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CitarStack Overflow Survey Finds 74% of Developers are 'Actively' Looking or 'Open to' a New JobPosted by EditorDavid on Sunday December 18, 2022 @03:49PM from the stopping-a-job dept.Stack Overflow has the announced the results of its annual survey of developers. ZDNet reports:CitarAlmost three-quarters (74%) of developers are actively looking for new roles or are open to fresh opportunities, according to research.... The highest percentage of active job seekers is in the 20-24 year-old cohort (27%), with 21% for 25-34 year-olds, 17% for 35-44 year-olds, and only 12% for 45-54 year-olds.Additionally, the percentage of younger developers actively searching for their next role increased nine points year over year, according to the survey of 2,600 developers by StackOverflow....Some 54% of respondents to the StackOverflow survey said a better salary is the largest motivator when considering a new opportunity. The biggest factors that stop developers from looking for new jobs are flexibility (58%), salary (54%), and learning opportunities (54%). Developers also want flexibility and the option to work from home, with 46% citing starting/ending the day at a precise time or being expected to work from an office (44%) as the top drawbacks in their current roles."Regardless of the economy, it's clear salary is important but it's not everything," says StackOverflow CEO Prashanth Chandrasekar.Saludos.
Stack Overflow Survey Finds 74% of Developers are 'Actively' Looking or 'Open to' a New JobPosted by EditorDavid on Sunday December 18, 2022 @03:49PM from the stopping-a-job dept.Stack Overflow has the announced the results of its annual survey of developers. ZDNet reports:CitarAlmost three-quarters (74%) of developers are actively looking for new roles or are open to fresh opportunities, according to research.... The highest percentage of active job seekers is in the 20-24 year-old cohort (27%), with 21% for 25-34 year-olds, 17% for 35-44 year-olds, and only 12% for 45-54 year-olds.Additionally, the percentage of younger developers actively searching for their next role increased nine points year over year, according to the survey of 2,600 developers by StackOverflow....Some 54% of respondents to the StackOverflow survey said a better salary is the largest motivator when considering a new opportunity. The biggest factors that stop developers from looking for new jobs are flexibility (58%), salary (54%), and learning opportunities (54%). Developers also want flexibility and the option to work from home, with 46% citing starting/ending the day at a precise time or being expected to work from an office (44%) as the top drawbacks in their current roles."Regardless of the economy, it's clear salary is important but it's not everything," says StackOverflow CEO Prashanth Chandrasekar.
Almost three-quarters (74%) of developers are actively looking for new roles or are open to fresh opportunities, according to research.... The highest percentage of active job seekers is in the 20-24 year-old cohort (27%), with 21% for 25-34 year-olds, 17% for 35-44 year-olds, and only 12% for 45-54 year-olds.Additionally, the percentage of younger developers actively searching for their next role increased nine points year over year, according to the survey of 2,600 developers by StackOverflow....Some 54% of respondents to the StackOverflow survey said a better salary is the largest motivator when considering a new opportunity. The biggest factors that stop developers from looking for new jobs are flexibility (58%), salary (54%), and learning opportunities (54%). Developers also want flexibility and the option to work from home, with 46% citing starting/ending the day at a precise time or being expected to work from an office (44%) as the top drawbacks in their current roles."Regardless of the economy, it's clear salary is important but it's not everything," says StackOverflow CEO Prashanth Chandrasekar.
CitarIf IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept."Today San Francisco has what is perhaps the most deserted major downtown in America," reports the New York Times. "On any given week, office buildings are at about 40 percent of their prepandemic occupancy..."Citar[T]he vacancy rate has jumped to 24 percent from 5 percent since 2019. Occupancy of the city's offices is roughly 7 percentage points below that of those in the average major American city, according to Kastle, the building security firm.More ominous for the city is that its downtown business district — the bedrock of its economy and tax base — revolves around a technology industry that is uniquely equipped and enthusiastic about letting workers stay home indefinitely. In the space of a few months, Jeremy Stoppelman, the chief executive of Yelp, went from running a company that was rooted in the city to vacating Yelp's longtime headquarters and allowing its roughly 4,400 employees to work from anywhere in their country."I feel like I've seen the future," he said.Decisions like that, played out across thousands of remote and hybrid work arrangements, have forced office owners and the businesses that rely on them to figure out what's next. This has made the San Francisco area something of a test case in the multibillion-dollar question of what the nation's central business districts will look like when an increased amount of business is done at home.... The city's chief economist, Ted Egan, has warned about a looming loss of tax revenue as vacancies pile up. Brokers have tried to counter that narrative by talking up a "flight to quality" in which companies upgrade to higher-end space. Business groups and city leaders hope to recast the urban core as a more residential neighborhood built around people as well as businesses but leave out that office rents would probably have to plunge for those plans to be viable.Below the surface of spin is a downtown that is trying to adapt to what amounts to a three-day workweek.... On Wednesdays, offices in San Francisco are at roughly 50 percent of their prepandemic levels; on Fridays, they're not even at 30 percent.... In a typical downturn, the turnaround is a fairly simple equation of rents falling far enough to attract new tenants and the economy improving fast enough to stimulate new demand. But now there's a more existential question of what the point of a city's downtown even is.Saludos.
If IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept."Today San Francisco has what is perhaps the most deserted major downtown in America," reports the New York Times. "On any given week, office buildings are at about 40 percent of their prepandemic occupancy..."Citar[T]he vacancy rate has jumped to 24 percent from 5 percent since 2019. Occupancy of the city's offices is roughly 7 percentage points below that of those in the average major American city, according to Kastle, the building security firm.More ominous for the city is that its downtown business district — the bedrock of its economy and tax base — revolves around a technology industry that is uniquely equipped and enthusiastic about letting workers stay home indefinitely. In the space of a few months, Jeremy Stoppelman, the chief executive of Yelp, went from running a company that was rooted in the city to vacating Yelp's longtime headquarters and allowing its roughly 4,400 employees to work from anywhere in their country."I feel like I've seen the future," he said.Decisions like that, played out across thousands of remote and hybrid work arrangements, have forced office owners and the businesses that rely on them to figure out what's next. This has made the San Francisco area something of a test case in the multibillion-dollar question of what the nation's central business districts will look like when an increased amount of business is done at home.... The city's chief economist, Ted Egan, has warned about a looming loss of tax revenue as vacancies pile up. Brokers have tried to counter that narrative by talking up a "flight to quality" in which companies upgrade to higher-end space. Business groups and city leaders hope to recast the urban core as a more residential neighborhood built around people as well as businesses but leave out that office rents would probably have to plunge for those plans to be viable.Below the surface of spin is a downtown that is trying to adapt to what amounts to a three-day workweek.... On Wednesdays, offices in San Francisco are at roughly 50 percent of their prepandemic levels; on Fridays, they're not even at 30 percent.... In a typical downturn, the turnaround is a fairly simple equation of rents falling far enough to attract new tenants and the economy improving fast enough to stimulate new demand. But now there's a more existential question of what the point of a city's downtown even is.
[T]he vacancy rate has jumped to 24 percent from 5 percent since 2019. Occupancy of the city's offices is roughly 7 percentage points below that of those in the average major American city, according to Kastle, the building security firm.More ominous for the city is that its downtown business district — the bedrock of its economy and tax base — revolves around a technology industry that is uniquely equipped and enthusiastic about letting workers stay home indefinitely. In the space of a few months, Jeremy Stoppelman, the chief executive of Yelp, went from running a company that was rooted in the city to vacating Yelp's longtime headquarters and allowing its roughly 4,400 employees to work from anywhere in their country."I feel like I've seen the future," he said.Decisions like that, played out across thousands of remote and hybrid work arrangements, have forced office owners and the businesses that rely on them to figure out what's next. This has made the San Francisco area something of a test case in the multibillion-dollar question of what the nation's central business districts will look like when an increased amount of business is done at home.... The city's chief economist, Ted Egan, has warned about a looming loss of tax revenue as vacancies pile up. Brokers have tried to counter that narrative by talking up a "flight to quality" in which companies upgrade to higher-end space. Business groups and city leaders hope to recast the urban core as a more residential neighborhood built around people as well as businesses but leave out that office rents would probably have to plunge for those plans to be viable.Below the surface of spin is a downtown that is trying to adapt to what amounts to a three-day workweek.... On Wednesdays, offices in San Francisco are at roughly 50 percent of their prepandemic levels; on Fridays, they're not even at 30 percent.... In a typical downturn, the turnaround is a fairly simple equation of rents falling far enough to attract new tenants and the economy improving fast enough to stimulate new demand. But now there's a more existential question of what the point of a city's downtown even is.
terrorismo1. m. Dominación por el terror.2. m. Sucesión de actos de violencia ejecutados para infundir terror.3. m. Actuación criminal de bandas organizadas, que, reiteradamente y por lo común de modo indiscriminado, pretende crear alarma social con fines políticos.
No es publirreportaje. Es propaganda pornográficamente usuraria
Tal y como dice Asustadísimos en su último post de hoy y en muchos tantos otros: se juega y se ha jugado con las emociones negativas de la gente, sobre un bien esencial como es la vivienda. Es maldad.
Qué dramático se pone Calópez cuando le entra el venazo. Pésimas noticias para los hipotecados, al BCE les importáis un guano¿Y no pensaron los hipotecados a tipo variable que el Euribor podía subir? Son hipotecas a muchos años. Y estaba el precedente de 2007. Ah, que eso fue un accidente y no podía volver a pasar...Impagables los comentarios rajando de Lagarde y Trichet. Coñe, para una vez que los franceses me caen bien...
Cita de: Derby en Diciembre 18, 2022, 22:08:39 pmTal y como dice Asustadísimos en su último post de hoy y en muchos tantos otros: se juega y se ha jugado con las emociones negativas de la gente, sobre un bien esencial como es la vivienda. Es maldad.A raíz de esto, el enlace sobre San Francisco, otra cosilla que ya habíamos comentado por aquí.Cita de: Cadavre Exquis en Diciembre 17, 2022, 23:59:30 pmCitarIf IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept."Today San Francisco has what is perhaps the most deserted major downtown in America," reports the New York Times. "On any given week, office buildings are at about 40 percent of their prepandemic occupancy..."Citar[T]he vacancy rate has jumped to 24 percent from 5 percent since 2019. Occupancy of the city's offices is roughly 7 percentage points below that of those in the average major American city, according to Kastle, the building security firm.More ominous for the city is that its downtown business district — the bedrock of its economy and tax base — revolves around a technology industry that is uniquely equipped and enthusiastic about letting workers stay home indefinitely. In the space of a few months, Jeremy Stoppelman, the chief executive of Yelp, went from running a company that was rooted in the city to vacating Yelp's longtime headquarters and allowing its roughly 4,400 employees to work from anywhere in their country."I feel like I've seen the future," he said.Decisions like that, played out across thousands of remote and hybrid work arrangements, have forced office owners and the businesses that rely on them to figure out what's next. This has made the San Francisco area something of a test case in the multibillion-dollar question of what the nation's central business districts will look like when an increased amount of business is done at home.... The city's chief economist, Ted Egan, has warned about a looming loss of tax revenue as vacancies pile up. Brokers have tried to counter that narrative by talking up a "flight to quality" in which companies upgrade to higher-end space. Business groups and city leaders hope to recast the urban core as a more residential neighborhood built around people as well as businesses but leave out that office rents would probably have to plunge for those plans to be viable.Below the surface of spin is a downtown that is trying to adapt to what amounts to a three-day workweek.... On Wednesdays, offices in San Francisco are at roughly 50 percent of their prepandemic levels; on Fridays, they're not even at 30 percent.... In a typical downturn, the turnaround is a fairly simple equation of rents falling far enough to attract new tenants and the economy improving fast enough to stimulate new demand. But now there's a more existential question of what the point of a city's downtown even is.Saludos.La concentración de población y empresas es necesaria para hacer economía de escala. Se comentó por aquí hace poco que por qué era ventajoso tener la mayoría de las empresas de cerámica concentradas en Castellón. Fácil: así si no te gusta una te cambias a otra.Durante los años de crisis tenía varios conocidos que, antes del teletrabajo, intentaban ir a por ciudades manejables y huyendo de los monstruos. El precio que pagaban por ello era una probabilidad bastante alta de tener que cambiar de ciudad si cambiaban de empresa, ya fuese voluntariamente o no. En una gran ciudad es más fácil no tener que hacer eso.Con lo que el rentismo pudo ver el negocio al momento: en algún sitio tienen que vivir. Si mal no recuerdo, fue PPCC el que puso la viñeta del rentista sacando el dinero del inversor americano y del ingeniero TIC con una aspiradora.Pero, vaya por Dios. Llega la pandemia, llegan dos meses de confinamiento obligatorio -y con recomendación de reducir al mínimo las interacciones sociales-, y más de una empresa descubre que no necesita depender tanto del presentismo.Mientras en España se niega la mayor, en Londres el mercado de oficinas se hunde. De San Francisco también se sabe lo que hay.Desde mi experiencia personal, lo que mejor funciona es que la empresa dé libertad: do whatever fits you best. Ya desde hace años conozco la experiencia de trabajar en equipos distribuidos, y hacer encuentros una o dos veces al año. Y va que chuta. A alguien que esté empezando le viene mejor mantener un trato presencial más continuo, pero cuando el perfil ya está consolidado, uno puede centrarse más en su vida personal.Ni que decir tiene qué piensa el rentismo de todo esto. Pero aunque capen el teletrabajo, ya no tienen forma de saltarse las renuncias a desplazarse por no encontrar vivienda a precio razonable.Otro articulejo del Confidencial que trajeron aquí hace poco fue el del que defendía el rentismo "porque en este sistema disfuncional los mayores necesitan complementos a su pensión". Y el que venga detrás que arree, le faltó añadir.En la anterior crisis se dijo que el ajuste de precios vendría vía paro. Ahora va a venir, además de por la subida de tipos, por la falta de trabajadores. ¿De qué te sirve el activo si en el restaurante de abajo han cerrado la mitad de las mesas por falta de camareros?
Para mí ya no es una cuestión de justicia, ni de schadenfreude, ni de nada por el estilo.Para mí es básicamente que se acabe ya tanta tontería y como sociedad haya de una vez la bofetada al niño malcriado (con todos los cambios que conllevaría). Y porque es hora de que ciertas generaciones puedan respirar de una vez en una sociedad con todos sus valores no deformados ni contaminados.Es increible el alcance que tiene esto en todas las esferas de la vida. Aunque quizá no es tan increíble tratándose de algo de primera necesidad.
Fallece a los 65 años Jaime Echegoyen, expresidente de Sarebhttps://www.elindependiente.com/economia/2022/12/18/fallece-a-los-65-anos-jaime-echegoyen-expresidente-de-sareb/
¿Y quién de ustedes, por mucho que se inquiete, puede añadir un instante al tiempo de su vida?Si aun las cosas más pequeñas superan sus fuerzas, ¿por qué se inquietan por las otras? [Lucas 12, 25-26]
Leyendo las hojas de té: del miedo de perderse la subida (FOMO) al placer de quedarse fuera (POMO)[...]De forma progresiva, los inversores han ido pasando del miedo a quedarse fuera de la subida de los mercados, el llamado “fear of missing out” (FOMO), al placer de quedarse fuera, el llamado “pleasure of missing out” (POMO). Al entender que la Fed está dispuesta a hacer un ajuste prolongado de las condiciones monetarias y que, por tanto, va a haber otras oportunidades de entrar en un futuro, la prisa por entrar en el mercado desaparece. La reacción de las Bolsas el pasado martes ante el dato de la inflación americana en noviembre es un buen ejemplo de ese cambio de actitud. La primera reacción de las Bolsas, nada más publicarse el dato, fue muy alcista, pero las subidas se moderaron mucho tras esa primera reacción y, de hecho, el Dow Jones cerró la sesión del martes subiendo solo un 0,3%. Si los inversores pensasen que en cuanto baje la inflación las Bolsas van a subir, comprarían de forma compulsiva como lo han hecho otras veces.Pero ahora los inversores empiezan a entender que el cambio de régimen monetario es muy estructural y que no es solo un cambio de las condiciones monetarias, sino también un cambio del modelo de crecimiento basado en la acumulación y monetización de la deuda y un cambio del modelo financiero de acceso ilimitado a dinero barato (‘easy money’). Y eso les mueve a quedarse fuera del “rally”, pensando que no hay que precipitarse.[...]https://www.r4.com/articulos-y-analisis/opinion-de-expertos/leyendo-las-hojas-de-te-del-miedo-de-perderse-la-subida-fomo-al-placer-de-quedarse-fuera-pomo
CAMBIO 'MUY ESTRUCTURAL' DE MODELOCita de: J. C. Ureta, R-4, 19-D-2022 Leyendo las hojas de té: del miedo de perderse la subida (FOMO) al placer de quedarse fuera (POMO)[...]De forma progresiva, los inversores han ido pasando del miedo a quedarse fuera de la subida de los mercados, el llamado “fear of missing out” (FOMO), al placer de quedarse fuera, el llamado “pleasure of missing out” (POMO). Al entender que la Fed está dispuesta a hacer un ajuste prolongado de las condiciones monetarias y que, por tanto, va a haber otras oportunidades de entrar en un futuro, la prisa por entrar en el mercado desaparece. La reacción de las Bolsas el pasado martes ante el dato de la inflación americana en noviembre es un buen ejemplo de ese cambio de actitud. La primera reacción de las Bolsas, nada más publicarse el dato, fue muy alcista, pero las subidas se moderaron mucho tras esa primera reacción y, de hecho, el Dow Jones cerró la sesión del martes subiendo solo un 0,3%. Si los inversores pensasen que en cuanto baje la inflación las Bolsas van a subir, comprarían de forma compulsiva como lo han hecho otras veces.Pero ahora los inversores empiezan a entender que el cambio de régimen monetario es muy estructural y que no es solo un cambio de las condiciones monetarias, sino también un cambio del modelo de crecimiento basado en la acumulación y monetización de la deuda y un cambio del modelo financiero de acceso ilimitado a dinero barato (‘easy money’). Y eso les mueve a quedarse fuera del “rally”, pensando que no hay que precipitarse.[...]https://www.r4.com/articulos-y-analisis/opinion-de-expertos/leyendo-las-hojas-de-te-del-miedo-de-perderse-la-subida-fomo-al-placer-de-quedarse-fuera-pomo¿Jerga del doble grado por Deusto?.Saludos.
Cita de: JENOFONTE10 en Diciembre 19, 2022, 12:38:42 pmCAMBIO 'MUY ESTRUCTURAL' DE MODELOCita de: J. C. Ureta, R-4, 19-D-2022 Leyendo las hojas de té: del miedo de perderse la subida (FOMO) al placer de quedarse fuera (POMO)[...]¿Jerga del doble grado por Deusto?.Era en Comillas.
CAMBIO 'MUY ESTRUCTURAL' DE MODELOCita de: J. C. Ureta, R-4, 19-D-2022 Leyendo las hojas de té: del miedo de perderse la subida (FOMO) al placer de quedarse fuera (POMO)[...]¿Jerga del doble grado por Deusto?.
Leyendo las hojas de té: del miedo de perderse la subida (FOMO) al placer de quedarse fuera (POMO)[...]
Cita de: Cadavre Exquis en Diciembre 17, 2022, 23:59:30 pmCitarIf IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept.OL3 también con problemas.Further delays for Olkiluoto 3https://www.neimagazine.com/news/newsfurther-delay-for-olkiluoto-3-10433350
CitarIf IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept.OL3 también con problemas.Further delays for Olkiluoto 3https://www.neimagazine.com/news/newsfurther-delay-for-olkiluoto-3-10433350
If IT Workers Stay Home, What Happens to 'the Most Empty Downtown in America'?Posted by EditorDavid on Saturday December 17, 2022 @04:34PM from the San-Francisco-suffers dept.
Binance buys bankrupt Voyager Digital’s assets in $1bn dealBinance has bought the assets of bankrupt digital assets lender Voyager Digital in a deal worth just over $1bn.The world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange swooped in to purchase the defunct lender’s holdings after Voyager’s deal with FTX fell apart following the collapse of the Bahamas-based exchange and arrest of its founder Sam Bankman-Fried.Binance US, the group’s American arm, agreed to a deal worth $1.02bn, which is the “fair market value” of Voyager’s cryptocurrency portfolio, the companies said on Monday.Voyager offered customers high yields for depositing funds on its platform, but was caught out by the collapse of hedge fund Three Arrows Capital in the summer and suffered losses worth more than $650mn on a loan to the fund, sending it into bankruptcy.Binance continues to expand despite the digital assets sector facing a crisis of confidence following the implosion of FTX.The company also bought Indonesian cryptocurrency exchange Tokocrypto on Monday.Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao said on Twitter that his company was already the majority shareholder and now “injected more cash and increased our shareholding a bit”.