Or am I being too negative?
We have numpty agents who've BJ'd their way onto the 'preferred suppler list' of clientcos and know nothing about the people they're trading, clientco 'purchasing departments' who know less than nothing about less than anything, EU tax regulations getting in the way of small, competitive business initiatives which survive on delivering to the client what he wants, where and when he wants it, and now IBM Europe have announced they're ending 'flexible working' and 'working from home' because their 19th century management practises can't cope with it.
Given these miserable circumstances, does European IT have any chance whatsoever of remaining competitive? Can we hope to do anything innovative that can actually sustain our economies?
Or are we royally fuqqed? Is it time to just give up and do something else before European IT goes the same way as British shipbuilding, iron and steel, coalmining etc, i.e. down the pan never to return?
We have numpty agents who've BJ'd their way onto the 'preferred suppler list' of clientcos and know nothing about the people they're trading, clientco 'purchasing departments' who know less than nothing about less than anything, EU tax regulations getting in the way of small, competitive business initiatives which survive on delivering to the client what he wants, where and when he wants it, and now IBM Europe have announced they're ending 'flexible working' and 'working from home' because their 19th century management practises can't cope with it.
Given these miserable circumstances, does European IT have any chance whatsoever of remaining competitive? Can we hope to do anything innovative that can actually sustain our economies?
Or are we royally fuqqed? Is it time to just give up and do something else before European IT goes the same way as British shipbuilding, iron and steel, coalmining etc, i.e. down the pan never to return?
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