100% agreed, CS is still incredibly relevant and going forwards, there will always be a need for them even considering the AI wave that will still take a while to make all humans obselete. One thing I guess I am stuck wondering is how you qualified what it takes to be a CS major. "If you like solving problems," is that not something that is needed in all professions?
I think engineering as a whole is pretty unique compared to other career fields in terms of "rate of problem solving." My entire job as a software engineer is to solve new problems or ideate solutions to problems. Jobs that I've worked in the past or had other people close to me work don't entirely look like that. An example of this could be when I did my private equity internship, I don't feel like I was solving problems directly at all. A lot of my work involved data entry, talking to clients, and managing things around the office. While those would all become problems if they weren't done, my work as a software engineer has been much more like "here's x problem, let's go fix it"
Anyone still on the fence? Leave your thoughts below 👇
I think yes BUT, we can’t ignore the financial hurdles tied to it.
Great Video !
Thank you!
100% agreed, CS is still incredibly relevant and going forwards, there will always be a need for them even considering the AI wave that will still take a while to make all humans obselete. One thing I guess I am stuck wondering is how you qualified what it takes to be a CS major. "If you like solving problems," is that not something that is needed in all professions?
I think engineering as a whole is pretty unique compared to other career fields in terms of "rate of problem solving." My entire job as a software engineer is to solve new problems or ideate solutions to problems. Jobs that I've worked in the past or had other people close to me work don't entirely look like that. An example of this could be when I did my private equity internship, I don't feel like I was solving problems directly at all. A lot of my work involved data entry, talking to clients, and managing things around the office. While those would all become problems if they weren't done, my work as a software engineer has been much more like "here's x problem, let's go fix it"