Anonymous wrote:Tech is not on most graduating students’ radar. It’s my number one advice to high school seniors though. We got into it late, thank god we did though. I think it would be hilariously stupid to get a law degree after being in tech, like a PP suggested. If you’ve been in tech you’re *very* hireable, and no signs of that slowing down.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, yeah, but then you’re a software engineer. So boring. High paying and dorky.
All the tech bros I know driving around their Maseratis in their new-build NoVa communities have poor social skills and haven’t read a work of fiction since high school.
I’m glad they exist— otherwise I couldn’t be typing this on my phone today — but it’s an unappealing, poor fit for a lot of us with equally big brains
Anonymous wrote:Tech generally has a shorter career span. If you are going to purely max income, start with tech, then at 30 or so get a law degree. And keep in mind that there are no guarantees in life, and that everyone has different ideas of what happiness and success means.
Anonymous wrote:I am lawyer - why did I prefer it over tech? It's my interest.
Anonymous wrote:My friend’s son graduated college at 22 with an undergrad degree, paid off all student loan debt by 23 with his 6 figure starting salary, then bought a house at 25 making 200k by then. He’s 30 now and makes around low 300’s in software engineering and has locked in a low interest rate on his house and benefitted from the past 5 years of appreciation.
My kid went to law school and is making less money, along with over 100k in student debt and now will have a much harder time getting on the property ladder since he waited to start his career. Seems like tech can’t be beat for how much you earn at a young age which gives you another 5-10 years to invest money early and get on the housing ladder. I guess big law can make 7 figures but most people won’t ever make that, and tech has similar or even better upside.