What is IT?
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To me (the source on all things I say) IT is a big ole blanket that we all cuddle up under to make sure everyones stuff that turns on works, is about to work, or is replaced. IT is for sure the parent of many little technical babies.
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I started my career in technology as a developer and I can tell you that being a real developer for the first twelve years there is a very big difference between IT and development. They have tons of overlap and are obviously highly related, but when you work in both, they are very clearly two different entities.
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@Hubtech said:
To me (the source on all things I say) IT is a big ole blanket that we all cuddle up under to make sure everyones stuff that turns on works, is about to work, or is replaced. IT is for sure the parent of many little technical babies.
Yes, many. It is a huge umbrella for the role(s) that operate technology for a business. But it isn't the umbrella for the also large software development and engineering groups which are also incredibly large. Both would be divisions under "technology".
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@scottalanmiller said:
I started my career in technology as a developer and I can tell you that being a real developer for the first twelve years there is a very big difference between IT and development. They have tons of overlap and are obviously highly related, but when you work in both, they are very clearly two different entities.
That's the thing. I started my career as a developer, and I don't see the big difference. I've also developed software for internal use, so I've been employed by the end user rather than working for a software house.
My life is just a series of if..endif, do while, for..next loops.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
That's the thing. I started my career as a developer, and I don't see the big difference.
You developed products? What kind of stuff did you make?
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@Carnival-Boy I'm very surprised, I've never met a developer that identified with IT in any way, let alone saw them as related. I see IT people often lump development in with IT but normally because they are unfamiliar with development and are not sure what it is, they also often lump marketing people into IT and sales people.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
That's the thing. I started my career as a developer, and I don't see the big difference.
You developed products? What kind of stuff did you make?
I wrote Health & Safety software for a small software house in the UK, and ERP and Accounting software for a small software house in Hong Kong. Although my title was Analyst Programmer if that makes a difference?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I wrote Health & Safety software for a small software house in the UK, and ERP and Accounting software for a small software house in Hong Kong. Although my title was Analyst Programmer if that makes a difference?
A Software Analyst isn't a programmer per se but is part of the software development and engineering family, rather than IT. Generally an SA is a very senior developer as they have to have a very high view of programming to do the analyst function.
A programmer analyst should be someone doing a blend of the two roles.
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What kind of stuff did you make?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
What kind of stuff did you make?
I did data retrieval systems for manufacturing when I started. Taught for a bit. Did most of my work in infectious waste tracking and reporting systems.