[nycphp-talk] About Formalizing an Enterprise PHP and the PHP+Developer
Peter Sawczynec
ps at sun-code.com
Wed Apr 23 17:25:55 EDT 2008
It would of course be very valuable to have a Computer Science degree
that included actual hands on programming and multimedia.
But then it would still be best to have an professional
industry/association cert just like other serious technical/professional
careers that involve consumer/business finances, accuracy, trust and
ethics.
I believe the most beneficial PHP+ cert that we can strive for would be
more on par with a Cisco cert. An acknowledged, industry heavy weight,
difficult but well worth while cert. I believe that the cert should be
advanced, sophisticated and relatively difficult -- the PHP+ cert should
not be about qualifying entry-level initiates, it would be used for
qualifying middle to expert level.
There could/should be a separate entry-level cert if needed.
Peter
-----Original Message-----
From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org]
On Behalf Of mikesz at qualityadvantages.com
Sent: Wednesday, April 23, 2008 3:09 PM
To: NYPHP Talk
Subject: Re[2]: [nycphp-talk] About Formalizing an Enterprise PHP and the
PHP+Developer
No matter how many certificates you stack on top of each other from
Manhattan to the Moon, it STILL does not equate to a BScs degree. I
see lots of people here bitterly complaining about legitimacy and yet
the avoid the very thing that gives them instant credibility, the
Degree.
My very first experience with sitting in front of a keyboard was in
fact while I was working on my degree at a time when BScs didn't exist
and colleges were issuing BSEE degrees for graduates who majored in
Computer Science.
>From my experience with certificates, the only people who really
benefit from them are the companies that hype them and the test taker
courses that teach you how to take the test and not whether the
qualifications are solid or not.
>From my perspective, have been a hiring manager for more than twenty
years, I know from bitter experience that certificate programs are a
LOT more marketing hype than they are a practical barometer for
gauging what someone is suppose to know about anything. Lots of people
can pass tests and don't know basis stuff when you set them in front of
a keyboard.
Some sound advice, GET THE DEGREE! When push comes to shove that is
what give you credibility not some pie in the sky marketing hype that
promises the moon and delivers chopped liver.
In a hiring situation when two candidates are pretty well equally
qualified, one with a degree and one without, almost ALWAYS the degree
is the determining factor for who gets the job!
This whole "self governing body" sounds a lot like a scam to me to
create a yet another bureaucratic monstrosity that has no power and
generates a lot of useless noise. Corporate Entities are obligated to
do what is best for their stock holders and that is the driving force
for how products generated by Zend Technologies evolve. The fact that
they haven't become a Micro$$$ is perhaps only a matter of waiting for
the right time and has nothing at all to do with "community". Whenever
they figure out how to do a licensing gig like Micro$$$, to exploit
all the PHP developers on the planet, then you will discover who
exactly the
"governing body" for PHP is to be sure.
My experience with User groups is that they tend to think they are the
"driving force" for products when in reality they are, well, User
Groups and
really don't have the power they think they do. They have the yearly
meetings and put on their conferences etc. but its the Corporation
roadmap that decides the directions for where the products go, not the
user groups.
--
Best regards,
mikesz mailto:mikesz at qualityadvantages.com
_______________________________________________
New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List
http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online
http://www.nyphpcon.com
Show Your Participation in New York PHP
http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php
More information about the talk
mailing list