Anonymous wrote:You see what you did there? If you are against H 1 B program you are racist.
There is no shortage of American talent and CS graduates in this country. We just had thousands laid off last year. We don’t need to bring foreigners to take middle class jobs.
Our kids going for CS in college have pretty bad chances of being employed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a US citizen who has been in the industry for over 15 years and I can tell you my perspective.
And you can say I’m racist or whatever, but it’s a known fact in the industry. Everyone inside KNOWS that Indians only hire other Indians. Most software teams look like a bunch of Indians and one Chinese dude.
So if you kids are not Indian, I hate to tell you, but it will be a fight to get a job.
So what should kids who are academically competitive and want to major in CS but are white and American do? What other major for kids along the STEM but not biochem lines would be good?
Anonymous wrote:My CS kid has a cleared job lined up for after graduation.
He just did an extended group research project with a few other CS/Engineering majors. The first week one of them said, "critical thinking is not my strongpoint". My kid had to remake every slide in the presentation that the other students made after the advisor said those slides won't get a passing grade. He is involved in another ongoing project where the students basically wait to be directed/told what to do by him or the other leader on the project. He finds that the majority of engineers/CS students just aren't very good at what they do and rely on college to teach them everything, then don't do any personal projects/clubs/etc at all which is where he personally has really learned the most.
In fact, he would rather be doing EE/ECE than CS at this point, based on all the knowledge he has picked up with personal projects, but feels that staying in college an extra year would be less beneficial than working a guaranteed year or two in cyber, continuing with personal projects, and then trying to change his career focus once he's not a new grad.
I think a lot of kids going into CS/engineering now just do it bc they think that's what they should do to make money and get a job, but they really would be better off doing something else from a personal satisfaction and skills perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Industry likes immigrants with a CS or Engineering background in order to create downward pressure on CS and engineering salaries in the USA.
The "shortage" of CS/engineering graduates that Musk and others allege is mostly a myth - caveat that there legitimately are a *small* number of narrow CS/engineering specialties which are in less supply.
There probably is an over supply of web programmers and ordinary application programmers at present. People with specific experience in embedded systems, Linux internals, Verilog/VHDL programming, or networking internals should have zero trouble finding good work - as those are examples of chronic shortage areas. In the metro DC/Baltimore area, there also is a chronic shortage of clearable US Citizens with skills in reverse engineering and applied cryptography.
Applied cryptography issue is mostly that CS majors in the US hardly have math in them. No, discrete is not enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The HB program has ruined the job market for Americans.Anonymous wrote:I’m a US citizen who has been in the industry for over 15 years and I can tell you my perspective.
There is nothing wrong with American education in computer science. It’s the best in the world.
Look at subreddits on computer science careers and you will see tons of graduates cannot find jobs.
We had massive layoffs the last couple of years that we never recovered from.
It’s capitalism - cheaper to hire offshore, even often less competent engineers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The HB program has ruined the job market for Americans.Anonymous wrote:I’m a US citizen who has been in the industry for over 15 years and I can tell you my perspective.
There is nothing wrong with American education in computer science. It’s the best in the world.
Look at subreddits on computer science careers and you will see tons of graduates cannot find jobs.
Anonymous wrote:
That’s exactly how it works. You hire one and then he will bring another Indian and they will only hire Indians.
And this goes for all sectors, not just computer science and IT.
So if someone is wondering why there’s a backlash against H 1 B visas (which I believe is 80% Indians) it’s because this unspeakable level of corruption.
But if we speak out against this we are “racist”.
Anonymous wrote:There absolutely is a shortage of highly experienced American tech workers willing to be paid $50k-$90k for an "entry level" position that actually expects senior level work.Anonymous wrote:You see what you did there? If you are against H 1 B program you are racist.
There is no shortage of American talent and CS graduates in this country. We just had thousands laid off last year. We don’t need to bring foreigners to take middle class jobs.
Our kids going for CS in college have pretty bad chances of being employed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Industry likes immigrants with a CS or Engineering background in order to create downward pressure on CS and engineering salaries in the USA.
The "shortage" of CS/engineering graduates that Musk and others allege is mostly a myth - caveat that there legitimately are a *small* number of narrow CS/engineering specialties which are in less supply.
There probably is an over supply of web programmers and ordinary application programmers at present. People with specific experience in embedded systems, Linux internals, Verilog/VHDL programming, or networking internals should have zero trouble finding good work - as those are examples of chronic shortage areas. In the metro DC/Baltimore area, there also is a chronic shortage of clearable US Citizens with skills in reverse engineering and applied cryptography.
Applied cryptography issue is mostly that CS majors in the US hardly have math in them. No, discrete is not enough.
Anonymous wrote:There absolutely is a shortage of highly experienced American tech workers willing to be paid $50k-$90k for an "entry level" position that actually expects senior level work.Anonymous wrote:You see what you did there? If you are against H 1 B program you are racist.
There is no shortage of American talent and CS graduates in this country. We just had thousands laid off last year. We don’t need to bring foreigners to take middle class jobs.
Our kids going for CS in college have pretty bad chances of being employed.
H 1 Bs aren't being given to hire Indians for HR, so this argument doesn't even make sense. H 1 Bs are for individual contributors.Anonymous wrote:
That’s exactly how it works. You hire one and then he will bring another Indian and they will only hire Indians.
And this goes for all sectors, not just computer science and IT.
So if someone is wondering why there’s a backlash against H 1 B visas (which I believe is 80% Indians) it’s because this unspeakable level of corruption.
But if we speak out against this we are “racist”.