>>> Many cs grads go into bs jobs way under their potential (random government agencies, contractors.) > Why are those jobs deemed bs? Because many of us went into the field bright-eyed, thinking about working on cool…
I respectfully disagree Jtsummers. Firstly, there are not "plenty of jobs for CS grads" -- if there were, you would have supply (us cs grads) matching up with demand (us tech jobs). Yet you see tons of unemployed CS…
You understood correctly, CS major numbers are still rising. CS major numbers == supply I'm speaking about jobs == demand
I'm going to provide a controversial take here as CS grad from a similarly-tiered program: there is a huge chasm between top-4 cs programs and everyone else. The top 4 are obvious: Stanford, MIT, CMU, Berkeley. Then…
>>> Many cs grads go into bs jobs way under their potential (random government agencies, contractors.) > Why are those jobs deemed bs? Because many of us went into the field bright-eyed, thinking about working on cool…
I respectfully disagree Jtsummers. Firstly, there are not "plenty of jobs for CS grads" -- if there were, you would have supply (us cs grads) matching up with demand (us tech jobs). Yet you see tons of unemployed CS…
You understood correctly, CS major numbers are still rising. CS major numbers == supply I'm speaking about jobs == demand
I'm going to provide a controversial take here as CS grad from a similarly-tiered program: there is a huge chasm between top-4 cs programs and everyone else. The top 4 are obvious: Stanford, MIT, CMU, Berkeley. Then…