Oracle To Add R&D Centers In China 223
stoborrobots writes "Reuters is reporting that the big O is planning to open new R&D centres in china. Initially aiming at the domestic Chinese market, there is potential to resell the technologies developed beyond the borders... Is this the next wave of outsourcing?"
Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Funny)
Yes.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:4, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:3, Informative)
That would be exporting [reference.com] , not outsourcing [reference.com] . You and the mods need to get thee to a dictionary.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Tackyness can be funny, but when it is overdone and overexposed, it simply loses appeal.
Hell, it was funnier than that damned badger/mushroom/snake animation.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't be so sure. People are surprisingly quick to adopt the cultures of others.
That happens to be one of Radical Islams greatest fears: cultural imperialism. Our ideas about freedom have been called "Murderous Germs".
From an article about the origins of fundamentalist Islam: [newyorker.com]
In his essay "Between Yesterday and Today," Banna [founder of the Muslim Brotherhood] wrote that the colonialist Europeans had expropriated the resources of the Islamic lands and corrupted them with "their murderous germs":
"They imported their half-naked women into these regions, together with
their liquors, their theaters, their dance halls, their amusements, their
stories, their newspapers, their novels, their whims, their silly games, and
their vices. . . . The day must come when the castles of this materialistic
civilization will be laid low upon the heads of their inhabitants. "
The Brotherhood's slogan was, and remains, "God is our objective; the Koran
is our constitution; the prophet is our leader; struggle is our way; and
death for the sake of God is the highest of our aspirations."
Or how about Osama's Letter to America [guardian.co.uk]:
(2) The second thing we call you to, is to stop your oppression, lies, immorality and debauchery that has spread among you.
(a) We call you to be a people of manners, principles, honour, and purity; to reject the immoral acts of fornication, homosexuality, intoxicants, gambling's, and trading with interest.
[snip]
(iv) You are a nation that permits acts of immorality, and you consider them to be pillars of personal freedom. You have continued to sink down this abyss from level to level until incest has spread amongst you, in the face of which neither your sense of honour nor your laws object.
[snip]
Who can forget your President Clinton's immoral acts committed in the official Oval office? After that you did not even bring him to account, other than that he 'made a mistake', after which everything passed with no punishment. Is there a worse kind of event for which your name will go down in history and remembered by nations?
If culture couldn't be outsourced, terrorists would have must less to be angry about.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2, Insightful)
Rock on! Kind of makes you proud to be a Westerner, doesn't it?
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Funny)
What's really bizzare about all of this?
1. Bush says "they hate us for our freedoms" but he doesn't believe it.
2. It's actually true, so he is accidentally right about something.
3. The Osamas of the world think America is morally too socially liberal.
4. so do conservatives in the US.
5. The US conservatives are fighting people they can somewhat agree with to protect the freedom of people they disagree with.
6. The political right doesn't realize it.
7. The political left doesn't realize it.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
All depends on POV. Liberal to one group != liberal to another.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Speaking as a leftist, I think most people on the left realize the paradox in this. The reason it happens, I think, is because both conservative forces are reactionary. Reactionaries will get rid of anyone--even people close to them. For example, the greatest and worst wars have always been wi
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
No it isn't. Bin Laden published his reasons for 9/11 and freedom was not one of them; not his fault if you won't accept them.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Although you are basically right that radical Islamists reject Western culture, often so pathologically, your (probable) conclusion is not.
Every society is overpretective of its own culture at some point, and it has nothing to do with religion.
When a society falls under a siege mentality, or feel that it is under attack, feeling insecure about its own culture, or is undergoing social upheavels, the result is often disdain for any form of culture that is important from a perceived "other".
That "other"
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:3, Insightful)
Tea. Porcelain dinnerware. The oxblood and hunter green drawing room. Lacquerware. Sofas.
All elements of classic British culture.
All Chinese.
And for those about to point out the negative aspect of such tranference of Chinese culture to Europe in the form of opium, I'm afraid that that culture is Greco-Roman and came to China in exchange for tea.
The fact, however, that opium is now so firmly embedded in the Western mind as a distinct aspect of Chines
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Americans don't have culture. (Score:2)
You have franchises instead.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Finally it's just an adaptation to a new way of working, like it was during/after industrial revolution. Nothing really special I mean..
What do you think would happen to outsourcing if we had teleporters ?
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Companies would locate themselves to some attractive locations (eg. Bahamas, Switzerland, Singapore; or places like that). Then the workers would live wherever they want but teleport to work every morning and then come home. What will essentially happen is that the notion of
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2, Interesting)
* obvious exaggeration, but you get the point
Postgres (Score:3, Funny)
It's almost laughable when you contrast Oracle with, say, Postgres. Apart from running the RPM command, all you have to do to get Postgres running publicly is edit two files in its config directory, one to turn on tcpip sockets and the other to tell it what authentication method to use. There's no monstrous pages out there with hundreds of errors comprising a very incomplete set of "how
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Language. Indian languages come from Sanskrit, which according to all credible sources is a sister language to Ancient Greek and Latin (Dental in English refers to Teeth. Tooth in french is "Dent". In Hindi, the equivalent is "Dant" which is pronounced almost like the french word. The same applies to counting and numbers. This, coupled with 250 years of British Rule, means that Indians pick up English/Western European languages a lot faster than Chinese (poor accents and grammar aside).
2. Culture. Chinese people as a rule are more homogenous than Indians, and by all anecdotal evidence are much more disciplined. This mindset means that replicating a manufacturing process comes very easy to them. Life in India, however consists of "Jugad". This is a hindi word which can loosely be translated as "Improvisation" or to a person in the CS field it would be called a "Hack". As much as we'd like to pretend that programming and development are simple ordered processes, we all know this is far from the truth. There are many solutions which require some improvisation, and this again means that Indians are better suited to software.
3. Government. India is a democratic republic, following a parliamentary system based on the British system. It has the three branches (legislative, executive, judicial) that are familiar to most (Western and) other democracies. China is more of a pseudo-communist/totalitarian-capitalist. This makes it easier for businessmen attempting to outsource, as they can operate in a framework they are familiar with. (In practise, this hasn't worked out, because India has not been going out of its way to attract business like China was doing...it is definitely easier to make fast decisions quickly in a communist country than in a democracy.
Anyway those are my two cents. Thank you for your time
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2, Interesting)
1. Language -- It doesn't really matter that the Indian languages come from the same roots. They're sufficiently different now that most Americans can't understand Indian anymore than they can understand French, Italian, or for that matter, Ancient Greek and Latin. Or Chinese. One of us will have to learn to communicate with the other, regardless of where they're from.
There are Chinese people who can speak perfect English. There are Indians who can to
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Informative)
attitude (Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer) (Score:2)
The reason you don't know about any Indian inventions is because you must be American, and have never seen it on Fox News.
That attitude (and others that I see on your blog) isn't going to get you very far in life. And if you form your view of foreigners from shallow stereotypes, well, pot meet kettle?
On second thought, keep it up ... forget I said anything. That attitude will help you immensely in international competition ;) Yeah, that's it ...
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
And this means what to anybody?
Zero and the decimel system in the 4th and 5th centuries AD. We are living in the 20th/21st century and show me the von Neumanns and Einsteins of India. I guess u can't. My reason for bringing this up was because the original poster mentioned the Chinese inventions of Paper and Gunpowder, both of which are 1000/2000 years old. Show me the
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:5, Interesting)
It is very true that chinese are generally rather homogenous, and I know many engineering and other students who routinely copy each others' assignments. But another thing you have to remember is that there are 1.3 billion people here and if
As far as the language, that's a big issue here, and their english is generally pretty bad, but as more and more students go abroad for college (since a lot more can afford it now) and that literally every chinese person i know is constantly trying to improve their english, that will become less of a factor.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:3, Insightful)
Chinese/Far Asians cannot code. There may be a few exeptions. They are good at other things. When you need real developer the salary does not count, skill and time is the factor.
When you leave outsourcing decisions to crappy Asian-hype analysts and business people they will go to China, of course...
As they know so much about the Indian skills... (a cheap waste of money).
"Chinese people as a rule are more homogenous than Indians, and by all anecdotal evidence are much more
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:4, Informative)
Chinese/Far Asians cannot code
Flamebait,troll,load-of-crap,not-worth-replying-t
What is a far Asian? Somebody living a 100 miles away? I've heard of East Asian(Chinese), North Asian(Japanese/Siberian), South Asian(Sub-continental) and West Asian (Saudi Arabia e.t.c.). But never a far Asian. Chinese people as a rule are more homogenous than Indians, and by all anecdotal evidence are much more disciplined."
haha. Chinese are not homogenous at all, although they look the same to "us". And discipline does not count, it's only important that they do what you want them to do.
I still stand by this statement. In India, you can cross over to a neighbouring state, and all of sudden not even be able to read that State's language, or understand it. It's written using a different script in some cases. This doesn't hold for one or two exceptions. It's the norm. The wedding customs followed vary. The type of cuisine can change drastically. Much more than say the difference between Sichuan or Cantonese (both are yummy btw). And Chinese people don't "look the same" to me. After having spent 12 years in Hong Kong, it's easy to spot the difference between Japanese, Chinese and Korean, no sweat. Same goes for their written and spoken languages. It's easy if you just bother to use your brain's power of observation. Eastern Europe and the Baltics have a shot, but they'll never be able to compete on numbers - human numbers. Size of most baltic countries = a small-sized city China/India.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Programming is culture centric. Perhaps a asian style of programming has to be invented. Far east means China/korea/Japan.
There are exceptions. The reason must be language. Programming uses a certain grammar.
Btw: just look how little software is developed by japanese, chinese...
"In India, you can cross over to a neighbouring state, and all of sudden not even be able to read that State's language, or understand it."
Same applies for China. China is a bunc
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
You just proved my own point. You think that Indians and Chinese are flocking to America/Europe, when the number of people emigrating is tiny compared to the populations of our country. And I made the mistake of "flocking" to America. Luckily I had the sense to come back, after my shit-all experience there.
Linguistics / ethnography (Score:2)
1. Language. Most Indian languages are indeed Indo-European and interoperate well with English. Many millions, however, speak non-Indo-European Dravidian languages. I would say that educated Indians _and_ educated Chinese speak better English than English and American people, though, anyway...
2. I agree that India is very heterogenous. China, however, also retains some heterogeneity, and although that diversity is being wiped out at a great rate and with huge brutality, it
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
China is more of a pseudo-communist/totalitarian-capitalist.
Yes. A friend of mine tried to start an off-shore GIS data conversion shop in Vietnam. At some point the Vietnamese government decided that *they* owned his computers. Businesses are going to be very leery of opening shops in countries where the normal laws of ownership do not exist.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
You say that so-called democracy makes a difference but does it really? Do the capitalists care what government is used? Not really. One just needs to look at Nazi Germany or modern day Singapore. Even modern day China with massive foriegn investment shows
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
First of all, most guys on battle.net are Korean, not Chinese (not that you would know the difference). Second, most of these are kids and teenagers. If I look at Americans, or Canadian, or Europeans, or whoever, people in that age group seem to be lacking teamwork as well. Lastly, you are a racist...
No (Score:2)
Outsourcing is hiring another company to do part of your work for you.
Opening a new branch or division or research centre is _not_ and never will be outsourcing, it's expanding. It's almost a polar oposite of outsourcing.
Perhaps you are confusing outsourcing with "hiring people that are not American"?
If that's what you mean, then say it.
Re:Simple Question, Simple Answer (Score:2)
The thing is, Chinese business has a simple tactic that works very well on us greedy capitalists. They will tell you (that's you, Mr. CEO) that hey, we're a HUGE market, biggest on the plan
As long as this continues to be the trend... (Score:5, Insightful)
OSS is no longer an ideology, it is fiscal self defense for programmers and IT professionals in general. Open Source allows us to start our own businesses offering support and design services without the middle man of large software companies that will always seek to downsize us to cheaper people.
I'm sure others may disagree, but this is the way I see things.
Re:As long as this continues to be the trend... (Score:2)
Companies are learning, albeit very slowly, that they do not need their balls in a clamp held by the software companies. The fut
Re:As long as this continues to be the trend... (Score:2)
> our sway to move to Open Source solutions in our companies and to develop Open Source Software.
Anything that reduces the barrier of entry to any company is a threat to existing companies. But a Free market would ensure that they fight fairly. Here geography is overcome to (thanks to a side-effect of US Defence project called DARPANET) ensure that the market is becoming wider and deeper.
Open Source will open up the market for small players. I d
Re:As long as this continues to be the trend... (Score:2)
Re:As long as this continues to be the trend... (Score:2)
But you do realize that under pure capitalism, you are supposed to privatize the roads too (in fact it's happening in some parts of the world).
The problem I see is that the people w
Workaround for US export controls? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Workaround for US export controls? (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the reason why my company has forty development positions available at the moment in China and an apparent hiring freeze in Europe and North America.
Re:Workaround for US export controls? (Score:2, Insightful)
BTW imagine what happens when Oracle becomes considered an almost-local company in China. It's going to be a great politically correct source of commercial software and profit for everyone involved (no commercial software => low selling price => no money for "consulting" payouts => bad business)...
Theref
Re:Workaround for US export controls? (Score:2, Insightful)
What protection does Oracle have (Score:3, Insightful)
Just a question.....
Re:What protection does Oracle have (Score:3, Insightful)
What protection does Oracle have from Chinese workers stealing their intellectual property and using it in China, or worse, in a Chinese company coming back to compete against Oracle in the States?
I don't know.
What protection does Oracle have from American workers stealing their intellectual property and using it in the US, or worse, in another American country competing against Oracle in the US, if they don't outsource?
Re:What protection does Oracle have (Score:2)
C'mon, people, the law is the law - do you seriously think that China has no leagal concept of contracts? That the Chinese government would piss off the US government and companies by allowing something like this to go unpunished, were it to happen?
The benefits (stealing a few secrets from $largeSoftwareCompany) would be completely swamped by the potential loss of foregin investment, etc.
Re:What protection does Oracle have (Score:2)
Having said that, they are trying to improve their legal system. I don't know how good is "good enough" but they are doing something.
Oracle compete thro' excellence not protectionism (Score:4, Interesting)
Hopefully, no protection whatsoever.
Oracle competes on excellence and through continuous improvement and customer satisfaction. The day that they call for protectionism is the day that they've started resting on their laurels and deserve to die.
Re:Oracle compete thro' excellence not protectioni (Score:4, Insightful)
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. You've never used Oracle, have you?
The day that they call for protectionism is the day that they've started resting on their laurels and deserve to die.
They've been resting on their laurels for a long time now. Oh, the core database product is good enough. But the little bits around the edges that make a polished product are just completely absent with Oracle. It comes across as an amateurish and half finished program. And given that they've had 20 years and billions of dollars to get it right, there really is no excuse for that.
Re:Oracle compete thro' excellence not protectioni (Score:2)
That's really freaky. That they have invested more time into writing tools and directions on how to recover a corrupted RPM database than into preventing it from becoming corrupted in the first place isn't very good.
Re:US copyright, trademark and patent law. (Score:2)
That means something.
This isn't just programming, it's R&D (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps too many grow up thinking they ought to be playing tennis or being musicians. Those are the most important people, right?
Those are the images the media gives them, so it must be true.
Re:This isn't just programming, it's R&D (Score:5, Insightful)
As an analogy, IBM's research lab in India is focussed on making eGovernance solutions, machine translation solns from/to Indian languages, Hindi speech reco etc.
Also, it goes without saying that it adds to the overall prestige of Oracle as well.
Cost of entry to China markets (Score:2)
Who wants a small-town America? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you complain about outsourcing you're merely buying into politician's agendas, effectively giving them an easy platform of "Vote for me and I will protect your jobs". Make great stuff and you don't need protectionism. And if you really value a free market, restrictions should be the last thing on your minds anyway.
The world is a tiny place now, you shouldn't be thinking about "keeping jobs at home" any more than you'd think about extracting all your raw materials from home too. That's not today's world. You can't compete on the basis of labour cost, that should be obvious; you need to be better.
Globalization of both the markets and the production has been immense in recent decades, and no megacorp can afford to chain itself down with yesterday's small-town views nor barriers against free flow of resources.
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:3, Interesting)
But your argument that outsourcing is OK rests on one very flawed assumption: that the people of the world are nothing more than labour.
From the point of view of the elite who own basically everything, people are just labour. But for the rest of us, there are some very important issues underneath the surface of outsourcing and globalization.
Look at the countries where the jobs are going.
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:2)
But that wasn't my assumption, pretty much the opposite.
Different people have different talents and abilities, depending on their personal circumstances and their environment and culture. You can't expect an unfortunate barely literate 3rd-world ex-farmer who came in to the city to pack boxes for a US global megacorp to be designing the latest technological marvels or p
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:2)
You are assuming that the cost of living is the same everywhere in the world. But that simply isn't true. A salary of USD 20,000 isn't much in San Francisco or Manhattan but you could live pretty well on it in Bangkok or Bangalore, because the USD.THB or USD.IRR exchange rate is favorable.
In the US, working in a call centre is one step above unskilled labour in a factory. In India, graduates of good colleges compete for job
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:2)
True. But that really doesn't mean it'll happen again. Or that it'll lead to anything similar, if it happens. It's not as if the general civilisational framework in today's threshold countries bore any framewor
And she calls ME a troll... (Score:2)
You've got to be kidding, right?
These places are the WORST examples you could have used. They are stuctured much like your own country ( I trust you are a proud American, right? ). There is a 5% elite class that own everything, that buy everything, that control everything. Then there is the rest of the people ( 95% for the American among us ) that live in the factories or in makeshift shelters just outside the factories. They process our toxic waste, recycle our electronic e
Re:And she calls ME a troll... (Score:2)
Stalin actually did a good job of industrializing the Soviet Union at a very fast pace. Before that, Russia was poor and destitute. The first time Lenin tried reforming the farms, there was a famine--Lenin was forced to implement the New Economic Policy to return the farms to a market system after that. Stalin did wonders for the Soviet economy, in the short term. In
Would you like fries with that? (Score:4, Insightful)
Dell operates on the same model as McDonald's. They do a little QC on the cheapest crap they can get their hands on and advertise. Most people, it seems, have been happy eating "downer cows" [mcdonalds.com]. That and an economy built on pure service might be good enough for you, but I want the freedom to do more.
If you complain about outsourcing you're merely buying into politician's agendas ... Make great stuff and you don't need protectionism. And if you really value a free market, restrictions should be the last thing on your minds anyway.
No, I don't buy it and yes I demand free markets.
The real protectionism is in "IP" laws. Restrictive licensing prevents people from actually rating Oracle's databases so comparison is impossible. Worse, I can't compete against Oracle if they get a bunch of bogus software patents. It is only that kind of government protection that makes the logistic headaches of outsourcing possible. In a free economy, most of the current big dumb companies would have been toppled by smaller smarter competition long ago.
As it is, the big dumb companies survive and feed off each other. The average American worker continues to suffer M$ desktops, mergers and layoffs while their overpaid executives pad their salaries with bonuses from all the money they have "saved" by eliminating their competition, auction proceeds and offshoring. The whole thing is a crock and represents the end of a long corporate looting spree.
The "service" economy was a lie. The US will quickly become a backwater if it fails to make things other people want. Some people were dumb enough to think that we could simply provide the world with "brains". The definition of "brains" is swiftly being reduced to ownership of ideas that citizens of other countries are increasingly having.
The ownership strategy is ultimately bankrupt. It amounts to enslavement of the rest of the world, a very unAmerican idea to begin with. It's also impractical. Our ability to level ownership taxes will die as other countries inherit and improve our former technical excellence.
The hogs running US mega corp and the US government could care less. They are getting theirs while the rest of us are getting the shaft.
true, so what? (Score:2)
The press release you link to states quite clearly that McDonalds does not allow the use of "downer" cows.
I used the McDonalds site for creditility. It is an admission on their part to a practice that every dairy farmer was aware of. Would you have believed me or some vegan site about it? It's also only fair of me to have been current and to give the devil his due, they no longer use "downer cows" It was news to me, but I'm not impressed nor does it make much differe
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:2)
The only thing I do not like about outsourcing is that I can't move as easily as jobs can. No amount of cheap food/merchandise can equate to a good job. In that sense, free trade is not necessarily fair trade (if we can call anything fair).
Re:Who wants a small-town America? (Score:2)
Oracle is a global company. (Score:5, Insightful)
If my company in New Zealand, or Canada, or wherever, made a billion dollars in the states, and decided it was time to open up a US office,would be out sourcing? Don't be so fucking greedy.
definition of offshore out sourcing. (Score:2)
If your company made 600 jobs in another country, then fired everyone but a handful of lawyers and marketing people in your country, you could conclude that your company had moved your job overseas.
If your company also had a bunch of bogus patents and other "IP", your unemployment might be indefinite. Try a year or two of it and tell me I'm gree
Re:definition of offshore out sourcing. (Score:3, Insightful)
That is the _only_ definition.
You can rant all you like about IP, protectionism, and off shore jobs, but it still doesn't change the fact that opening a branch in another country is _not_ offshore outsourcing. Even if you do fire everyone in the original country.
You might well call it off-shoring - Though I would call it relocating - but you most certainly can not call it off shore outsourcing.
Some facts people need to learn (this portion i
Music perhaps (Score:2)
Not to mention the forthcoming Narnia series.
OK, not exactly all NZ IP... so go and persuade the world to rent "Footrot Flats: A Dogs Tale" or "Came a hot Friday" and feel better :-)
Re:Music perhaps (Score:2)
Ba da daa ba bom, Ba da daa ba bom,
Ba da daa ba bom, Baaa da da ba booom.
(cue pan-pipes...)
OK, I know how to get that tune out-of-your head:
Ahem...
Righto, kick it in the guts, Trev...
Gumboots, they are wonderful, gumboots, they are swell
'coz they keep out the water, and they keep in the smell.
And when you're sittin' round at home, you can always tell
When one of the Trevs has taken off his gumboots.
Chorus:
If it weren't for your gumboots, where would
Alanguagewithoutspaces (Score:5, Interesting)
It makes perfectly sense to open an R&D department in China, since there's a huge market there, and of course Oracle wants to fully support chinese.
Re:Alanguagewithoutspaces (Score:2)
outsourcing (Score:5, Insightful)
The other myth about "free trade" is that it's all or nothing. You have to let companies import and outsource everything, otherwise you're economy will tank. That has never been the case, and it never will be.
Re:outsourcing (Score:2, Insightful)
BOGUS, "their feet won't reach the pedals" (Score:2, Insightful)
all interesting facts, all (probably?) true, and all beside the point.
None of those facts matter to the people who make the outsourcing decisions. Price DOES matter.
Proof: all of your observed "advantages" of India (over China) are even more applicable to the locally-based programmers whose jobs are being outsourced. But those advantages haven't prevented their j
The reason is education. (Score:2)
A lot of people dismiss companies when they say the research pool is better overseas, but I think they're right. I'm sure anyone who's been through school recently remembers that (a) studying and getting good grades is hazardous to your social standing, and (b) there are very few American faces in advanced science programs.
If we ever want to regain our foothold in the research world, we have to import some of China/India/Japan's culture. Most kids in these cultures are pushed hard to study, and it's consid
Re:The reason is education. (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason you see so few Americans in science and engineering programs is because it simply doesn't make sense to go into them for most people. For many types of engineering (especially Compu
Look... This is all good (Score:2)
It's the new trend you see (Score:2)
Re:They're just a bit smarter: IQ=104 versus US 98 (Score:2)
It's ironic that Hitler could have won the war through superior technology had he not tried to rid the country of it's best and brightest.
Just Evolution in Action... through Nazi selection (Score:2)
Evolutionary Pressure is what happens when you wipe out a huge amount of a species at the same time. When Hitler & Co wiped out a lot of Jews, the few Jews who were smart enough to see it coming escaped... And so on..
Generations of high evolutionary pressure on a once numerous species either kills them by interbreeding or makes them highly selected for
Re:They're just a bit smarter: IQ=104 versus US 98 (Score:3, Funny)
Re:They're just a bit smarter: IQ=104 versus US 98 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is it just me .. (Score:2)
Aye, Big O does mean something else to me as well, but perhaps its different from what you are thinking about, or perhaps part of the same... Paradigm.
I was thinking about (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I was thinking about (Score:2)
It totally eclipsed my knowledge of big Oh notation (given that I am a computer programmer) with its fancy opening theme song and all. I guess I'm just not as big a geek as I used to be. :)
Re:Is it just me .. (Score:2)
Re:duh? (Score:2)
This could actually help reverse the flow of globalisation--the authors will speak the language(s) natively and all those cultural idiosyncracies will be an assumption, not an afterthought.
As a non-American, there's nothing I hate more (well there is, but more of that another time) than having American dictionaries installed as standard in all my software. I think this is a great plus for the Chinese
Re:Who cares? (Score:2, Informative)
Crap? Before you sound off about a product you should make an effort to have even the vaguest notion of what you are talking about. Those of us that work with databases professionally know and appreciate what the likes of Oracle can do for us that the current OSS alternatives simply cannot. I would love to see a free and open database be able to compete with Oracle on a terrabyte scale but we simply aren't there yet.
It's ok to be an OSS fan, but for the lo