"I can assure you that these systems are far beyond anything you have seen in your professional life in terms of complexity and stability ..."
In a government system? LMAO

Far beyond anything I have seen in my professional career?
Now thats a wild guess and a very empty assertion.
You have NO idea what I have seen in my professional career.
In my 24 years of software experience, I can count on
1 FINGER, the number of comp sci phd's I have met
that could build systems better than the best
computer hacks I have met in the field with degrees.
Make that zero fingers.
I work for a large, successful, tech company, who determines
position on 100% merit, and not degrees. A small group
of super techies sit at the top of the chain, and maybe
only one of them has their PHD in comp sci.
The fact is, in the techi industry, the industry leads the
colleges by at least a year in technology.
If you want to learn the latest technologies,
you get it from the field, not from some book.
So much for your theory...
peace
axeman
Quote from CalTrader:
I did not say that I would take a fresh, no experience college degreed individual and put them to work without experience. Let me be more specific: In my 20 years of experience writing software systems I can count on one hand the people that I either hired, or who I worked with that were building complicated software systems and had never finished college.
FYI: When I worked for the US government our entire software team was composed of phD's and I can assure you that these systems are far beyond anything you have seen in your professional life in terms of complexity and stability ...
So much for your theory ....