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Offshoring the movement of white-collar jobs overseas really began to take off in the U.S. when the Y2K computer crisis triggered dramatic shortages of code writers who could reprogram company computer systems to make sure they wouldn't crash when the year 1999 gave way to 2000.
(In the wake of the immensely popular "The Da Vinci Code," there appears to be no shortage of medieval codes waiting to be cracked by intrepid scholar-detectives).
On the downside, the city is also experiencing a skilled-labor shortage; hundreds of coding jobs alone languish on job boards.
Opponents also report a shortage of radiologists, insufficient screening codes and work-flow issues.
Schools have embraced the changes and, despite a shortage of suitably qualified teachers, coding software such as Scratch is now standard in classrooms, while app-building and even 3D printing are becoming commonplace.
There's no shortage of workshops on media ethics and concomitant codes of conduct in Lebanon, but how are those guidelines being implemented?
The new code would end a worsening shortage of local exchanges -- the first three digits of the seven digits following an area code -- that reflects deregulation of the telephone industry and the resulting assignment of exchanges to competing service providers.
Distrust and professional censure, limited training opportunities, lack of creativity in the field, and a shortage of medically-trained neuroimaging researchers were also coded.
In a week where the code contemplated issues of integrity off the field, it found no shortage of salvation on it.
A shortage of cranberries?
A shortage of humanity.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com