaps correctly) that allowing the free market to do its think will result in higher GDP growth. But if people are unemployed and struggling to find good work, what's the benefit of that GDP growth? There should be some effort to balance what's reasonable from an employers perspective with what's reasonable for employees.
So this a bone conducting microphone? That operates at the speed of speech? While you sit around awkwardly, hoping no one talks to you? This isn't thought. This is you saying to yourself quite clearly what you would like it to hear.
As a stroke/neuro rehab speech-language pathologist that is married to a web dev/engineering manager (that obviously sent me this blogpost), everyone reading needs to listen to this author's sound advice for prevention of CVA as well as for post-stroke management. We are seeing younger age strokes more frequently, especially those with jobs that are high stress and low physicality (read: you folks!). Thank you to the writer for spreading this info and awareness… I can confirm it is not as niche as one might think and for best outcomes you have to respond FAST (look at Face, Arm weakness, Speech difficulty, Time to call 911). PSA of the day!