BDPAers,
this info comes from techrepublic.com. It contains 10 hot skills for IT
professionals during the next five years. This may be of use to you in making
career and training choices.
Have a great day!
Frank
1. Voice over IP
Many
companies and consumers are already using VoIP for telephone services due to
cost and convenience factors. According to a SearchVoIP.com article in June 2007,
sales of pure IP PBX systems for the first quarter of 2007 increased 76% over
the first quarter of the previous year.
More and
more companies are expected to go to VoIP, to either supplement or replace
their traditional phone lines. And because VoIP runs on the TCP/IP network, IT
administrators will in many cases be expected to take responsibility for VoIP
implementation and ongoing administration.
2.
Unified communications
Along with
the growing popularity of VoIP, the concept of unified communications-the
convergence of different communications technologies, such as e-mail,
voicemail, text messaging, and fax-looks to be the wave of the future. Users
will expect to have access to all their communications from a single interface,
such as their Inbox, and from a variety of devices: PCs, laptops, smart
phones/PDAs, traditional phones, etc.
Convergence
makes networks more complex, and IT administrators will need to develop skills
for managing converged networks to compete in tomorrow's job market.
3.
Hybrid networks
The day of
the all-Windows or all-UNIX network is already past, and networks are likely to
grow more, rather than less hybridized in the future. As new versions of Linux,
such as Ubuntu, become friendlier for end users, we're likely to see some organizations
deploying it on the desktop for certain users. However, it's likely that other
users will continue to use Windows because of application requirements and/or
personal preferences, and there may very well be Macintosh users in the mix as
well, especially in graphics environments.
IT pros
will no longer be able to get by with expertise in only one platform; you'll
need to be able to support and troubleshoot different operating systems.
4.
Wireless technology
Wireless
networking is still in its infancy in the enterprise. Companies are (often
grudgingly) establishing wireless LANs for the use of employees and visitors
because it's the most convenient way for portable computers to connect to the
network, but many organizations are still wary of wireless (rightly so),
particularly its security implications.
But
wireless isn't going away, and the future promises faster and more secure
wireless technologies. You'll need to know about 802.11n, a new standard now in
development and estimated to be released in late 2008, which will provide for a
typical throughput of 74 Mbps with a theoretical maximum data rate of 248 Mbps
and a longer range than current 802.11a/b/g standards (about 70 meters, or
approximately 230 feet).
5.
Remote user support
The trend
is toward more employees working off-site: executives taking their laptops on
the road, telecommuters working from home at least a few days per week,
personnel in the field connecting back to the LAN, and so forth. The IT staff
will need to be able to support these remote users while maintaining the
security of the internal network.
It will be
important to learn skills relating to different VPN technologies (including SSL
VPN) and technologies for health monitoring and quarantining of remote clients
to prevent those that don't meet minimal criteria (antivirus installed and
updated, firewall enabled, etc.) from connecting to the LAN and putting the
rest of the network at risk.
6.
Mobile user support
Cell
phones, Blackberries, and other ultra-portable devices are becoming ubiquitous
and will likely grow more sophisticated in the future. Employees will expect to
get their corporate e-mail on their phones and in some cases (such as Windows
Mobile devices), to use terminal services client software to connect these small
devices to the company LAN.
IT staff
members will need to develop a plethora of skills to support mobile users,
including expertise in configuration of mail servers and knowledge of security
implications of the devices.
7.
Software as a service
Web 2.0,
the next generation of the Internet, is all about SaaS, or Software as a
Service. SaaS involves delivering applications over the Web, rather than
installing those applications on individual users' machines. Some IT pundits
have warned that SaaS will do away with IT administrators' jobs entirely, but
the more likely scenario is that the job description will change to one with
less focus on deployment and maintenance of applications and more emphasis on
broader-based planning, convergence, etc.
If SaaS
takes off, the job market may also shift so that more jobs are concentrated in
the application provider sector rather than in companies' in-house IT
departments. In that situation, IT pros who have the skills relating to service
provision and multi-tenant architecture will have a head start when it comes to
getting and staying
employed.
8.
Virtualization
Virtualization
has been around for a while, but now, with Microsoft heavily investing in the
technology with its Windows hypervisor (Viridian), which will run on Windows
Server 2008, VMWare offering VMWare Server for free, and Red Hat and SuSE
planning to include Xen hypervisor technology in the next versions of their
server products, we can expect the concept of virtual machines to go to a whole
new level in the next few years.
Managing a
VM-based network environment is a skill that will be not just handy, but
essential, as more and more companies look to virtualization to consolidate
servers and save on hardware costs.
9.
IPv6
Widespread
adoption of the next generation of the Internet Protocol (IPv6) hasn't come
about as quickly as originally predicted, in large part because technologies
such as NAT prevented the depletion of available IP addresses from happening as
soon as anticipated.
However,
with the number of hosts on the Internet growing steadily, the larger address
space will eventually be critical to further expansion. IPv6 also offers better
security with IPsec, a part of the basic protocol suite. Perhaps the
inevitability of the transition is best indicated by the fact that Windows
Vista, Windows Server 2008, Mac OS X 10.3, and the latest versions of other
operating systems have IPv6 enabled by default.
With an
entirely different address notation, called CIDR, and addresses written in
hexadecimal instead of the familiar four octets of decimal numbers used by
IPv4, there will be a learning curve for IT administrators. The time to tune up
your IPv6 skills is now, before the transition becomes mandatory.
10.
Security
Smart IT
pros have been developing their security skills for the last several years, but
the future will bring new security challenges and new security mechanisms.
Technologies such as VoIP and mobile computing bring new security issues and
challenges. Authentication methods are evolving from a password-based model to
multifactor models, and biometrics are likely to become more important in the
future.
As threats
become more sophisticated, shifting from teenage hackers defacing Web sites
"just for fun" to well financed corporate espionage agents and
cyberterrorists bent on bringing down the country's vital infrastructure by
attacking the networks that run it, security skills must keep up.