<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <rss version="2.0"> <channel> <title>Remote IT Jobs | Find Remote Tech Jobs Worldwide</title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app</link> <description>Discover top remote IT jobs from leading tech companies. Search software development, DevOps, cybersecurity, and tech leadership positions. Apply to work-from-home tech jobs today.</description> <lastBuildDate>Sun, 22 Mar 2026 03:45:35 GMT</lastBuildDate> <docs>https://validator.w3.org/feed/docs/rss2.html</docs> <generator>https://github.com/jpmonette/feed</generator> <language>en</language> <image> <title>Remote IT Jobs | Find Remote Tech Jobs Worldwide</title> <url>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/images/logo-512.png</url> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app</link> </image> <copyright>All rights reserved 2024, RemoteITJobs.app</copyright> <category>Bitcoin News</category> <item> <title><![CDATA[Discover Chicago's Top AI Engineering Roles with Exceptional Work-Life Balance]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/discover-chicagos-top-ai-engineering-roles-with-exceptional-work-life-balance</link> <guid>discover-chicagos-top-ai-engineering-roles-with-exceptional-work-life-balance</guid> <pubDate>Sat, 21 Mar 2026 20:15:14 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[The race to dominate the artificial intelligence landscape is transforming hiring for tech talent in Chicago. As firms across fintech, healthcare, logistics and other sectors integrate AI-enabled capabilities like predictive modeling into their core operations, the demand for skilled AI engineers has never been higher. However, for many developers in the Windy City, the appeal of a high-impact role is often weighed against the risk of burnout, which can be typical in high-growth work environments. Fortunately, Chicago’s employer ecosystem is increasingly defined by organizations that prioritize sustainable productivity. Many organizations are starting to put in place no-meeting days, generous leave policies, learning and development initiatives and other approaches to support the mental longevity that allows for complex problem solving and AI innovation. The following companies offer AI engineers the opportunity to optimize large language models, develop computer vision systems and tackle other sophisticated challenges in environments structured to encourage work-life balance. ## Companies With Great Work-Life Balance Hiring AI Engineers in Chicago ### Motorola Solutions **Founded:** 1928 **Industry:** Hardware, software, security **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How Motorola Solutions Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Flexible work model * Paid parental and family leave * Global wellness resources * Learning and development opportunities **Employee perspective:** “At Motorola Solutions, we encourage our employees to pursue their passions and potential. Members of my team have been interested in exploring new areas, and with new projects always happening across the company, it has been easy for me to find the right opportunity for them.” Boris Ploix, Director of AI, Founder of Calipsa ### Tempus AI **Founded:** 2015 **Industry:** Artificial intelligence, healthtech, big data **Size:** 1,001 - 5,000 employees **How Tempus AI Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Hybrid work policy * Charitable matching program * Discounted gym memberships * Employee resource groups **Employee perspective:** “The casual setting here in the Chicago office makes everyone less intimidating and more approachable. It's nice to be in an environment where our day-to-day work actually makes a difference, I feel valued. Tempus is also great at welcoming everyone with different backgrounds.” Alexis, Clinical Lab Associate ### Caterpillar **Founded:** 1925 **Industry:** Artificial intelligence, industrial, IoT **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How Caterpillar Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Hybrid work model * Parental leave and adoption benefits * Tuition reimbursement * More than a dozen employee resource groups **Employee perspective:** “Caterpillar gives me the opportunity to grow my career and my leadership skills. It also creates an environment for camaraderie and teamwork.” Marcus, Senior Software Engineer ### TransUnion **Founded:** 1968 **Industry:** Fintech, big data, business intelligence **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How TransUnion Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Hybrid work model * 12 weeks of parental leave with gradual return * Tuition reimbursement * Two global wellness days * Flexible time off **Employee perspective:** “You’ll have the opportunity to develop your skills, whether that be functional coding or interpersonal skills while you’re at TU. We offer our employees resources so they can bring their best to work each day.” Paul, Manager, Database Engineering ### ZS **Founded:** 1983 **Industry:** Artificial intelligence, healthtech, consulting **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How ZS Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Flexible work options * Family leave and fertility benefits * Skills development programs * SoFi student loan refinancing options * PerkSpot corporate discounts **Employee perspective:** “ZS’s tagline of “Impact where it matters” empowers me from a work-life balance perspective. If you are getting your work done — and your teams and clients are happy — there is great flexibility in how that work happens, in both time and location.” Anna Simon, Decision Analytics Manager ### Optum **Founded:** 2011 **Industry:** Healthtech **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How Optum Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Up to $5,250 in tuition reimbursement per calendar year for approved coursework in an accredited program * Six weeks of paid leave for new parents to use within the first 12 months after birth, adoption or foster care placement * Free premium Calm app membership * Company subsidized Bright Horizons back-up child and elder care **Employee perspective:** “Many companies have a standard 8-hour day, but we don’t. Optum is a global company, so we recognize that working hours are different for everyone depending on their situation. Optum has implemented flexible working policies that allow employees to work from home in addition to the traditional office setting with virtual tools to support everyone.” Rachel, Chief of Staff ### ServiceNow **Founded:** 2004 **Industry:** Software, artificial intelligence, productivity **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How ServiceNow Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Hybrid and remote work arrangements * Tuition reimbursement program * Access to fertility resources and adoption assistance * Paid volunteer time * Well-being resources through Lyra **Employee perspective:** “The supportive and inclusive environment at ServiceNow has enabled me to thrive and grow, making it the perfect place to build a fulfilling career. I have always felt respected and valued when bringing up questions and sharing my opinions. My team’s supportive and patient culture emulates two core values at the company: ‘Win as a team’ and ‘Create belonging.’ They’ve helped me tremendously to grow into my role.” John Magallanes, AI Software Engineer ### Morningstar **Founded:** 1984 **Industry:** Fintech **Size:** 10,001+ employees **How Morningstar Supports Work-Life Balance:** * Flexible time off * Annual wellness stipend * At least 16 weeks of parental leave for primary caregivers and up to eight weeks for secondary caregivers * Paid sabbatical every four years; annual education stipend and tuition reimbursement through Scholars Program **Employee perspective:** “I would describe Morningstar's culture in two words — open and inclusive. Our work place and facilities are also reflective of those two.” Saurabh, Senior Software Engineer]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>ai</category> <category>chicago</category> <category>worklifebalance</category> <category>techjobs</category> <category>engineering</category> <enclosure url="https://cdn.builtin.com/cdn-cgi/image/f=auto,fit=cover,w=1200,h=635,q=80/sites/www.builtin.com/files/2026-03/chicago-ai-engineers-work-life-balance.jpg" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[South Korea's AI Labor Debate: Are Unions Protecting Old Jobs at the Cost of Future Workers?]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/south-koreas-ai-labor-debate-are-unions-protecting-old-jobs-at-the-cost-of-future-workers</link> <guid>south-koreas-ai-labor-debate-are-unions-protecting-old-jobs-at-the-cost-of-future-workers</guid> <pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2026 20:15:15 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[## South Korea's Labor Debate Moves into Digital Policy South Korea's labor debate is increasingly moving into digital policy. On February 11, the Ministry of Employment and Labor (MOEL) launched a consultative body with the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) to discuss **artificial intelligence, automation, and industrial restructuring**. This body brings union leadership into regular policy discussions with the government on issues such as **AI deployment and workplace transformation**. KCTU leaders framed the initiative as necessary to ensure that technological change follows a **“human-centered” approach** as AI spreads across workplaces. With more than one million members, KCTU is a major institutional actor in Korea’s policy ecosystem, and its policy positions carry real weight in regulatory debates. ## The Real Challenge: Productivity Growth vs. Job Loss The key question is not whether labor should participate in shaping digital policy—it should. The question is whether the policy direction being advocated will actually help workers over time. The available evidence does not show an economy already experiencing large-scale AI-driven job loss. Statistics Korea reported that total employment in January 2026 reached roughly 28 million, an increase of about 108,000 from the same month of the previous year. International evidence points in the same direction. An OECD analysis of AI adoption finds **little aggregate employment impact** so far across OECD economies, including Korea. These findings suggest that the immediate challenge is not technological unemployment but how to manage **productivity growth and worker transition** as technologies diffuse. ## KCTU's Policy Focus: Safeguards vs. Adoption Yet much of the current debate is moving in a different direction. In recent policy discussions, KCTU has called for stronger safeguards on the use of artificial intelligence in workplace decision-making. Labor leaders have argued that firms should face clearer rules when deploying AI systems that affect hiring, evaluation, or working conditions, and some union proposals emphasize the need for **labor-impact assessments** as automation expands across industries. But there is a difference between requiring transparency and building a de facto permission structure around adoption. This distinction matters because the government itself is moving toward a more calibrated model: MOEL’s 2026 work plan calls for industry- and occupation-level surveys on AI transition effects and the development of a labor-sector AI ethics guideline, rather than an upfront presumption that firms should slow deployment until broad social consensus is reached. ## The Bigger Bottleneck: Weak Diffusion and Reskilling This is where the Korean debate is starting to drift. Korea does need safeguards for algorithmic management, AI-based evaluation, and workplace surveillance—but it also needs deployment. The OECD’s Korea study suggests that while AI adoption remains at an early stage, firms and employees are already reporting **productivity gains**. However, participation in adult learning in Korea is the lowest among OECD countries at just 13 percent, compared to an OECD average of 40 percent, and only 42 percent of firms that have adopted AI report providing training to employees to work with it. In other words, the bigger bottleneck is not just harmful adoption. Rather, it is **weak diffusion paired with weak reskilling**. A policy framework that puts most of its energy into restricting employer use of AI, while underinvesting in rapid retraining and worker mobility, would misdiagnose the problem. ## Union Representation Gap and Digital Labor Markets Meanwhile, KCTU has increasingly entered broader digital policy debates, including discussions on platform regulation and competition issues surrounding Korea’s Online Platform Fairness Act. A more constructive approach, however, would focus less on resisting technological adoption and more on supporting worker transition as technology diffuses. Governments can strengthen reskilling systems, improve job-matching infrastructure, and provide temporary income support during periods of labor market adjustment. Such policies help workers move into higher productivity roles while allowing firms to adopt technologies that enable those roles in the first place. When policy frameworks prioritize restrictions on new technologies instead of adaptation, they risk slowing diffusion in sectors where productivity growth is already weak. The tension becomes clearer when looking at the structure of Korea’s broader labor landscape. Union membership in Korea is concentrated in large enterprises and the public sector, while union density falls sharply in smaller firms. According to official MOEL data, unionization rates reach nearly 72 percent in the public sector and roughly 35 percent in firms with 300 or more employees. In establishments with 30 to 99 workers, the rate is only 1.3 percent, and in firms with fewer than 30 employees, it drops to just 0.1 percent. This imbalance means organized labor often reflects the interests of workers in relatively stable, well-paid jobs rather than the broader workforce, including younger and nonregular workers, as well as those in emerging digital sectors. This representational gap matters in debates about technological change. Workers in highly unionized sectors are more likely to face automation risks in large manufacturing firms or state-linked industries, while younger and nonregular workers are more likely to participate in fast-growing **digital labor markets**, including platform services and freelance work. Policies designed primarily to protect existing job structures may therefore do little to help the groups that are actually expanding within the labor market. In an economy where the majority of workers are employed in services and small firms, regulatory approaches that slow digital adoption may end up protecting a shrinking share of the workforce. ## Economic Context: Productivity and Global Competition The economic context reinforces the stakes of this debate. Korea’s productivity growth has slowed significantly over the past two decades. OECD data show that Korea’s GDP per hour worked is roughly 70 to 75 percent of the U.S. level. At the same time, Korea is entering one of the fastest demographic transitions in the OECD, with the working-age population projected to decline sharply over the coming decades. In this environment, long-term growth will depend increasingly on technologies that raise output per worker rather than on expanding the labor force. Automation technologies, including AI and robotics, are central to that adjustment. According to the International Federation of Robotics 2024 report, Korea has the **highest robot density in the world**, with 1,012 industrial robots per 10,000 manufacturing workers. But global competition is intensifying. China installed 295,000 industrial robots in 2024, accounting for more than half of global installations. For Korean manufacturers facing rising labor costs and aging demographics, automation is not simply a labor-saving tool but a key mechanism for maintaining **global competitiveness**. ## Balancing Worker Protections with Technological Progress None of this means that worker protections should be ignored. Technologies that reshape workplaces should be accompanied by transparency rules, fair dispute processes, and reskilling opportunities. But the policy objective should be to help workers transition alongside technological change rather than to slow the diffusion of productivity-enhancing technologies. MOEL has already begun expanding training programs to build AI and digital skills among workers, including targeted programs for mid-career workers and employees in small and medium-sized firms. The deeper risk is that Korea’s digital policy debate becomes framed primarily around protecting existing jobs rather than preparing workers for the next generation of industries. Labor unions have historically played an important role in shaping fair transitions during technological change. If policy debates focus mainly on restricting new technologies, they may end up protecting yesterday’s jobs at the expense of tomorrow’s workers.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>ai</category> <category>automation</category> <category>southkorea</category> <category>laborpolicy</category> <category>futureofwork</category> <enclosure url="https://cdn.sanity.io/images/03hnmfyj/production/3e89256f95da3be2f2d9cdd7c58a90f5ecf6e9b1-1920x1080.jpg" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Maryland's Bold Tech Jobs Push: How the State is Becoming a 21st Century Innovation Hub]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/marylands-bold-tech-jobs-push-how-the-state-is-becoming-a-21st-century-innovation-hub</link> <guid>marylands-bold-tech-jobs-push-how-the-state-is-becoming-a-21st-century-innovation-hub</guid> <pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2026 13:15:15 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[## Maryland's Tech Jobs Initiative Gains Momentum Maryland Lt. Gov. **Aruna Miller** is championing the Moore administration's ambitious plan to transform the state into a **major tech jobs hub**, defending their economic strategy during a recent appearance at the INSIGHT ConneX event in Cockeysville. ![Aruna Miller](https://dehayf5mhw1h7.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/2100/2026/03/19124024/untitled-1.webp) ### Strategic Focus on 21st Century Industries Miller emphasized the administration's **laser beam focus** on attracting technology companies and creating high-quality jobs. "If we try to dilute ourselves and try to chase after everything, we're not going to be able to get that," Miller stated. "So we really want to be laser beam focused on the industries of the 21st Century, and really the great resources we have in the state of Maryland that add to that." ### Progress Despite Challenges Despite the implementation of a **3% sales tax on digital services and IT** last year, Miller highlighted significant progress in Maryland's tech sector development. "Gov. Moore often says we are asset-rich and strategy-poor, and we're working on that," Miller explained. "Is it going to happen overnight? The changes, no, policy takes time to happen." ### Major Corporate Investments The state has successfully attracted substantial investment from **major technology and pharmaceutical companies**, including: - **AstraZeneca** - **Hitachi Rail** - **Samsung Biologics** ### Maryland's Competitive Advantages Miller pointed to several key factors making Maryland attractive for tech companies: - **Incredible talent pool** from local universities and institutions - **Proximity to Washington D.C.** and federal resources - **Strong existing infrastructure** for technology development "We have an incredible talent pool here, and so many resources, just because, you know, our nation's capital is in our backyard, that you know, together, attracts so many business to our area," Miller noted. ### Long-Term Vision The administration recognizes that building a robust tech ecosystem requires **patient, strategic investment** rather than quick fixes. Miller's comments suggest a commitment to creating sustainable growth through targeted policies and infrastructure development that will benefit both established companies and startups in the technology sector.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>techjobs</category> <category>maryland</category> <category>economicdevelopment</category> <category>innovation</category> <category>careergrowth</category> <enclosure url="https://dehayf5mhw1h7.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/2100/2026/03/19124024/untitled-1.jpg" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[AI Investment Boom Sparks Massive Tech Layoffs: Are Your Job and Salary at Risk?]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/ai-investment-boom-sparks-massive-tech-layoffs-are-your-job-and-salary-at-risk</link> <guid>ai-investment-boom-sparks-massive-tech-layoffs-are-your-job-and-salary-at-risk</guid> <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 20:15:24 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[![techlayoffsai](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt0bbd1b20253587c0/blt1b13c3597008248c/69bc3e5122146604bf29a938/GettyImages-aidisplacesworker2234275993.jpg?width=1280&auto=webp&quality=80&format=jpg&disable=upscale) Tech firms are laying off workers and reducing their compensation to fund AI investment, though some question if this approach is sustainable. blocberry/ iStock / Getty Images Plus For the past few years, the promise of AI has been to enable humans to use the tools as a companion to be productive and replace only lower-end jobs. But continuing a trend that appeared to pick up last year, more tech firms appear adamant on eliminating more positions as AI investment picks up, leaving even highly skilled workers looking over their shoulders on whether they will be next. According to the site layoffs.fyi, which tracks layoffs, under 40,000 employees at tech companies have been cut thus far in 2026. Notable companies that have announced layoffs include Amazon (100, though other sources say 16,000), Meta (1500), FormFactor (220), Autodesk (1000), and ASML (1700). But these numbers don’t begin to indicate what may be coming in the not-too-distant future. ## Profitable, But Still Laying Off In the era of AI, layoffs are no longer attributed to poor company financial performance. Instead, companies appear to be proactively cutting employees to balance their budgets with AI investments. For instance, ASML said in its most recent quarterly financial earning statement in late January it was reorganizing to streamline operations and thus would eliminate some jobs, many at management levels. But almost two months later, employees remain in limbo as the cuts have not yet been finalized amidst reported pushbacks by unions, who noted the Dutch-based company still plans to expand some of its facilities. But the real drama can unfold in coming months as tech companies reportedly engage in more drastic downsizings. Meta, which has engaged in several highly-publicized rounds of layoffs in recent years, axed 1,500 workers in its Reality Labs metaverse unit in January. Now, new reports hint Meta could cut as much as 20% of its remaining workforce, as the firm seeks to offset mammoth investments in AI infrastructure and top-level talent. Some of the cuts could be in AI units themselves. The report quotes one analyst as stating that a 20% staff cut could produce $6 billion in cost savings. Meta is not the only company considering massive layoffs. Amazon is reportedly considering cutting an additional 14,000 in the second quarter according to a post on American Bazaar Online. The report noted that divisions like Amazon Web Services (AWS) are consolidating entire departments, with small clusters of senior engineers using advanced AI models like Claude Sonnet to manage workloads that previously required dozens of employees. Amazon’s Alexa division, which once employed over 800, now reportedly has a skeletal crew of 23, with remaining hardware development contracted to a team in Bangalore, India that utilizes AI-powered coding tools. To add insult to injury, the American Bazaar Online post reported sources said process documentation and workflow information from outgoing workers was used in datasets to train the AI agents that replaced them. Oracle is reportedly planning to cut between 20,000 and 30,000 jobs, about 12% to 18% of its global workforce. The proposed cuts are linked to efforts to control costs as Oracle increases spending on AI infrastructure. ## Study Confirms Companies Prioritizing AI A recent survey of 866 business leaders by the career site Resume Builder paints a dim picture of the current tech job climate. About 46% of the companies surveyed were in technology and software. The survey found that the companies justified their actions by stating that only substantial AI investments would enable them to compete and thrive in a rapidly changing global economy. The survey found: - 75% say AI provides a competitive edge. - 74% expect AI to drive revenue growth. - 57% fear falling behind without AI investment. - 56% cite board or investor pressure to adopt AI "This is not reluctant belt-tightening, and these leaders are not apologetic about the choices they are making,” said Stacie Haller, Chief Career Advisor of Resume Builder, in a statement. “They see AI investment as existential and are willing to absorb turnover and employee dissatisfaction as acceptable costs. The weak job market is giving them confidence that they can do this without serious consequences. But the job market will not stay weak forever. Job seekers are already wary of employers using AI to eliminate roles, and organizations that have cut compensation to fund those investments may find that history follows them when workers have choices again,” says Haller. Further study results reinforce current company attitudes toward cutting compensation or conducting layoffs to fund AI, with companies willing to absorb further human costs: - 94% expect to reduce headcount. - 92% say AI investment is a higher priority than employee satisfaction. - 94% are willing to accept higher turnover to fund AI growth. - 88% say the weak job market makes it easier to reduce compensation without losing talent. ## This Year’s Raise? Only After AI is Budgeted Even if jobs are not cut, employee compensation is taking a back seat. Resume Builder found that 54% of companies have or will reduce employee compensation to free up capital for AI spending in 2026. By the end of the year, more than half of companies (58%) will have cut employee compensation (54%) or laid off workers (26%) to help fund AI investments, according to the survey. “Companies are making a clear calculation: AI investment is the priority, and employee compensation is where the budget will come from. This is not just layoffs. Bonuses, raises, equity, benefits, and base pay are all being cut simultaneously, across industries,” said Haller. Resume Builder added that many companies plan to take a flat, across-the-board approach to raises in 2026, sometimes referred to as “peanut butter raises,” rather than tying compensation to individual performance. - 71% tie raises to performance. - 11% offer below-inflation raises. - 4% plan no raises at all. “Companies that flatten compensation this way risk losing the people they can least afford to and end up retaining low performers who had nowhere else to go,” added Haller. ![Stacie-Haller-300x298.png](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt0bbd1b20253587c0/blt4038199685c3d6d8/69bc3ba2b62d6edddb7dab31/Stacie-Haller-300x298.png?width=1280&auto=webp&quality=80&disable=upscale) Stacie Haller of Resume Builder says more companies are reducing employee compensation to invest in AI. (Resume Builder) ## Will it Pay Off? But will this herd mentality of many firms reallocating budgets to AI help produce the handsome returns they expect? That is far from a sure thing. According to a Harvard Business Review report, MIT Media Lab/Project NANDA found in a report last year that 95% of investments in generative AI have produced zero returns. That report generated controversy on how widespread AI’s benefits were. A more recent article in Harvard Business Review, summarizing a survey of 1,006 global executives, said that many companies were cutting jobs in anticipation of AI producing benefits. So far, there is an absence of data to verify that AI investments will reap the benefits companies hope for. ## Look Before You Leap Given the uncertainty of AI payback, the Harvard Business Review article suggests a more measured approach by using these alternative approaches: - Use attrition instead of large-scale layoffs. - Redesign workflows with AI as an enabler. - Communicate AI’s role in enhancing employee productivity.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>techlayoffs</category> <category>aiinvestment</category> <category>jobmarket</category> <category>career</category> <category>compensation</category> <enclosure url="https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt0bbd1b20253587c0/blt1b13c3597008248c/69bc3e5122146604bf29a938/GettyImages-aidisplacesworker2234275993.jpg?disable=upscale&width=1200&height=630&fit=crop" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[From Fields to Tech: How AI and Data Are Revolutionizing Agriculture Careers]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/from-fields-to-tech-how-ai-and-data-are-revolutionizing-agriculture-careers</link> <guid>from-fields-to-tech-how-ai-and-data-are-revolutionizing-agriculture-careers</guid> <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 13:15:22 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[## High-Tech Opportunities in Agriculture Bring a New Crop of Professionals Agriculture is one of humanity’s oldest professions, but technology is rapidly reshaping agricultural employment. In the U.S., it accounted for 10% of total jobs in 2024 according to USDA data. "Farming used to be all about horsepower. Now it’s just as much about computing power," says Justin Rose, president of John Deere’s worldwide agriculture and turf division. "Today, we’re building **artificial intelligence (AI) systems** that can literally see what’s growing in the field and make split-second decisions about what needs attention." Daniel Burrus, technology futurist, adds: "We’re no longer guessing about the future. The data is there, and when we combine it with human ingenuity, we can pre-solve problems before they happen." ## The New Face of Agricultural Careers "The narrative that agricultural careers are limited to field work is outdated," says Elaine Millar, associate vice president of research at Gray Decision Intelligence. New enrollments in **high-tech agriculture programs** are growing faster than other programs, which is crucial as the sector faces a labor shortage with older farmers retiring. Beginning in fall 2026, the College of Central Florida will offer the state’s first Associate in Science degree in **precision agriculture**. This program will prepare graduates for roles such as: - **Precision agriculture specialists** - **Agronomic consultants** - **Farm data analysts** - **Drone operators** - **Equipment technicians** Smart farming’s emphasis on efficiency over labor is also attracting a more diverse workforce. "Sixty-four percent of all agriculture graduates in 2023 were women," Millar notes. ## High-Tech Equals High Pay Gray’s data shows that high-tech roles are not just in demand, but well-compensated. "With an average salary of **$83,842 for data analysts** and flavor technologists commanding almost $70,000 annually, these positions offer a financially rewarding path for analytically minded graduates," Millar explains. Sarah Budde Rodriguez, an agronomy solutions manager at Tidal Grow AgriScience, exemplifies this shift. "Testing new technologies in real-life scenarios is critical to bringing innovation to market," she says. Her academic background in microbiology and plant pathology provided the analytical foundation needed for her role. ## The Next Generation of Tech-Savvy Farmers Twenty-three-year-old Salvador Ayala, a paid intern with Innov8.ag, represents the new generation entering agriculture. "I returned to agriculture because it matched my background and I was excited to apply technology to farming," he says. Ayala spends 70-75% of his time in front of the computer and the rest in orchards or meeting with farmers. "It’s incredibly satisfying when growers see different options and gain efficiency without sacrificing their health, time or money," he adds. Rose concludes: "When I visit a farm and see a twenty-something using drones to analyze crop health or relying on perception technology to scout fields, it’s inspiring. Agriculture today is as dynamic as any field in Silicon Valley." ![Sarah Budde Rodriguez](https://www.gannett-cdn.com/authoring/authoring-images/2026/01/22/USAT/88303122007-sarah-budde-rodriguez-courtesy-tidal-grow.jpg) *Sarah Budde Rodriguez testing intelligent leaf delivery technology* ![Salvador Ayala](https://www.gannett-cdn.com/authoring/authoring-images/2026/01/22/USAT/88303624007-salvador-ayala-selfie.jpg) *Salvador Ayala, a tech-savvy agricultural intern*]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>agtech</category> <category>precisionagriculture</category> <category>ai</category> <category>dataanalytics</category> <category>techcareers</category> <enclosure url="https://www.gannett-cdn.com/authoring/authoring-images/2026/01/22/USAT/88303590007-tavis-douglass-cf-associate-professor-and-program-manager-for-agribusiness-management-flies-a-precision-agriculture-drone.jpg?auto=webp&crop=1429,804,x0,y74&format=pjpg&width=1200" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Siemens Invests $165M in US Data Center Expansion, Creating 150 New Tech Jobs Amid AI Boom]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/siemens-invests-165m-in-us-data-center-expansion-creating-150-new-tech-jobs-amid-ai-boom</link> <guid>siemens-invests-165m-in-us-data-center-expansion-creating-150-new-tech-jobs-amid-ai-boom</guid> <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 13:15:14 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Siemens, a leading German technology manufacturer, has announced a major investment in data center growth in the Carolinas, signaling a significant boost to US manufacturing capacity. ### Major Investment in Spartanburg Facilities Siemens is investing **$165 million** in new and expanded facilities to meet rising demand. This includes a new **120,000-square-foot facility** in Spartanburg, which will house lighting panel production and distribution operations. ### Expansion and Job Creation In addition to the new facility, Siemens will expand its existing plant in Roebuck by **22,000 square feet** to increase busway production capacity. The expansion will feature a new paint line, epoxy line, and an expanded plating line. These developments in Spartanburg County are expected to create **150 new manufacturing jobs**, contributing to local economic growth. ### Driving Force: AI and Data Center Demand Ruth Gratzke, President of Siemens Smart Infrastructure U.S., highlighted the surge in customer demand, stating: "**Customer demand is at an all-time high** as advanced infrastructure upgrades are needed to meet the power requirements from increasing AI workloads. Through sustained investment in U.S. manufacturing, Siemens is enhancing its capacity to meet the needs of data center and AI factory customers during this transformative phase of the AI industrial revolution, underscoring our long‑standing commitment to American made solutions." This investment underscores Siemens' strategy to capitalize on the growing needs of **data centers** and **AI-driven industries**, positioning the company at the forefront of technological infrastructure development.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>siemens</category> <category>datacenters</category> <category>manufacturing</category> <category>ai</category> <category>techjobs</category> <enclosure url="https://gray-whns-prod.gtv-cdn.com/resizer/v2/VHMOJBMKMJBVXO74XOJYVIUEFU.jpg?auth=4db6910afce233bf8c40c5fc22b755a7b7db4d2e756d86d67cb3ed0dad73b5ce&width=1200&height=600&smart=true" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Is AI Crushing Entry-Level Tech Jobs? The Shocking Truth About Wages and Hiring Freezes]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/is-ai-crushing-entry-level-tech-jobs-the-shocking-truth-about-wages-and-hiring-freezes</link> <guid>is-ai-crushing-entry-level-tech-jobs-the-shocking-truth-about-wages-and-hiring-freezes</guid> <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 20:15:25 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[## The Rise of AI in the Tech Industry Growing AI adoption has slowed the hiring of young workers in software development and customer service jobs, and recent data suggests it could also be exerting pressure on entry-level wages, according to industry experts. **“For software developers, there’s been about a 20% decline for entry-level people aged 22 to 26,”** said Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the Stanford Digital Economy Lab. **“For call centers, [there’s been] about a 15% relative decline. Mid-career people are doing okay. The more senior people are doing well.”** Instead of cutting wages, companies have stopped hiring for those positions, Brynjolfsson said during a panel discussion at last week’s Economic Summit held by Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. AI is automating work previously done by entry-level workers, which is also reshaping career pathways. Hiring for mid- and senior-career positions that focus on value creation remains stable, Brynjolfsson said. AI’s impact so far has been more evident on employment but **“we’re beginning to see a little bit of effect on wages, too,”** he said. There’s still insufficient data to properly measure AI’s true impact on wages, but that should become clearer as trends in the labor market emerge in the coming months, Brynjolfsson said. He noted that jobs in other industries such as home healthcare are not affected by the AI revolution. ## The Rise of ‘AI Washing’ Another emerging trend related to AI is that companies often blame the technology for layoffs, even when it’s not a major factor in cuts. Resume.org conducted a recent study in which 17% of 1,000 respondents said AI would be a reason to lay off employees this year. That study also found that **59% would use AI as a reason to justify hiring freezes or layoffs, “because it plays better with stakeholders than citing financial constraints.”** Outside of exposed professions, **“AI washing”** — a term that describes when companies use AI to justify layoff — is becoming a concern. Companies such as Amazon, Microsoft and Meta have cited AI as a reason for rounds of layoffs. Block recently laid off 4,000 workers, citing the use of AI tools to work more efficiently. **“Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion and make similar structural changes,”** said Jack Dorsey, CEO of Block, in a letter to shareholders. The labor market slowdown isn’t driven by AI, but more by typical labor market trends, said Erika Mcentarfar, an economist at Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and former Commissioner of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Firm AI adoption has friction, and non-tech companies running pilots won’t move quickly due to concerns on security, privacy and litigation. **“We’re in very…early stages,”** Mcentarfar said. ## The Broader IT Market Sees Uneven Growth The tech industry gained about 5,100 jobs in February, according to an analysis by CompTIA of jobs numbers released by U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). About 5,900 workers were added in IT and custom software services and systems design jobs, CompTIA said. Job postings referencing AI capabilities have risen sharply in early 2026 as companies build out AI systems, according to data from ManpowerGroup, a workforce consulting firm. **“We are seeing more employers embed these skills into hybrid roles that combine software development, data expertise, and systems engineering,”** said Kye Mitchell, head of Experis, which is part of ManpowerGroup. The tech sector is restructuring, but **“demand for multidisciplinary technologists remains strong,”** Mitchell wrote in an email to *Computerworld*. Many CIOs know AI will increase productivity, but are not yet sure what the technology will mean to the organization in the long term, said Jack Gold, principal analyst at J. Gold Associates. Some companies are doing a good job of deploying AI assistance in certain roles like HR and customer service, Gold said. **“But even the ones that have endorsed it for major shifts like agents are starting to discover that it isn’t fully capable of replacing all humans,”** he said.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>ai</category> <category>techjobs</category> <category>career</category> <category>automation</category> <category>layoffs</category> <enclosure url="https://www.computerworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/4147180-0-39804100-1773853138-Der-Obstkorb-alleine-reicht-Developern-nicht-mehr.jpg?quality=50&strip=all&w=1024" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Atlassian's AI Job Cuts: Are We Heading Toward a 'Chaos Tsunami' in the Workforce?]]></title> <link>https://www.remoteitjobs.app/article/atlassians-ai-job-cuts-are-we-heading-toward-a-chaos-tsunami-in-the-workforce</link> <guid>atlassians-ai-job-cuts-are-we-heading-toward-a-chaos-tsunami-in-the-workforce</guid> <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 13:15:13 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Experts are sounding the alarm about a **"chaos tsunami"** of task automation, hollowed-out talent pipelines, and costly misfires that await leaders who cut staff to invest in AI without equally investing in human capability. ## Atlassian's AI-Driven Job Cuts Spark Industry Debate Atlassian's decision to cut **1,600 jobs** – about 10% of its global staff – to "steer more spending into artificial intelligence and enterprise sales" has become a flashpoint in a much bigger argument about how far and how fast AI should reshape white-collar work. This move, coming on the heels of a slew of other AI-linked redundancies, is already rippling through Australia's tech ecosystem. Venture backers say non-AI start-ups now face a funding drought and are quietly trimming headcount. While some investors hail this as overdue "right-sizing," workforce experts warn that Atlassian's cuts are an early sign of a more chaotic and uneven transition – one that could hollow out talent pipelines, deepen disengagement, and create a dangerous illusion that software can replace hard-won human judgement. ## 'Chaos Tsunami,' Not Instant Apocalypse or Utopia Steven McConnell, chief customer officer at Arielle Executive, said the Atlassian cuts should be seen less as a one-off restructuring and more as the front edge of a **"chaos tsunami"** in how work is organized. "You're about to see an explosion in two types of hype," he said. "Doomers will claim that we're about to see 50% unemployment, grinding poverty, and a wave of quantitative easing to prop up the economy. Utopians will claim that agents and humanoid robots are about to create a world of universal abundance where work is optional." Both extremes, he argued, are seductive – and social media will reward them – but both are wrong. Instead, he expects a classic S-shaped adoption curve: a burst of rapid AI deployment that is eventually capped by technological and economic realities. McConnell highlighted how the numbers behind the AI boom don't fully add up. The bigger estimates point to OpenAI committing about $1.4 trillion in long-term spending. However, it only made $20 billion in 2025. Today, a company might think it's cheap to use ChatGPT instead of junior staff when it costs $20–$200 per user each month. But that decision would look very different if a ChatGPT subscription jumped to $1,000–$5,000 per user per month. In that world, McConnell said, decisions like Atlassian's start to look less like inevitable automation and more like a **high-risk bet** on where AI costs and capabilities will land. ## Middle Management in the Firing Line – For Now Atlassian's 10% cut is far from the first time its workforce has been jolted by structural changes. A separate case before the US National Labor Relations Board alleges the company illegally fired an engineer, Denise Unterwurzacher, after she mocked co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes in an internal Slack channel while protesting a "re-leveling" exercise that demoted and displaced staff. The NLRB's lawyer argued she was acting in the spirit of Atlassian's own "Open Company, No Bullshit" philosophy when she criticized the CEO's comments during an all-hands meeting about the changes. Atlassian denies wrongdoing and says it expects staff to speak up "in a manner that remains professional and respectful." For McConnell, the real structural pressure from AI is gathering one level below the C-suite. **"Middle management is most at risk,"** he said. "Think about what middle managers do day to day. They reduce friction between teams, chase updates, track milestones, hold people accountable." "Much of this activity exists for one reason: making sure information moves across the organization. And agentic AI is getting surprisingly good at handling predictable coordination work." He stressed that, so far, there is little hard data showing companies are directly making middle managers redundant because of AI. The more immediate effect is a silent hiring freeze. "Before adding headcount, leadership teams are increasingly asking a simple question: 'How much of this role can AI do?'" ## A Disengaged Workforce Meets an AI Shock If AI is accelerating structural change, Melissa Jenner, founder and CEO of Actvo, worries that many organizations are entering this era already badly underprepared. "We entered the AI era already carrying a **decade-long disengagement crisis**," she said. "Without immediately authorizing self-directed learning and building a genuine learning culture, organizations cannot expect even a third of their workforce to adapt at the pace AI is demanding." Her view is that Atlassian-style cuts risk becoming the default response because it is simpler to shed staff than to rewire culture. "We are walking into a deficit era, unprepared – and the costs to correct are going to be much larger than just retrenching staff." "The mindset shift has to come from a leadership shift first – towards building a sustainable culture centred around self-determined learning enabled for everyone," Jenner explained. ## The False Economy of 'Cut to Pivot to AI' Atlassian has framed its job cuts as a way to reallocate spending into AI products and enterprise sales. Across the start-up sector, venture capitalists describe a similar story: AI is allowing software firms to operate with much leaner engineering teams, and many that hired aggressively during the 2021–22 boom are now slashing 20–40% of product and engineering roles to "extend runway" in far tougher fundraising conditions. Jenner argues this arithmetic ignores the true cost of trading people for promises of automation. "Cutting 10% of your workforce to 'pivot to AI' is a short-term headline with a long-term cost," she said. "Research consistently shows that re-hiring externally can cost three to five times more (after factoring in financial, time and resource costs). This means for a $50,000 employee replacement costs could be $100,000 before accounting for lost institutional knowledge and the cultural DNA that simply cannot be rehired." "Institutional knowledge – customer relationships, product history, cultural context – lives in people, not systems," Jenner added. "When you displace experienced employees for lacking a few skills – in favour of AI – you're not just losing headcount. You're deleting years of pattern recognition that no model has been trained on." McConnell makes a similar point from the employer-brand side. He says companies that hide behind euphemisms about "rebalancing" and "long-term operational efficiency" while offering "tick-the-box" outplacement support are damaging their reputation in a tight talent market. "Make your brand relatable and human by getting in front of cameras," he said. And if you are cutting roles, ensure the career transition support "delivers value in the 2026 job market", not a box of generic CV templates. ## AI is Killing Tasks, Not Jobs – But Roles Need Redesign Both experts insist that a binary "AI kills jobs" narrative misses what is actually happening inside companies like Atlassian. "AI doesn't replace jobs – it replaces tasks," Jenner said. "The real question leaders should be asking is: have we actually mapped what our people can do against what our AI-augmented roles will need?" She argues that with the right workforce intelligence tools, companies can rapidly identify which employees are already close to future roles, and then re-skill the rest "far faster than they could ever recruit externally". Yet most organizations are getting the sequence backwards. "Most organizations are investing heavily in AI tools as a first-step on their augmentation journey – but almost nothing in human readiness," she said. "It's the equivalent of fitting out a world-class gym and expecting your team to be athletes by osmosis. The technology growth budget and the people growth budget need to be in the same conversation – right now, they're not even in the same building." McConnell noted that individual workers need to lean into that redesign rather than hope the storm passes. "The most in-demand leaders of the next decade won't just manage people – they'll manage hybrid teams of humans and AI agents," he said. "So stop asking: 'Should we use AI?' And start asking: 'How do we staff with it?'" He acknowledged the paradox: by embracing AI, some workers may help make their own current role redundant. "But you'll walk away with a skillset likely to have commercial value in the future." ## Talent Pipelines at Risk Beyond today's headlines, McConnell is most worried about what AI-linked cuts mean for tomorrow's leaders. "The Big Four consulting firms, for example, have slashed graduate hiring by almost 50%, with Deloitte recording the steepest drop," he said. While this hiring pullback may be driven as much by economic jitters as by AI, the effect is the same: entry-level roles are being squeezed just as generative AI tools become embedded in white-collar work. "The trouble with replacing entry-level roles with AI is that AI hallucinates – confidently. And spotting a mistake requires someone to know what AI doesn't know – which only comes from experience," McConnell added. If junior roles disappear, fewer people will accumulate that experience – making the whole system more brittle. ## Innovation's Human Ceiling – and the Investment Test For Jenner, the risk is that companies like Atlassian successfully automate away large chunks of routine work, only to discover they have also thinned out the very capabilities that make them competitive. "AI can obviously accelerate execution, but it cannot generate the contextual judgment, customer empathy, or collaborative, creative problem-solving that drives genuine innovation," she said. "If you under-invest in your people's capability to work alongside AI, you don't get 10x output – you get faster mediocrity." "My belief has always been that AI scales wisdom – secure your wisest people and upskill them, to reap the 1+1=3 outcome you need to innovate faster than your competitors." Her prescription is blunt: "For every dollar an organization spends on AI technology in 2026, they should be committing an equal dollar to human capability development. Anything less is planning to fail slowly – as the machines won't run themselves." In other words, Atlassian's 1,600 job cuts may prove a defining test – not just of one company's AI strategy, but of whether the tech sector can resist the temptation to cut first, explain later, and instead build the human systems needed to stop automation turning into a self-inflicted talent crisis.]]></description> <author>contact@remoteitjobs.app (RemoteITJobs.app)</author> <category>ai</category> <category>jobcuts</category> <category>workforce</category> <category>automation</category> <category>talent</category> <enclosure url="https://cdn-res.keymedia.com/cms/images/us/037/0365_639069851259796359.png" length="0" type="image/png"/> </item> </channel> </rss>