The downtick in humanities this year pushes up the ETA for when CS is larger than all humanities degrees together to one of the classes currently in college. pic.twitter.com/muaYNhDIe4
— Ben Schmidt / @[email protected] (@benmschmidt) August 24, 2022
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Back when I was choosing my university degree I thought to myself that CS/IT is going to be oversaturated as frick in a couple of years cause literally everyone I knew who had an ounce of brain in their skull went for that program. I was wrong and it didn't happen, but I'm wondering if this will finally do the trick
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You don't need a CS job either to go into the field. I worked with physicists, doctors, chemists, mathematicians, etc. It's all about portfolio basically in the field rather than a degree.
Krayon sexually assaulted his sister.
![https://i.rdrama.net/images/17156480765435808.webp](https://i.rdrama.net/i/l.webp)
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I don't see a collapse on IT jobs, just shifting priorities. Many CS majors can't code/hate coding and will go into business/marketing/sales/consulting instead. Also, the proliferation of managed devices at schools, hospitals, etc means that low-level help desk is still a huge need, even if the salaries aren't high. IT is also a bigger part of building and industrial design, so there will be plenty of IT people setting up smart HVAC and lighting systems for decades to come. Additionally, the rise in managed SOC offerings from the MSP-level on up has created huge demand for onshore security pros, even if they don't always start with particularly interesting job roles or mega salaries.
CS degree holders who aren't CWC-level spergs are doing much better than the average Humanities "degree" holder and while the dream of the $130k FAANG entry level job might be dead (spoiler: it already was for 98% of Grads) a CS degree is probably the best ticket to comfortable white collar mediocrity you can get today.
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lol wat
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You'd be surprised. If you look at a well-regarded large university graduating class of CS majors, probably only half of them get a job doing anything that could be loosely described as "coding". The other half do sysadmin/helpdesk/business jobs (sales engineer, etc)
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They all bring shame on the degree.
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Just a bunch of cowards imo
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Hey that's me![:marseywave3: :marseywave3:](/e/marseywave3.webp)
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same bestie!
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its true lol
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White collar paper chasing. There’s enough adjacent positions and dumbasses that think 99% of the job is innovating and by that they think just sitting around having a huge brain. The job just boils down to can you finish typically tasks that are to specialized for most ppl. If you can’t you can only grift so long without a lot of extra effort
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Pretty much this. You can make the median US salary slinging JS all day. I think HN/costal ppl also miss all of the "dark matter developers" who aren't even using JS but just writing Line of Business apps all day in C#.
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You can go be a Salesforce admin with like 6 months of certs and make 70-90k/year building dashboards for some consumer packaged goods supplier in Tulsa, OK. Anyone who says "ITcels r cucked" is a tard, just as much as the people who think a 3.4 GPA from State University should get them 240k total comp at GlowieTech Inc. with minimal effort
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yeah I didn't realize the salesforce thing until recently. seems like half of modern companies are running SF code that's duck taped together.
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