Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
No, I work in industry doing the hiring. And where it comes to computer science, Ivies typically have little relevance. I'd rank MIT, Stanford, CMU ahead of Ivies and solid tech schools ahead of or on par with Ivies.
I am guessing ivy, MIT, Stanford, CMU students don't apply to your firm. I mean, you are obviously not up there with FAANG or Jane Street. Many ivy students turn down FAANGs.
"I am guessing"
This is the only part of your statements that is relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
No, I work in industry doing the hiring. And where it comes to computer science, Ivies typically have little relevance. I'd rank MIT, Stanford, CMU ahead of Ivies and solid tech schools ahead of or on par with Ivies.
I am guessing ivy, MIT, Stanford, CMU students don't apply to your firm. I mean, you are obviously not up there with FAANG or Jane Street. Many ivy students turn down FAANGs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anyone thinking about 4 years of SJU should consider a 12-week book camp.
Anyone who thinks you can learn what you need for a successful tech career in a 12 week boot camp with no other tech experience is so far off the reservation they don't deserve a reply.
So why did I reply?
I don't know. I feed the trolls like people feed pigeons I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
No, I work in industry doing the hiring. And where it comes to computer science, Ivies typically have little relevance. I'd rank MIT, Stanford, CMU ahead of Ivies and solid tech schools ahead of or on par with Ivies.
I am guessing ivy, MIT, Stanford, CMU students don't apply to your firm. I mean, you are obviously not up there with FAANG or Jane Street. Many ivy students turn down FAANGs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
No, I work in industry doing the hiring. And where it comes to computer science, Ivies typically have little relevance. I'd rank MIT, Stanford, CMU ahead of Ivies and solid tech schools ahead of or on par with Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
No, I work in industry doing the hiring. And where it comes to computer science, Ivies typically have little relevance. I'd rank MIT, Stanford, CMU ahead of Ivies and solid tech schools ahead of or on par with Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most employers don't care about Ivies where it comes to Computer Science.
Are you an ivy grad or has a kid in an ivy? Unless this review is from your personal experience, it's meaningless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of CS jobs as a spectrum.. On the more "cool" and difficult end are the hard core programming jobs, the ones that create software like salesforce, facebook or google's own algorithms, building a web browser, etc. On the other end of the spectrum are Information systems jobs that take these tools and apply them to business situations (implementing salesforce, custom code to build business websites, etc.).
The first category of jobs are fewer in number and pay a lot more in the long run and most of the hires come disproportionately from top CS schools. The latter kind (IS jobs) draw heavily from the lower ranked schools and bootcamps and pay less than pure CS jobs. There are also a lot more of these jobs.
Net result? The majority of CMU CS grads will end up with hardcore CS jobs that pay 20-50% more (total comp) while the majority of UVA CS grads will end up working at IS jobs (think Accenture, BAH, etc.).
There are so few CMU students that they don't make much a dent in the whole industry. Also the first generation of google search engine was first developed by the graduates from state univ that are on par with UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Also the first generation of google search engine was first developed by the graduates from state univ that are on par with UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of CS jobs as a spectrum.. On the more "cool" and difficult end are the hard core programming jobs, the ones that create software like salesforce, facebook or google's own algorithms, building a web browser, etc. On the other end of the spectrum are Information systems jobs that take these tools and apply them to business situations (implementing salesforce, custom code to build business websites, etc.).
The first category of jobs are fewer in number and pay a lot more in the long run and most of the hires come disproportionately from top CS schools. The latter kind (IS jobs) draw heavily from the lower ranked schools and bootcamps and pay less than pure CS jobs. There are also a lot more of these jobs.
Net result? The majority of CMU CS grads will end up with hardcore CS jobs that pay 20-50% more (total comp) while the majority of UVA CS grads will end up working at IS jobs (think Accenture, BAH, etc.).
Just wondering if the IS types tend to end up in upper management or on the partner track which increases their earnings tremendously while the hard core programmers will stay in the same job unless they work for start ups that have high earning potential.
A friend who is an no name school IS graduate loves to point out that those hardcore elite school CS graduates all work for him. He with his management chops gets to call the shots.
Anonymous wrote:Think of CS jobs as a spectrum.. On the more "cool" and difficult end are the hard core programming jobs, the ones that create software like salesforce, facebook or google's own algorithms, building a web browser, etc. On the other end of the spectrum are Information systems jobs that take these tools and apply them to business situations (implementing salesforce, custom code to build business websites, etc.).
The first category of jobs are fewer in number and pay a lot more in the long run and most of the hires come disproportionately from top CS schools. The latter kind (IS jobs) draw heavily from the lower ranked schools and bootcamps and pay less than pure CS jobs. There are also a lot more of these jobs.
Net result? The majority of CMU CS grads will end up with hardcore CS jobs that pay 20-50% more (total comp) while the majority of UVA CS grads will end up working at IS jobs (think Accenture, BAH, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:I don't claim to be up on CS rankings, but Carnegie Mellon being #2 does surprise me. When I was in undergrad way back in the 90's, it seemed like it had a reputation for being a decent school overall, but nowhere near in the same league as MIT or Stanford, etc. Then again, that's speaking as a school overall, not just CS, as CS back then definitely wasn't what it is now!