Given the choice between a ticket into space and $102,000 (approx
£65,000), 60 percent of IT staff would take the cash. That’s the finding
of a survey of 4,000 global Twitter followers by UK-based software
company Red Gate.
The research was carried out as part of Red Gate’s current DBA
in Space competition, which has a spaceflight as the first prize. Now
extended until noon GMT on Tuesday, November 22, 2011, the free
competition, open to anyone who is involved with IT databases in the UK,
USA, Australia, Canada and Germany, will put one lucky database
administrator (DBA) on a Space Adventures flight into suborbital space.
For legal reasons the winner of the competition can choose between the
flight and its cash equivalent of US$102,000.
Space or cash?
The Twitter survey found that cash-conscious DBAs would overwhelmingly
put their money into bricks and mortar over space travel, with 65 per
cent promising to splash the cash on paying off their mortgages. The
survey is still running and anyone in the IT community can simply visit DBA
in Space to indicate their preference for either cash or space. Red
Gate has now extended the poll to the entire IT community – people can
visit DBA
in Space to make their choice between cash or space.
Catching fire in the community
The competition has already caught fire in the IT community – the DBA in
Space site has seen 67,000 unique visitors, with the different pages and
videos viewed more than 263,000 times. The UK currently leads the way in
terms of visits per head of population, closely followed by Australia
and then the USA.
More than 2,400 competition tweets have been sent, as entrants scrabble
to find the answers to the 14 video-based sci-fi questions. Fifteen
finalists will be chosen, based on answering all the quiz questions
correctly and revealing what they’d tweet from space. Finalists will
take part in an American Idol style vote off, with the ultimate winner
chosen by a 50/50 combination of the public vote and a panel of judges.
Still time to enter
“We created this competition to celebrate the underappreciated work that
database administrators do and to reward one lucky person with a trip
into space,” says Neil Davidson, joint-CEO of Red Gate. “But it looks
like the recession is really biting, as six out of 10 would rather take
the substantial cash equivalent instead of the journey of a lifetime.
“We want to find out what other people think – so we’ve opened the poll
up to ask the whole IT community: Would you go for space or cash? And
while we call it DBA in Space the prize is open to anyone that works on
databases – DBA doesn’t have to be your job title.
“There’s still time to enter before the extended deadline of 22
November, and you have a great chance as only one in five of applicants
so far are getting all 14 answers right.”
After the competition closes, the answers to the sci-fi quiz questions
will be announced on November 23, with the 15 finalists of DBA in Space
revealed on December 6, 2011.
About the sponsor
Red
Gate creates ingeniously simple software tools used by more than
500,000 IT professionals worldwide. The company works to uplift the
market it serves through free web community sites, technical
publications and conference sponsorships that reach millions annually.
For four years, Red Gate has sponsored the Exceptional
DBA of the Year award, honoring the DBA who exemplifies the virtues
of knowledge, sharing and dedicated service.
About Space Adventures
Space
Adventures, the company that organized the flights for the world's
first private space explorers, is headquartered in Vienna, Va., with an
office in Moscow. It offers a variety of programs such as the
availability today for spaceflight missions to the International Space
Station and around the moon, Zero-Gravity flights, cosmonaut training,
spaceflight qualification programs and reservations on future suborbital
spacecraft. The company's advisory board includes Apollo 11 moonwalker
Buzz Aldrin, Shuttle astronauts Sam Durrance, Tom Jones, Byron
Lichtenberg, Norm Thagard, Kathy Thornton, Pierre Thuot, Charles Walker,
and Skylab/Shuttle astronaut Owen Garriott.
