Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Med is always in demand. CS is not. Was hot soon to be cooler
This is wholly inaccurate. The layoffs were across jobs and a few big companies and the people with CS backgrounds all had new jobs within a week.
Just a beginning far from over. You make it sound like it’s over and done with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Med is always in demand. CS is not. Was hot soon to be cooler
This is wholly inaccurate. The layoffs were across jobs and a few big companies and the people with CS backgrounds all had new jobs within a week.
Anonymous wrote:Med is always in demand. CS is not. Was hot soon to be cooler
Anonymous wrote:I'll chime in with one opinion on CS.
You should be quite good at it if you plan on doing it long term and really enjoy it because you'll constantly have to learn new languages and frameworks.
There's no sign of demand abating for CS majors in the near future but the crazy salaries from FAANG-like firms may be a thing of the past (at least until the next major technical breakthrough).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your college student dc ask about the advantages and disadvantages of this careers, what would you tell them?
Both career paths will suck you dry and leave you burnt out if you are serious about making money. Medicine also carries bigger student loans and more time in education, tech is a lower hanging fruit if you are good at it. But medicine also has bigger job security and minimum guaranteed income probably, vs. tech is more volatile.
Both career paths are now starting to quantify performance and with automation you are now becoming a cog in the machine even in medicine.
Anonymous wrote:If your college student dc ask about the advantages and disadvantages of this careers, what would you tell them?
Anonymous wrote:If your college student dc ask about the advantages and disadvantages of this careers, what would you tell them?