Any answer is fine, but focus on actual coding, rather than management or entrepreneurship. Inspired by this question at Reddit.
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I think C++ for EDA. |
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According to my CS teacher, mainframe programming is a highly paid profession. Also maintaining legacy code, since it's harder to find people that can work with the older languages (ie. COBOL) |
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In Montreal C++ programmers are in high demand in the video games industry. |
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On our side in Canada, C# developers with experience with SharePoint is really in demand. Really easy to get a good salary if you know how to code with SharePoint 2007. Of course, the rarer the framework, better the pay. Simple demand/offer equation. |
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You can get a pretty accurate estimate for a particular title in a particular area from the Dice Salary Survey. Beyond that I would say communication skills, both written and verbal, pay off quite a bit. |
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People skills. Seriously. If you think about your entire career (rather than a single gig that may / may not last in today's world), there is nothing more valuable in the long term than the ability to work with a team, figure out what a customer really needs, balance what your team think they can get done with the remaining budget, and turn it all into a consensus plan. You can always pick up a particular technical skill. Admittedly, some disciplines have minimal intersection with others (e.g., financial management and digital signal processing) but the people problems are the same everywhere. |
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C# has been the craze from where I am (Philippines). Companies are giving a higher rate to ASP.NET C# programmers over PHP programmers. :| |
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For jobs, I would still say the financial industry, e.g. commercial or retail banks, hedge funds. Yes, the financial industry as a whole has taken a huge hit. But many individual banks haven't taken a big hit, and they need to rebuild some of their systems to cope with a world that looks very different. |
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compares pay from job adverts, so can be gamed by recruiters. |
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Digital Signal Processing is a high paid field. It does not only require coding skills, sometimes down to assembly level, you also need a very good math-skills. |
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Financial software, in Banks and so on tend to pay the most (or did until recent times ;)). The languages vary, quite a lot of older C++ and more Java and C# coming through. |
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It depends on location. Sorry but that's just how it is. Here in Iceland we have a high demand for Java and C# and they get payed well. |
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SAP, Cobol |
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In my country (Israel) PHP developers are in very high demand. There is a surplus of Java and ASP.NET developers since those languages are taught in most academic institutions and a shortage of PHP developers as its mostly self taught. With the increasing public awareness to PHP as viable platform for commercial sites the trend is only increasing. |
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I would recommend you check our Craigs List or some other classifieds for your area. It doesn't matter how much programmers are making with language X half way across the world if the pay isn't the same where you are (unless you are willing to do the traveling, that is). |
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C# programmers are in high demand these times, in Denmark. |
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At least in my country (Argentina), Java is very very active. There's strong demand for Senior Java developers here. I'd like to hear what others (from other countries) think too. |
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Probably not representative of everywhere, but at one place I worked we had to pay testers a lot more than developers since they were in much shorter supply. |
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