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[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 21.1 ms ] thread
TLDR: "previous years of boom provided 100k jobs straight out of college, 200k jobs and a guaranteed path to wealth soon after that. That time is over."

Right. And this, IMO, is not a bad thing. We had a long, multi-year bubble and bubbles are not good for anyone. Deflating bubbles can be painful, but they are less painful than bursting ones.

And the current software bubble is deflating, not bursting -- there are still plenty (say, compared to the last 50 years average) of jobs where a good engineer comfortable with programming will make a very good living. So do still learn CS or SE in college, but as a minor to another STEM field. My 2c.

> So do still learn CS or SE in college, but as a minor to another STEM field. My 2c.

What other STEM field, if I may ask?

It really depends on the person. This may be an unpopular opinion today, but I strongly believe that someone doing what he loves will statistically be both happier and better off financially than someone in only for the money. So whatever makes their ears perk up: EE, chemistry, mechanical, math, physics, biology, etc.

And, as a complement, pick up a "computer-ish" minor to learn how to make a machine do your bidding. My 2c.

A company I just left hired all of their development teams from Eastern Europe.

Their rate was a fraction of teams in the US and communication was great.

Perfecting remote work during covid showed companies how easy it is to hire cheaper developers in other countries.

I suppose I can't afford to become a "member" in order to read your article about it then.
Waste of time. Article cuts off. Medium is useless.
Not a great article
This just regurgitates low-quality general arguments from the past few years, and demands payment to read it. I don't even think this is AI slop, but this is badly written slop. Very badly written slop.
I lost my job due to AI.