G
Guest
Guest
@Indian Fanboys Predicting Gloom & Doom --
My company spends a lot of time fixing or entirely rewriting work that comes out of India. The threat they pose is to artificially deflate costs and mess up market values, much like SAAS does when people think software should cost $100, and forget about the unit "per month." Indian programmers working for pennies on the dollar is a myth.
The good ones work at Microsoft in New Delhi. You *might* save 10-20%, esp. with a weaker dollar if you find one working freelance. You could find a great programmer in the US as well. He'll get your requirements better, and speak English natively @ some level of a premium.
I have nothing against Indians -- but they're just people! They're not mythical powercoders who work more efficiently. On the contrary, they're frequently inferior programmers in my experience.
I'm more worried about Russians and Chinese. They tend to be well-educated, and they churn out good work for a reasonable price. Russians have been a force in programming for awhile. I've seen a few random ones whip up compilers in a month. Now *that* is talent.
What I see from India is usually security-impaired, buggy, and a total fail. Almost all of it is poorly organized. I programmed better when I was 12.
Gloom and doom? Nah. I rather enjoy laughing at the code I see from India.
My company spends a lot of time fixing or entirely rewriting work that comes out of India. The threat they pose is to artificially deflate costs and mess up market values, much like SAAS does when people think software should cost $100, and forget about the unit "per month." Indian programmers working for pennies on the dollar is a myth.
The good ones work at Microsoft in New Delhi. You *might* save 10-20%, esp. with a weaker dollar if you find one working freelance. You could find a great programmer in the US as well. He'll get your requirements better, and speak English natively @ some level of a premium.
I have nothing against Indians -- but they're just people! They're not mythical powercoders who work more efficiently. On the contrary, they're frequently inferior programmers in my experience.
I'm more worried about Russians and Chinese. They tend to be well-educated, and they churn out good work for a reasonable price. Russians have been a force in programming for awhile. I've seen a few random ones whip up compilers in a month. Now *that* is talent.
What I see from India is usually security-impaired, buggy, and a total fail. Almost all of it is poorly organized. I programmed better when I was 12.
Gloom and doom? Nah. I rather enjoy laughing at the code I see from India.