| Are there STEM students considering CS majors for this application year? If so, which schools do they consider? LAC? State Flagships? Ivy? Engineering school? |
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Best bet is double major in CS and something else, or get an engineering degree and minor in CS.
Best schools for CS related interests with the job market now and for the forseeable future: MIT, Stanford, CMU, ivies with real engineering , JHU, Rice, Northwestern, UCB, GT. |
What happened to the kids who learn how to code and love robotics and 3D design? What majors do they choose? |
JHU, Rice, and Northwestern are not known for CS. |
JHU is rising rapidly in CS. They are getting a ton of money from Michael Bloomberg. |
| CS major is dead unless you attend a school like MIT. People refuse to believe it and keep making disastrous decisions. |
Robotics is the future. Something like Robotics + AI should be future proof. Mechanical engineering also a possibility. Search for top schools in robotics and AI and see what majors they offer. Usually top schools like MIT, CMU, Stanford, GTech are quite quick in adopting to new trends. |
You are quite wrong. CS is more than software development (programming). AI, computer vision, human computer interaction, etc. are also part of CS and will be in demand. |
Many schools in Michigan are looking at this trend. We have it in our vo-techs, community colleges, state flagships, and "tech" colleges. The U.S. government is also shoveling cash into training related to semiconductors since the US has national security concerns in that area. Michigan schools are also targeted for this funding. |
Did I say it’s only SD? |
You said is dead and I think it is not. SD is dying for sure but CS has a good future. |
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| Nearly everthing now and in the future will rely on computers; CS can't be dead as a field unless we revert to paper and pencil. |
Sure..l |
Ever heard of AI? |