@scottalanmiller Interesting.
But how do you/we get around the problem of an interview panel asking " so how much experience do you have with Ansible, Salt, AD etc"
If you're the interviewee and you say none and 90% of job respondents reply with none, that business is going to have trouble finding a suitable replacement, which becomes a business problem.
You have to remember the majority of businesses are small businesses without IT departments, they don't understand IT and an IT issue is usually a major headache.
I guess what I'm saying here is, is it a good idea to use technologies that aren't as well known Vs ones that are well known.
I'm not anti this or that, I don't care what anyone uses.
The last interview I went to I was asked "what experience do you have managing iPads in an MDM environment?" I answered none, because I had none. Then I inherited 2 sites that were managing iPads with an MDM and both sites I have improved and made the management of the iPads easier and more efficient than what was configured by the so called highly paid expert that set it up initially.
So I do agree with what you say about how an experienced IT person should be able to just sit down and figure it out, but it's hard to get that opportunity when applying for a new position, interview panels want immediate results most times.