11-02-2007 01:56 PM

11-02-2007 02:48 PM
There are lots of experienced LabVIEW programmers that are members of LAVA, LabVIEW Advanced Virtual Architects.
Members of LAVA could be another source of LabVIEW experience. There is a place within forums.lavag.org
to post employment description. The LAVA forum could be a great place to find the experienced people you want.
I am not a spokesperson for LAVA, though I am a member.
Good Luck!
11-02-2007 03:29 PM
Thanks we will post on lava as well.
I dont totally agree with the statement:
"Of course, since my company is largely based on our supplying the needed expertise to other companies it might not be in my interest to promote a wider level of LabVIEW education in the general community!"
I think that the wider exposure that the next generation of engineers (and management) to LabVIEW the better fot the consultants. This exposure will open the doors to new markets where many projects are not automated because the task seems too daunting or the engineer doesnt know where to start. If the engineer at least knows that labview is an option the ball will get rolling. Sure there will be some more competition and some companies will do inhouse development but I believe that a larger market share fort labview will benefit us all. Also the language will grow and mature faster with a larger user base.
11-02-2007 03:41 PM
There is another perception problem as well: LabVIEW is not viewed as a programming/IT skill. LabVIEW is perceived to be an engineering skill and part of an overall engineering skill set. It is assumed that any bright engineer can pick this up on the fly all while working their regular day jobs. I agree that the engineers that I have been associated are extemely smart as a whole and are very likely to have the ability to master this. Not in a few weeks and not while doing three other things at the same time. This is the reason there are likely to be more "dabblers" than "professionals" as far as LabVIEW users go.
11-05-2007 08:22 AM
falkpl wrote:
Thanks we will post on lava as well.
11-05-2007 05:00 PM - edited 11-05-2007 05:02 PM

11-06-2007 04:38 AM
"Are there any Experienced programmers looking for jobs or is this a lost cause?"
Actually yes, me being one of them. ![]()
The problem I've found is there doesn't seem to be much demand for LV programmers in the South East of the UK. Most programming jobs appear to be in the North and the Midlands, for which I would have to re-locate (something my wife doesn't want to do). So at the moment I am considering setting up an office at home and going self-employed, although I'd obviously I'd still need to travel to meet with clients from time to time.
11-06-2007 04:41 AM - edited 11-06-2007 04:45 AM
11-06-2007 09:12 AM
Well-said Putnam...
Sounds almost poetic.. Although I didn't realize you were also a poet.. 🙂
11-06-2007 11:12 AM
Putman you're absolutely right, but I think NI is partly to blame for this. LabVIEW was advertised to us exactly as "a tool that any bright young engineer should be able to pick up while doing their day job". Which is the main reason it was adopted by the company I work for. It was only when we started using it in anger, that we began to understand the depth of the skills & experience required to write "good" full-scale applications. The net result is that is that I have ended up doing most of the company's LabVIEW coding (because I already had a programming background) but not getting any rewards for my efforts because my work is not perceived as real programming.