| Major in what instead. AI? 🤣 |
+1 Also, pair the CS degree with another degree. Or do engineering and minor in CS, or do economics and minor in CS. Find a meaningful path for using your CS and you will be just fine. And yes, be good at it. If you have a 3.5+ in any CS/Engineering major, you will go far. If you can barely get a 3.0, you will still get a job, but wont be able to be as choosy initially |
Psst, AI is a part of CS. |
It's math. If new CS grads have 7% unemployment, 93% must be employed or in grad school. |
Wow, talk about not understanding the jobs data ... given that you don't actually know how many are in job-specific CS roles vs social media/gig-economy vs grad school, your 93% number is utterly meaningless ... |
Wow, explain to us? |
Yes they can. It may not be the job and pay they want but they can. You don’t understand anything. |
Barista? Uber driver? Retail at the mall? Front desk at the health club? Bagging groceries? |
I just did. Find out the % of CS majors working specific jobs using their CS degrees to land full-time jobs at a company looking to hire recent graduates with degrees; % of CS majors who are employed but doing things like participating in retail jobs, gig economy jobs, or social media accounts related income; % of CS grads going onto grad school. Only one of those measures gives you the actual % of CS grads truly employed. |
This is the job of Mr/Mrs 93% get jobs. They threw out a misleading statistic. We’ll wait patiently for the deep dive. |
Nope, you clearly have no idea what cs is. |
It’s about underemployment, not how super smart and super special CS grads are. |
That's the point. It's silly to think that a major closet to AI and its implementation/expansion will all of a sudden be rendered obsolete. CS majors will be fine. There are many career options. Do you think all of these guys will be Political Science majors instead? 🤣 |
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ok, that's not good, but a 7/11 cashier isn't gunning for CS jobs so this is irrelevant to the thread. But, thanks for sharing. |