The Future of Computing Computing, software engineering and information systems are international qualifications that enable people to work globally and in a wide variety of roles. There is a constant growth in demand for technically savvy and flexible IT graduates. Declining student enrollments, while growth continues in law, medicine, biology, economics and business; the decline among women is particularly alarming (Klawe and Shneiderman 27). IT is now part of everyone's daily life thanks to the innovations and technologies it enables. From transforming healthcare to enabling a stronger national defense, computing is at the forefront of discovery, driving economic growth, and transforming our culture. With respect to the future of IT employment, the most challenging goal concerns professional development that includes being familiar with many programming languages and possessing considerable creativity. Internationally, computer scientists could join their efforts with existing programs that aim to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger and improve education (27). To achieve these goals, I obviously need to write clear comments and technical specifications, which help other programmers understand my programming codes. In other words, other programmers can use and work with my code instead of rewriting it. By writing clear technical documentation for end users, they allow people to understand what their code is supposed to do, which is the only way those users can see the value in their code. There's a lot of wonderful, useful code buried somewhere in source forges that no one uses because it was created by programmers, who don't write very well, and therefore no one knows what they did... middle of paper. .....d at the heart of the development of high-tech clusters that represent the technological innovation of companies. In the future, global economic growth in our national conditions should be the starting point for developing new business models for innovation. We have optimistic minds about the future of our computing. Sources of pages cited from the work: 1. Klawe, Maria and Shneiderman, Ben. "Crisis and opportunities in information technology". Communications of the ACM. November 2005, vol. 48 Number 11, p.27-28. 2p. 1 Illustration. Print2. Lohr, Steve. "Computer Science, 2016: What Won't Be Possible?" New York Times. 31/10/2006, vol. 156 Edition 53749, pF3-F3. 1/2 p. Print3. Quan, Margherita. “Computers of the future give voice to the dead.” Electronic Engineering Times (01921541). 05/31/99, number 1063, p59. 2p. 1 color photograph. Press
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