It's not my approach, I'm just stating on what I see happening when I talk to companies (both vendors and customers). There's definitely a move to cut back the numbers who deal with IT support
You may be glad how things worked out but you wouldn't have racked up any debt, tuition fees were introduced in 1998 not 30 years ago (and they only £1,000 a year then)
Yes, that's what happening now but this is about the future. I've just started doing work for a company that's all about automating network security. It's all very early for this sort of thing but it will happen.
They won't be fixed, people will just buy new ones. I had a problem with my daughter's Chromebook, it cost so much to fix that I ended up buying another. That will permeate into the office culture too.
The ongoing move to cloud will remove another layer of support. Yes, there's still a need for...