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Dice: Demand for Linux Talent Is Higher than Ever
Read more at Dice.
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Wall Street Journal: Big Data Puts Linux Talent in Hot Demand
Big Data is driving demand for professionals with Linux programming skills, according to a survey from Dice Holdings Inc. and the Linux Foundation. But a talent shortage makes it challenging to find experienced Linux professionals.
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The Register: Survey: Bosses are DESPERATE and GAGGING for Linux skills
Demand for IT professionals with Linux skills is stronger than ever, but a new worldwide survey of more than 850 hiring managers and 2,600 Linux professionals indicates that companies are having a hard time finding qualified hires.
Read more at The Register.
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Wall Street & Technology: Looking for A New Tech Job? Brush Up on Your Linux Skills
A new survey has shown that recruiters are aggressively seeking Linux professionals to fill positions, with 93% of hiring managers saying they will hire a Linux pro in the next six months.
Read more at Wall Street & Technology.
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eWeek: Linux Professionals Receive Higher Salaries: Dice
As the U.S. jobs recovery steadily inches forward, the market for Linux professionals continues to leap ahead, with 93 percent of hiring managers planning to hire a Linux pro in the next six months, according to a survey from career and employment site Dice.com.
Read eWeek.
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VentureBeat: Hiring managers: “A good Linux-head is hard to find”
A new report shows Linux experience is in greater demand — and, hiring managers say, harder to find — than in past years.
Read more at VentureBeat.
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InfoWorld: Linux-savvy IT pros are in high demand, low supply
Linux skills are in high demand in the IT world, with 93 percent of hiring managers looking to hire a Linux professional in the next six months. But that's only if they can find any with sufficient skills, a task that's proving quite challenging.
Read more at InfoWorld.
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CIO: Tizen 2.0 Operating System Released to Developers
Tizen, the open-source project backed by Intel and Samsung Electronics, has released to software developers and device makers the software development kit and source code for a new version of its operating system.
Read more at CIO.
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The VAR Guy: Perforce: Linux, Open Source Commitment High
Should companies that produce mostly proprietary software invest in Linux development? In one sense, that seems as illogical as the artisanal-organic bread guy from the local farmers’ market buying shares in Wonder Bread. But in a move that reveals the growing influence of open source beyond its traditional space, Perforce has joined the Linux Foundation and is very committed to supporting and protecting open-source code. Here’s what Don Marti, technical marketing manager, had to say.
Read more at The VAR Guy.
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Fortune: Amid the patent wars, a powerful pact of non-aggression
The Open Invention Network, a community set up by an IBM-led consortium in 2005 to foster a safe patent environment for developers and users of the free, open-source software operating system Linux, now has more than 500 signatories, the group announced today. The group surpassed that symbolic milestone last December, according to its CEO Keith Bergelt, and now signs up a new company roughly every three days.
Read more at Fortune.
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