"Information technologist" might be a more accurate label for someone whose responsibilities and skills subsume developing, maintaining, assessing, and deploying software, databases, networking, UI/UX, security, privacy, legal concerns, communications, online abuse, epistemology, and more.
"Tecnology" in conventional parlance has regrettably come to equate to "information technology" much as "engineer" once referred principally to a locomotive operator.
I'll skip the "ssofftware engineer" debate, though note its existence.
"Tecnology" in conventional parlance has regrettably come to equate to "information technology" much as "engineer" once referred principally to a locomotive operator.
I'll skip the "ssofftware engineer" debate, though note its existence.