h1b facts once again
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Fri Jun 27 09:32:03 EDT 2003
Federico Lucifredi writes:
|
| -There are 3.8 million Americans working abroad. Conversely, there are
| about 250.000 H1bs and as many L1s according to a recent Business Week
| article. That is less than 0.1% of the number of people living in the
| continental US for each visa category.
Yeah, and in an attempt to get somewhat back on topic, I'll mention
that for the past year or so I've been working for a small software
firm whose main client is a big European company. Which one doesn't
matter; what's interesting is that our job is to wean them of their
dependence on software controlled by a big American firm. We're
moving them to a networked collection of linux servers. The main
pitch that got us this job was the idea that by using open-source
software for the underlying system, they would no longer have to
depend on a big American corporation that doesn't have their
interests at heart.
Our team of about 15 people does have two foreigners, though one of
them is Canadian, so she hardly qualifies as foreign. The other is
Indian, and frankly, he's a quite competent fellow; I'd hate to see
him hurt by all this H1B fuss. In any case, it's not obvious how our
working for a European company is materially different from an Indian
company working for an American company.
We have had a few jokes about their hiring a gang of Americans to
free them from the bonds of another American company. Of course, we
just tell them that we understand their problems all too well, since
it's just as big a problem here.
I once tried making a joke about how we're using RedHat, and that's
another American corporation. But I think that was stretching the
joke a bit too far, and we couldn't find a way to make it sound
really humorous.
In any case, there is a bit of irony about an anti-foreigner attitude
in a linux discussion group. I'd think a better approach for us would
be to make alliances with the people adopting open-source software
around the world. One of our main selling points is independence from
powerful interests, and the ability to give people control over their
own computers. This is what got me the job I'm working on now, and
it's probably a lot of the future of open-source software.
More information about the Discuss
mailing list