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Rise of the Software Craftsmen in Singapore (sgentrepreneurs.com)
30 points by tdkr on March 13, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 5 comments


Great article.

Malaysian here. A lot of what's mentioned in this article also applies to Malaysia. Being an engineer doesn't carry the same prestige as being a manager - there's a perception that if you are still coding at the age of 35, you must have failed at life. That bit about computer science graduates being stuck in "enterprise IT oblivion" - that also rings true over here. The end result is that:

A) It's really hard to find real engineering talent. As in people who understand the harder computer science topics. Don't talk about deeper machine-learning stuff - even finding people who can code up a webapp from scratch is a challenge. Most of the smart ones are now either working overseas, or are now in non-technical positions.

B) Our IT projects are woefully sloppy. Just visit any *.gov.my website for proof.


A number of my friends mentioned in the article are Malaysians. And they are good software craftsmen.


If you want to understand why finding engineering talent is so difficult in Singapore and this extends to Southeast Asia, and get a sense on the people who are involved here. This is the article to read.


Singapore is a really difficult play in my experience. The work culture is cut-throat at best is what I found and backstabbing at worst. Limited resources with a lot of people competing is what I suppose leads to this. Neither I nor anyone else I knew had a good experience on work there. Hopefully start-ups do change that culture. But if the same continues it is difficult for the survival of start-ups there.


Thanks for the mention.




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