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29/Oct/2007 3:52PM
EDS recently announced an early-retirement program in the U.S., and Keane Inc. recently announced U.S. layoffs -- two moves that could put as many as 10,000 IT-related people out on the streets, estimates Gartner Inc. analyst Diane Morello in a research brief. Yet, at the same time, CIOs say they're unable to find qualified IT talent.&nbsp;Say what? These are exactly the sort of IT/business hybrids that CIOs say they're looking for. Morello suggests the problem is that CIOs' ability to lure these folks with exciting jobs has &quot;atrophied.&quot; She hints that jobs in corporate IT shops just aren't that appealing anymore -- and CIOs better fix the situation fast.

29/Oct/2007 3:52PM
EDS recently announced an early-retirement program in the U.S., and Keane Inc. recently announced U.S. layoffs -- two moves that could put as many as 10,000 IT-related people out on the streets, estimates Gartner Inc. analyst Diane Morello in a research brief. Yet, at the same time, CIOs say they're unable to find qualified IT talent.&nbsp;Say what? These are exactly the sort of IT/business hybrids that CIOs say they're looking for. Morello suggests the problem is that CIOs' ability to lure these folks with exciting jobs has &quot;atrophied.&quot; She hints that jobs in corporate IT shops just aren't that appealing anymore -- and CIOs better fix the situation fast.

29/Oct/2007 3:52PM
EDS recently announced an early-retirement program in the U.S., and Keane Inc. recently announced U.S. layoffs -- two moves that could put as many as 10,000 IT-related people out on the streets, estimates Gartner Inc. analyst Diane Morello in a research brief. Yet, at the same time, CIOs say they're unable to find qualified IT talent.&nbsp;Say what? These are exactly the sort of IT/business hybrids that CIOs say they're looking for. Morello suggests the problem is that CIOs' ability to lure these folks with exciting jobs has &quot;atrophied.&quot; She hints that jobs in corporate IT shops just aren't that appealing anymore -- and CIOs better fix the situation fast.

29/Oct/2007 5:38AM
It's IT Blogwatch: in which the House Judiciary Committee makes a basic email error, violating whistleblowers' privacy. Not to mention a stark warning of the dangers of sticking with IPv4...Paul Kiel calls it, &quot;a whoops with a capital W&quot;:This summer the House Judiciary Committee launched an effort to collect tips from would-be whistleblowers in the Justice Department ... it would not accept anonymous tips, [but] it assured those who came forward that their identity would be held in the &quot;strictest confidence&quot; ... But in an email sent out today, the committee inadvertently sent the email addresses of all the would-be whistleblowers to everyone who had written in to the tipline ... included in the &quot;to:&quot; field -- instead of concealing those addresses with a so-called blind carbon copy or &quot;bcc:&quot; ... [including] vice_president@whitehouse.gov ... [so] the email addresses of all the whistleblowers who had written in to the committee tipline was sent to [Dick] Cheney.

29/Oct/2007 5:38AM
It's IT Blogwatch: in which the House Judiciary Committee makes a basic email error, violating whistleblowers' privacy. Not to mention a stark warning of the dangers of sticking with IPv4...Paul Kiel calls it, &quot;a whoops with a capital W&quot;:This summer the House Judiciary Committee launched an effort to collect tips from would-be whistleblowers in the Justice Department ... it would not accept anonymous tips, [but] it assured those who came forward that their identity would be held in the &quot;strictest confidence&quot; ... But in an email sent out today, the committee inadvertently sent the email addresses of all the would-be whistleblowers to everyone who had written in to the tipline ... included in the &quot;to:&quot; field -- instead of concealing those addresses with a so-called blind carbon copy or &quot;bcc:&quot; ... [including] vice_president@whitehouse.gov ... [so] the email addresses of all the whistleblowers who had written in to the committee tipline was sent to [Dick] Cheney.

29/Oct/2007 5:38AM
It's IT Blogwatch: in which the House Judiciary Committee makes a basic email error, violating whistleblowers' privacy. Not to mention a stark warning of the dangers of sticking with IPv4...Paul Kiel calls it, &quot;a whoops with a capital W&quot;:This summer the House Judiciary Committee launched an effort to collect tips from would-be whistleblowers in the Justice Department ... it would not accept anonymous tips, [but] it assured those who came forward that their identity would be held in the &quot;strictest confidence&quot; ... But in an email sent out today, the committee inadvertently sent the email addresses of all the would-be whistleblowers to everyone who had written in to the tipline ... included in the &quot;to:&quot; field -- instead of concealing those addresses with a so-called blind carbon copy or &quot;bcc:&quot; ... [including] vice_president@whitehouse.gov ... [so] the email addresses of all the whistleblowers who had written in to the committee tipline was sent to [Dick] Cheney.

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