Showing posts with label next step. Show all posts
Showing posts with label next step. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

10 High-skilled Jobs which keeps you Relevant in the IT Sector - 2017



If you wanted to stay relevant in the IT sector, there is enough scope. Check out the Best 10 High-skilled Jobs with salaries (per year), that will help you stay secured professionally.



  • Digital Marketing Head
Digital marketing is the promotion of products or brands via one or more forms of electronic media and differs from traditional marketing in that it involves the use of channels and methods that enable an organization to analyze marketing campaigns and understand what is working and what isn't – typically in real time.

Salary$40,004 - $59,052


  • Quality Assurance Analyst 
A software quality analyst is responsible for applying the principles and practices of software quality assurance throughout the software development life cycle. Though often referred to as "quality assurance", software testing is considered to be only one part of the larger process of reducing errors.

Salary$58,992 - $91,643



  • Mobile Product Development Engineer
The mobile product development process is, undoubtedly, a costly and complex one. Analysing the market, deciding for the type of app you will build, estimating the budget and, finally, the execution.

Salary$59,500 - $78,982



  • Information Security Analyst
Information security analysts install software, such as firewalls, to protect computer networks. Information security analysts plan and carry out security measures to protect an organization's computer networks and systems.

Salary$60,120 - $117,900




  • Product Developer
Product developers assist in the development of a commercial or industrial products. Depending on their specific job duties, product developers go by many titles, such as: product design engineer, product development engineer and commercial and/or industrial designer.

Salary$62,529 - $129,238


  • Actuary 
An actuary is a business professional who deals with the measurement and management of risk for financial investments, insurance policies and uncertainty.

Salary$64,141 - $150,000



  •  Simulation Engineer
Modeling and simulation is a key enabler for systems engineering activities as the system representation in a computer readable (and possibly executable) model which enables engineers to reproduce the system (or Systems of System) behavior.

Salary$64,709  - $80,487


  • Web Production Lead
Web design encompasses many different skills and disciplines in the production and maintenance of websites. The different areas of web design include web graphic design; interface design; authoring, including standardised code and proprietary software; user experience design; and search engine optimization (SEO).

Salary $73,886 - $78,242


  • Product Designer
Product design is to create a new product to be sold by a business to its customers. A very broad concept, it is essentially the efficient and most effective generation and development of ideas through a process that leads to new products.

Salary$81,042 - $102,131



  • Research and Development Engineers 
The activities that are classified as R&D differ from company to company, but there are two primary models, with an R&D department being either staffed by engineers and tasked with directly developing new products, or staffed with industrial scientists and tasked with applied research in scientific or technological fields which may facilitate future product development.

Salary$81,417 - $133,904


  • Data Scientist 
Data science, also known as data-driven science, is an interdisciplinary field about scientific methods, processes and systems to extract knowledge or insights from data in various forms, either structured or unstructured, similar to Knowledge Discovery in Databases (KDD).

Salary$118,702 - $126,000



How Emerging Technology will Shrink Jobs in 12 Sectors - 2017


The World Economic Forum 2016 at Davos earlier this year warned that the Fourth Industrial Revolution is underway and that it may eliminate millions of jobs over the next five to 10 years. A Bank of America-Merrill Lynch report too had earlier predicted that 47% of jobs in the US will be taken over by technology.

  • Telesales/call centre employees
Amelia, an artificial call centre agent, can speak 20 languages, learn from her human co workers and has taken over 30% of the calls at a trial call centre. McKinsey estimates that by 2025, similar automated software will replace 250 million knowledge workers across the world. That's equivalent to 50% of India's current working population.


  • Software tester

Agile technology or rapidly developing and deploying working software is the focus of technology firms. This means that, developers are required to do unit testing, use QA automation tools and write their own testing code without wasting time in the QA process. This has made many QA engineers redundant and some firms predict that by as early as 2017 they will not hire or retain a single QA employee.



  • Farmers
Increased mechanisation and farm productivity has led to less than 2% of the US population being directly employed in agriculture. In India, it is currently 50% of the population. With land, machinery, chemicals and seeds becoming expensive and technology providing cost-effective labour solutions, the days of the individual farmer are numbered. Wealthy landowners and corporations will take over this sector while reducing employment dramatically.



  • Factory workers
In Japan there are over 1,500 robots for every 10,000 workers in the automobile manufacturing industry. They are faster, better and becoming increasingly cheaper. The trend is accelerating across global manufacturing and production, taking away the livelihood of factory workers.



  • News reporters
Associated Press already publishes over 3,000 financial reports every quarter using Wordsmith—the natural language reporting platform. 8.5% of Wikipedia's total content has been written by bots. With advertising revenues dropping sharply for news agencies and print media, they can scarcely afford to keep hordes of reporters to track breaking news. Efficient software is up to the task. This means fewer human news reporters and they will be writing more opinion pieces than news.


  • Teachers
With online college classes and degrees, the Internet is eliminating the need to go to college to pursue higher education. Similarly, supplementary education like tuition and coaching is being replaced by apps and online classes. Apart from primary education and schools, this reduces both the salary and the number of teachers required.


  • Health workers
The IBM cognitive computing prototype, Watson, is set to revolutionise medical diagnosis with a projected ability to give accurate, consistent, free diagnosis of medical conditions. Add to that -smart phones coupled with remote electronic health monitoring devices and computerised medical history, and fewer health care professionals will be required as most patients will avail of treatment remotely.


  • Lawyers and paralegals
The largest chunk of legal work is the discovery phase where paralegals and junior lawyers have to go through physical records to gather and synthesize information and draft legal documents before a trial. Software like Legal-Zoom, that performs the task, is dramatically reducing the number of jobs.



  • Accountants
Accounting software for businesses is becoming easier to use. Small businesses are migrating to do-it-yourself solutions like Freshbooks, requiring fewer hours of work by human accountants. While they are automating and reducing wage bills, demand for professional accountants will decline significantly in the next 10 years.

  • Drivers
Driverless cars have been successfully demonstrated on public roads in the US over the past few years. Regulations are being crafted that will permit you to call for a driverless taxi through an app or transport goods by driverless trucks. Fewer accidents, faster travel and no jobs for drivers.


  • Cashiers
In supermarkets and large stores, thousands of cashiers are being replaced by automated self-checkout systems which bill you based on the items in your cart using RFID chips or automated scanners. You can swipe your card or scan your digital wallet on your way out. No queues and no jobs for human cashiers.



  • Hospitality workers
The Henn-na hotel in Nagasaki is the world's first hotel to have only robot staff. Restaurants across the world are experimenting with touch screens at tables for ordering food, robotic waiters/self-service to pick it up and automated systems to perfectly cook fast food. The hospitality segment, which employs up to 5% of the workforce is set to shed millions of jobs.






Saturday, 11 February 2017

"China Establishes the Largest Megacity in the World" [26x Larger London / 4x greater New York]



Tuesday, 24 January 2017

All Events of APPLE in 2017 (iPhone 8 & 8 Plus,SE2,OLED, iPad Pro,Macbook Pro,iOS 11,Mac Pro,iWatch 3,iCar)


It’s officially 2017 and we’re already looking forward to what Apple has in store for us over the next twelve months. as we know that This year will mark the 10th anniversary of the iPhone, and the grand opening of Apple’s ‘Spaceship’ Campus 2 headquarters in Cupertino where it will host all of its future events, so this will be the huge moment of year for Apple. So here's a look at all events of what’s next for Apple as we ring in the New Year. 

Apple Special Event (March , 2017)


Three new iPad Pros expected at Apple. This will include a new 12.9-inch model, a 10.5-inch model (to replace the current 9.7-incher) and there is a new rumour rolling around that Apple may soon be releasing the Pencil 2, a new and improved version of the product with this model. and a fresh new 7.9-inch model called the iPad Pro Mini with a force touch keyboard.We originally expect these new iPads to be launched in early 2017. An update iPhone SE2 is Rumoured as well in the march timeframe. new Mac pro 2017 is also expected as the long-overdue update since 2013.








WWDC 2017 (June, 2017)


We'll catch out first glimpse of iOS 11 to be officially unveiled in this event. we’d expect Apple to continue the tradition of previewing macOS 10.13 along with tvOS 11 at its annual WWDC developer conference in June ahead of a release in the fall.  Siri SDK with upgrades is also expected in 2017's release.






Apple Special Event (September, 2017)


We expect to see Apple announce the Apple Watch Series 3 with watchOS updates in September, featured built-in GPS and water resistant . With a new edge-to-edge design, software enabled fingerprint & iris Scanner, long-range wireless charging, OLED curved display, plus the usual internal upgrades, the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus really could be a worthy way to mark a decade of apple's Success in September 2017. 





Apple Special Event (October , 2017)


 A further update to the Pro line, New Macbook Pro 2017 is expected in oct .The stand-out feature is definitely the Touch Bar, complete with Touch ID fingerprint sensor, which adds a new level of control to the Pro. the 12-inch MacBook may acquire a standalone wireless or USB-C ultraslim keyboard.





The Hot Rumour of 2016 is obviously The Apple Car. but 2020 is the more likely date for apple's car along with those rumours. 
So guys what are your expectations for the Apple's new reborn launches of 2017.. share your thoughts in the comments..

Monday, 23 January 2017

What will Happen in 2017 all over the World ?? [WORLD IN 2017]

January: It is likely to be a busy start to the year for Europhiles in Romania and Bulgaria: as soon as they finish celebrations to welcome in the new year, they begin toasting their decade as members of the European Union.

Matters will be more sombre in France, however, with two anniversaries marking terrorist attacks falling in January. First, on January 7, it will be two years since the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris, before a week later the six-month anniversary since the July 14 attacks in Nice. Later in the month France’s socialists will choose their candidate for presidential elections in April/May.
On the other side of the Atlantic, Donald Trump will be inaugurated on January 20 the following day one million women are set to march in Washington to oppose his election.
Other events include the Oscars shortlist being announced and the Africa Cup of Nations football tournament starting in Gabon.

February: It’s a key month for the European Union, both symbolically and existentially. First EU leaders meet in Malta on February 3 to discuss the bloc’s future after Brexit, before events to mark 25 years the signing of the Maastricht Treaty, an agreement which paved the way for the EU and the Euro.

The film awards season comes to a climax with the Oscars on February 26, preceded by the Berlin International Film Festival in the middle of the month.



Elsewhere, Germany is set to elect its next president, there are key international awareness days for cancer and female genital mutilation and it will be three years since the Maidan protests in Ukraine.
March: Another key month is on the cards for the EU – British prime minister has said she will trigger the two-year process for leaving the bloc by the end of March.

It’s likely to follow Brussels marking another key milestone in European integration: March 25 is 60 years since the Treaty of Rome, Maastricht’s predecessor.
The month also sees a century since the start of the first Russian revolution. Shortly afterwards, on the 18th, it’ll be three years since Russia formally signed the annexation of Crimea.

The Netherlands will hold parliamentary elections, while Germany’s burgeoning far-right party Alternative for Germany (AfD) will hope for further gains in a regional poll in Saarland.

There are also anniversaries to mark terrorist attacks in Brussels (2016) and Tunisia (2015), as well as the Germanwings crash in the French Alps (2015).

April: France enters the final furlong of the process to elect a new president to replace incumbent François Hollande. The first round of voting will take place on April 23, featuring National Front leader Marine Le Pen and Les Republicain’s François Fillon.

Greece is likely to come into focus this month as the 21st marks 50 years since a group of army officers seized power in a military coup.
Elsewhere, Hungary is likely to have a new president this month – current PM Viktor Orban has said it will not be him.
May: Local elections will take place in Britain at the beginning of the month, the first major polling since the country voted to leave the EU in June 2016.

Eyes will then switch to across the English Channel where voting will likely take place in the second round of the race to be the next French president.

There is set to be a presidential election in Iran on the 19th, followed by a G7 Summit in Sicily, likely to be Donald Trump’s first major foray onto the world stage as US president.

June: Voted one of the best music albums of all time, June 1 marks half a century since The Beatles released Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

It was also in this month a year ago that Britain voted to quit the EU (23) and the world mourned the death of Muhammad Ali (3).


Meanwhile in France if you hate politics then best to stay in hiding for a little while longer – the country has parliamentary elections planned this month, having likely elected a new president in May.

The month will also mark a year until Russia hosts the next football world cup, set to kick off on June 14, 2018.
July: Staying with sport, the month gets underway with the Tour de France, which this year starts in Dusseldorf, Germany, followed by the World Swimming Championships in Budapest, Hungary, which begin on July 14.

Germany will not only be hosting the start of road cycling’s marquee event, it will also welcome world leaders to a G20 summit in Hamburg on July 7-8.
Elsewhere it’s 20 years since control of Hong Kong was handed over to the Chinese. It’s also a year since the Nice terrorist attacks and the failed coup in Turkey.

August: One of the highlights of the month is likely to be a solar eclipse on August 21, visible in full from the USA and partially from Europe.

August 31 marks two decades since Britain’s Princess Diana died after the car she was travelling in crashed in Paris.
September: The International Olympic Committee is set to announce on the 13th who will get to host the 2024 Olympic Games, with Paris, Budapest and Los Angeles all in the running.
The month will also see a meeting of the UN’s General Assembly, at which climate change is likely to be one of the hot topics.
September could also be a key month for the future stability of the EU: federal elections are expected in Germany, with current chancellor Angela Merkel set to go for a fourth term.
October: Germany will celebrate its unification day on October 3, before parliamentary elections in Argentina towards the end of the month.
October also marks half a century since former US presidential hopeful John McCain was shot down during the Vietnam War, before spending five years as a prisoner in the infamous ‘Hanoi Hilton’.
November: World leaders will descend on Bonn, Germany, to discuss progress towards tackling global warming at the 23rd session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 23) to the UN Convention on Climate Change.
December: The month will see the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize and will also mark 50 years since the first heart transplant as well as the death of soul singer Otis Redding in a plane crash.