LinkedIn Testing 1970's-Style No-CS-Degree-Required Software Apprenticeships (mercurynews.com) 200
theodp writes: The Mercury News reports on REACH, a new software apprenticeship program that LinkedIn's engineering team started piloting this month, which offers people without Computer Science degrees an opportunity to get a foot in the door, as Microsoft-owned LinkedIn searches for ways to help diversify its workforce. For now, the 29 REACH participants are paid, but are only short-term LinkedIn employees (for the duration of the 6-month program). LinkedIn indicated it hopes to learn if tech internships could eventually be made part of the regular hiring process, perhaps unaware that no-CS-degree-required hiring for entry-level permanent positions in software development was standard practice in the 70's and 80's, back when women made up almost 40% of those working as programmers and in software-related fields, nearly double the percentage of women in LinkedIn's global 2016 tech workforce. Hey, even in tech hiring, everything old is new again!
theodp (Score:2)
Re: theodp (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, my next doctor is going to be someone who didn't go to medical school.
There are plenty of those around and there have been for a long time. Chiropractors, Naturopaths, Homeopaths, Acupuncturists and a whole lot more. They succeed because any given illness has an 80% chance of being self limited and going away on its own. That's a phenomenal success rate for these "alternative doctors", although it's no better than if you had just stayed home.
The problem is when you have something that falls into the 20%.... we who did go to medical school don't claim to be able to save anyone, but we have documented proof that we can usually offer you a more desirable outcome than doing nothing at all.
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No one is going to die if a LinkedIn programmer is bad.
Unless they work on medical devices. Failure to subtract by one for an array can be fatal.
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So LinkedIn is working on medical devices now?
I've worked on medical devices (as a hardware engineer) and the QA on them is astounding. So bugs like that are exceedingly rare in the final product, even if they aren't any more rare than elsewhere in the first prototype.
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So LinkedIn is working on medical devices now?
I believe the context to "LinkedIn" programmer" was "a programmer who got hired off of LinkedIn" and not "a programmer who works for LinkedIn."
I've worked on medical devices (as a hardware engineer) and the QA on them is astounding. So bugs like that are exceedingly rare in the final product, even if they aren't any more rare than elsewhere in the first prototype.
Assuming, of course, they're on a separate VLAN and a dedicated team keeps them updated. If they show up on the general VLAN, they become a vulnerability in the Nessus scan and need immediate removal. Especially the Windows-based medical devices.
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Assuming, of course, they're on a separate VLAN and a dedicated team keeps them updated. If they show up on the general VLAN, they become a vulnerability in the Nessus scan and need immediate removal. Especially the Windows-based medical devices.
I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.
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That was meant specifically at the "Windows-based medical devices" part. Not the rest.
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I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.
That's my reaction when I saw garage openers on the Nessus scan.
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creimer has a post quota on slashdot that he has to reach. Sometimes* that requires posting only vaguely meaningful content.
The current business model is to make comments throughout the day when I'm not busy to generate an extra $50+ per month in ad revenues from traffic to my websites.
* Sometimes meaning All the time
I'm not longer wasting my time on correcting the asshats who misrepresent my positions.
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Wow. $50/month is all the incentive you need to troll Slashdot?
I'm actually tracking $75+ for this month and $100+ per month looks quite doable. For planning purposes, $50 per month is a conservative number. That amount will also offset the cost of my monthly subscription to The Wall Street Journal. ;)
No wonder you are such a fat slob. Try standing once an hour instead instead of rolling those ham hocks to the candy drawer.
Just kidding, we know you eat it by the bag before it gets to the drawer.
My work office doesn't have drawers and the overhead has a bag of sunflower seeds. I don't allow food in my home office.
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Just because some DCs are quacks doesn't mean they belong in your list just like a DDS doesn't, they actually need to have a degree to practice. If you dislocate or break a few bones and need therapy under the supervision of a DC you will understand the difference. Naturopaths, Homeopaths, and Acupuncturists don't use x-rays or MRI, can't give you prescription medication, and isn't covered by your insurance like a DC or DDS.
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they actually need to have a degree to practice.
Sure. Said degree is not granted by a medical school though. It's granted by some other school - of chiropractic, of acupuncture, etc. I never said they were "quacks" - after all what is medicine anyway? I will state, however, that they do not follow the scientific method and cannot back up their claims with scientific studies. Even though they have thousands of testimonials from people who say they feel better. At the end of the day feeling better is what medicine is supposed to be about. But god help you
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DC is an 8 year degree and whether you realized it or not sports medicine and rehabilitation clinics are often run by DCs and they have distanced themselves from the label Chiropractic because of a stigma created by quacks with claims that can't be supported.
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I will state, however, that they do not follow the scientific method and cannot back up their claims with scientific studies.
Are you an idiot?
The oldest mass tests - usually done on convicts or prisoners of war (which usually became slaves) - for acupuncture are probably 4000 years old. And since the west has adopted acupuncture we have thousands of 'scientific studies' about it, probably 10,000ds.
Chiropractics is a branch of orthopedy. Why you claim it is not following 'scientific methods' is beyond me.
Ei
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You forgot to add the important keywords: in the USA
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And for all those 'medical professions' you need in every country of the world -- except the USA, ofc. -- a medical education. Either a university degree or at least a "healing practitioner" certificate.
So what exactly was your point?
Re: theodp (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, my next doctor is going to be someone who didn't go to medical school.
In many other countries, when you go to see "the doctor" you are actually seeing a nurse or PA. You are only referred to an actual MD if your problem is non-routine. This leads to faster and more affordable healthcare and MEASURABLY BETTER HEALTH OUTCOMES.
So would you be better off if your next "doctor" is someone who didn't go to medical school? Apparently, yes.
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A couple years ago, I spent an extra 6 hours wait
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The biggest stumbling block I see that will likely always require doctor participation is in prescribing controlled substances. We require extra credentials for that because of that abuse potential.
I don't see any reason, even in theory, why "extra credentials" should have any effect on abuse.
Many other countries have far fewer drugs that require prescriptions, and some have a hierarchy of prescription drugs, with some requiring only the approval of a pharmacist or nurse, rather than a doctor. The upside to this system is lower costs and more accessible treatment. The downside is ... nothing.
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WTF is residency if not an apprenticeship? IIRC the last year of Med school is also a rotation of practical experience in many specialties.
I've been reading 'Amature Doctor' magazine for 25 years. That should make me a doctor by now...
Slow news day (Score:4, Interesting)
Most companies already don't require a CS degree, or any degree, for programming jobs. Your GitHub activity carries more weight. Show me what you can do, not where (or if) you got a piece of paper.
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Same, actually I don't know a single person that can. ...
In my field of work, no none is doing it. I avoid Excel like the plague.
And: in case you have not realized it in your decades of carrier in IT: Excel macros don't run on Bash command lines, as Services in a Java backend or as Greasemonkey scripts in a web browser
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As a CS, I wouldn't apply for a position expecting me to write Excel Macros all day.
You would write a front end to access the data to create pretty pie chart. Someone without an CS degree could export the data to a CSV file and write an Excel macro to create a pretty pie chart.
Re:Slow news day (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason Silicon Valley wants H1-B visas is that the idea of hiring someone and training them for a few years is alien to them. Forty years ago employees had the promise of a pension holding them to the company. "I might be able to get 20% better pay at the other place, but if I stay here another 22 years I can retire on 60% of my retirement age pay. Woo hoo!" Since you can take a 401k with you when you quit a job, now a company that trains someone for two years is likely to lose them to a competitor that pays better.
See, supply and demand is good when it works in favor of the shareholders. When it operates in favor of the workforce, that's bad and laws need to be passed to import foreign labor and fix the problem.
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The reason Silicon Valley wants H1-B visas is that the idea of hiring someone and training them for a few years is alien to them.
Many companies have the lifespan of a mayfly and can't train properly anyone since they won't be in business in two years time. As for H1-B visas they constitute a tiny part of the total tech employment market in the US and don't noticeably depress salary levels but they're a good scapegoat for some folks who can't find that perfect 200k a year job churning out basic DBA apps for
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a good scapegoat for some folks who can't find that perfect 200k a year job churning out basic DBA apps
This is so exactly right. I've never had a problem finding a job in software, it seems there's plenty of demand. People love to make excuses.
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Between the H1-B visas and the collusion between Intel, Apple, Google, Oracle, and a host of other companies there have been illegal, unethical downward pressure on engineer labor. You shouldn't get a 200k job for building financial services software unless you live in some place like Mountain View where $200k gets you a one be
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But Apple, Microsoft, Google, GE, etc... isn't bringing these people in to make the lives of the people they brought in better. They're bringing them in to enrich their executives and shareholders. So while their means of reaching the goal isn't fundamentally bad - give some man or woman from India, China, Bulgaria, whatever a better life - their end goal is to continue their class warfare. More money going to the people t
Not lost (Score:5, Insightful)
TFA ignored obvious facts (Score:5, Insightful)
In addition to your irony, TFA ignores some pretty important facts. In the 1970s we had Math, Engineering, and Physics. There was no such thing as a CS degree. One learned to code because it helped your education, not because it was seen as a cash cow specialty. The successful coders may not have all completed a degree, but were all the brightest of the bunch in College. If they left without a degree it was by choice, not because they lacked aptitude to finish.
Let me use a Basketball analogy. Linked in believes that anyone can be Shawn Kemp, or another player that never played college ball and was not highly educated. In reality, the Shawn Kemp like people are extremely rare. About 1 in a billion.
Can linked in find people "good enough" to get a job done without? Probably, but I would rather have people better than "good enough" as a hiring manager.
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In addition to your irony, TFA ignores some pretty important facts. In the 1970s we had Math, Engineering, and Physics. There was no such thing as a CS degree.
That's because you didn't have a computer on every desk. Things change when a scarce resource becomes a commodity item.
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Let me use a Basketball analogy. Linked in believes that anyone can be Shawn Kemp, or another player that never played college ball and was not highly educated. In reality, the Shawn Kemp like people are extremely rare. About 1 in a billion.
A better sports-related comparison might be Daniel Tosh's joke-not-joke about Babe Ruth playing before they let black people play, and before they were testing for juicing [dallasobserver.com]. It's a whole different sport today.
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EE Degree (Score:5, Interesting)
I find this interesting. I did an EE degree, but only did two papers on software, and to be honest, they were pretty basic. I had taught myself programming before hand but was much more interested in hardware and circuits rather than software. However, as my career progressed, I basically just became a full time software developer. For some reason, having an EE degree is considered the same (or for some people better, if you have software experience) than a CS degree, because supposedly I know how computers work at a gate level.
In the end I use almost nothing that I learnt in my EE degree to do software development, and certainly none of the really hard math/sig pro stuff, and I can't see why someone who has gone through all the self taught/on the job training I did to learn programming wouldn't be able to do what I do now. Of course there is causality - if you can finish an EE degree you can probably do anything technical if you put your mind to it, but it does seem a bit pointless spending all that money and effort to get a piece of paper.
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In the end I use almost nothing that I learnt in my EE degree to do software development, and certainly none of the really hard math/sig pro stuff
Maybe you've simply demonstrated your ability to handle advanced mathematical thinking in general, and therefore do have a grasp for less specific mathematical properties of programs? Which, after all, are just complicated representations of mappings, so being able to intuitively handle situations like "if I write is like this, condition X never occurs" or "if I write it like this, cases A, B and C handle possible inputs exhaustively" and such are helpful.
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Re:EE Degree (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a piece of paper that says "You can work hard, study, make your own mind up and evaluate things critically, research and a whole host of other extremely advantageous traits while operating in a field of rigor and discipline". Coupled with the experience that also says "I can do the job you're asking me to do as described".
It's a piece of paper that says a lot...
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I have an ME and I spend my days programming. Everyone in my group is as ME or EE and all we do is make control algorithms in Simulink. Write low level C for compiling that to our embedded systems. Python for the dSpace hardware in the loop testing.
I don't use any of the Thermo, Statics, Dynamics, or 90% of the classes I took. For most of the stuff I do day to day (and are overwhelmed with work doing) I would love a 15-17 year old high school student that was interested in cars to take on as an apprentice.
T
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I did an EE degree
I think they mean somebody without any degree at all (or some really easy degree like journalism or philosophy). I've never heard of anybody passing over a candidate because they "only" had an EE (or math or physics or chemistry or something else difficult to complete) degree. If anything, that's usually sort of a plus, since CS is a tad easier than EE or math or physics.
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For some reason, having an EE degree is considered the same (or for some people better, if you have software experience) than a CS degree, because supposedly I know how computers work at a gate level.
I have a physics degree, so supposedly I know how everything works ;) Most of my research/development work has been some kind of programming, but presumably that's how everything is done today. For example physics and chemistry simulations rather than lab work.
In my experience, one thing you get from advanced studies better than practical work is an abstract, systemic understanding of things. A way to look at the big picture and realize it's still only a special case of a humongous picture. For example,
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When I was waiting for a new project to begin, my company put me on infrastructure pu
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Technically true...his university didn't have an EE program. I bet his CS was taught out of the business school (spit).
The obsession with degrees hold good people back. (Score:5, Interesting)
I drop out of university in the 80's. Went on a 4 month government run programming/job placement course at a different university learning to program COBOL on VAX/VMS. I was found a job doing C programming on Unix, where I was giving on the job training and sent on courses. I've gone on to have a successful career, with the last 20 years running my own consulting business. Without this opportunity and taking a chance on me, I would have never had my career.
Since then, I have gone on to get 2 degrees, Bsc in Math and Post-grad in Computer Sci, but this was after I was already established, had changed jobs a few times to better positions and didn't need the degrees to be looked at.
After learning math, and studying Knuth, learning Java, database theory, Lisp, Prolog, sure I have a better understanding now than when I started, but lack of the knowledge didn't stop me from getting started.
One of the best programmers I work with had a degree in English.
A lot of people, who could either be talented or good enough would miss out if only Comp Sci degreed people were considered.
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I think that, whatever your answer, it proves that there is a good reason for them.
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If degrees are so meaningless, why did you bother getting a "Bsc in Math and Post-grad in Computer Sci" later on?
I think that, whatever your answer, it proves that there is a good reason for them.
His answer to that question can be found in the title of his post: the obsession with degrees in the society. My career path was similar, where I started working with no degree and then received a BS/MS after about 10 years in. I learned nearly nothing in the BS, and barely anything for my MS (my thesis research project was a good experience), but those degrees had a big impact on my career. Not because of what I learned but because they check off boxes for HR and for hiring managers who like their software
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You apparently flunked logic. First, he did not claim degrees are useless at all. He said they are unnecessary for programming. He went on to say that he then chose to get 2 degrees to further his knowledge. Indeed, a degree program is a valid way to do that. It is not the only way to do that.
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The same reason why I also got an associate's level degree in accounting, and why I want to do a degree in Astronomy (now that I have the math background)..... I don't know what the reason is.... but it's the same reason.....
My wife says I'm addicted to learning, as I've been formally studying something ever since she's known me.
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Good story, but I think that stories like yours are the exception rather than the norm. This kind of seems like survivor bias [wikipedia.org] to me. Of all the people who entered similar government run programs there's probably a large number who just couldn't make the cut and we'll just never hear about them.
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For sure, on the course, I think only 3 of us out of 12 got jobs from their placement program. A couple of the people had no hope of getting a programming job. I know that I was chosen to be on the scheme as I had already completed one programming course at Uni before I dropped out - I had already programmed in Pascal on a VAX, before being taught how to program COBOL on VAX. I had previously taught myself DCL (VMS scripting). By picking people who already would have had a chance on getting a job helped the
It's cost benefit (Score:2)
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Yes, it has certainly become a tick box exercise. When I tender for contracts, there is normally a requirement for which degree is held. I can tell you, having a BSc in Math fills the box ticking, but doesn't make me more competent in my field.
I know the theory behind PKI, and could create my own poor implementation, but why would I, when there are teams of professionals that can do a far better job than me.
The only thing the Math degree has been good for is getting me upset at the reporting of statistics i
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In my experience not having a degree hasn't been a big deal. My Dad worked for a large corporation and always crowed that they only considered college graduates with a B average, but that was a rural area. There are plenty of companies in the big cities that only care about what you can do.
I started programming computers in second grade and got a job in industry during my sophomore year of college. It's amazing how many people out there don't start learning their trade until college and who graduate wit
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This is a good post. I have a similar story, only I dropped out of college in the late 90s and got into consulting right before the big dot com crash. I had developed my own basic computer skills as a kid, and was fortunate enough to find an employer who was willing to take a chance and train me. In my case, aptitude plus opportunity equals success. I am never going to be rich at the rate that I am going, but I am making comfortable money at a stable company.
My dad was a programmer in the mid to late 70
I can understand (Score:5, Insightful)
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About 1990 with 4 years of CompSci under my belt. Solid stuff - lots of math, theory.
Our awesome TA asks the 20+ of us in the group "who is here because they like to program?" My hand shoots up.
I look around. I'm the only one. In a class that is only taken by CompSci students.
I dropped out shortly thereafter. I'd learned lots. I was already working a solid coding job. These were NOT my people.
There has never been a shortage of folks in computers for reasons other than the love of the art/science.
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There are basically 3 kinds of CompSci programs, they can be identified by what school they are taught out of: Engineering, Math or Business (in general, in decreasing order of their quality).
CompSci people that graduated out of a business based CS programs are about as useful as MBAs.
Math based can be good if you're looking for a theoretician, but cut out the middleman and just get an applied math PhD. Go to the nearest university and shake a tree, watch out they don't hit you when they fall out.
This might actually work (Score:2)
just in general for diversity and to break the back of the whole "Bro..." culture.
Good on ya Linkedin!
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This is new?? (Score:2)
I don't have a CS degree, and few than 50% of people my age (mid 40s) in the industry do (in the UK). Few of the most technically impressive senior people I've met had CS degrees, and only about half of them had technical degrees.
When I hire developers, I don't require ANY degree, much less a CS degree. What I require is the ability to write software.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Turnover must slow down for this to catch on (Score:5, Interesting)
Employer/employee loyalty is the thing that has to improve first -- then OJT will move beyond an experiment. Back in the good old days, employers would take recent college grads and even recent high school grads, knowing they were only getting raw material, and train them to their standards. Now employers see employees who will jump to the competition in 6 months or less just because they're upset about something or will get a small raise. Because of that, training is a liability and they'd rather hire consultants who may or may not have lied about their level of experience.
Employers need to come to the table too. We need to stop the constant cycle of layoffs and offshoring and maintain a reasonable level of steady employment. If employees feel safe in a job, they'll worry less about finding another one and worry more about doing a good job in the current one. This is one thing from the old days I'd like to see come back -- employers would have to think very hard about hiring someone because they'd at least have some sort of commitment to them.
Training on the job and starting in the bottom of an organization aren't totally dead. I know a lot of people who work for the state university system. Here in NY, university professional staff are effectively tenured the same way faculty are, after a long probationary period and having to convince your department to nominate you. Training is an accepted part of life in this environment because they're keeping the employees whether or not they're skilled up. In this case, it makes perfect sense to invest in employees because you'd rather have a good loyal employee than one who knows you can't get rid of them and doesn't advance their career.
Also, CS degrees are probably overkill for most web programming jobs that LinkedIn typically hires for. You may need a CS degree to write their deep learning algorithm that maps your connections and mines them for data, but you don't need one to be a JavaScript monkey cranking out the front end stuff. I'm in IT, with a chemistry degree, and the only thing I use from my degree is the ability to methodically break down a problem and troubleshoot. It's helpful but I know plenty of older iT people who have no degree or a completely unrelated to CS degree, and they do well.
Diversify? (Score:3)
...as Microsoft-owned LinkedIn searches for ways to help diversify its workforce.
as Microsoft-owned LinkedIn searches for ways to help Microsoft make H-1B irrelevant by churning out new American programmers until programming becomes a low-wage commodity-class skill. FTFY.
That's not to say they will, or even can, succeed in that goal - but I'm pretty sure 'diversity' is just a politically-correct red herring.
CS degrees are overrated (Score:4, Interesting)
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So, if a CS degree is overrated, why isn't college in general overrated? If college in general is overrated, why isn't high school overrated? What you're saying is that education is pointless, and everybody is born with an inherent talent set that can't be improved upon.
That's a horrible conclusion. Education is very important.I simply stated CS degrees were overrated.They don't prepare you for actual work conditions. The various principles of computer science be self-taught and practiced in the age of online content. Programming was not something I did by sitting in classes listening to lectures. I wrote what I knew with my limited knowledge. It was an organic process for me that lead me to discover things by realizing the inadequacies in my own code first hand. When
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Personally, I've worked at two very different EE jobs. One of them is very demanding, and required application of many of the advanced concepts I learned from college, and I had to learn things even beyond that to stay eff
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CS degrees are overrated
I say this simply because as a developer with no CS background.
I always hear people who don't have a CS degree bash on it. If you have no CS background, how are you qualified to comment on whether a CS degree is useful? Do you even know what getting a CS degree entails?
I've worked with graduates who could belt off different concepts from definitions they've memorized but don't know how to implement it or more importantly, don't know how to spot errors.
Why are you comparing yourself to graduates? They'll get a 50% raise as soon as they get a few years of experience. You also didn't say anything about the schools they came from or their GPA. How many were from MIT or Stanford vs. Trump University? How many had > 3.0 GPA?
Diversity, huh? (Score:2)
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Maybe diversification includes hiring whites, now?
Possible. I had interviews with Indian companies. I even had a job offer from an Indian company, but it was at a lower pay rate with no benefits and the other two offers I had were better than that.
The Internship,,, (Score:2)
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Do you actually write out that last bit about GWB and his tax credit every day or do you keep it saved in a text file somewhere along with the bit about how little you are paid in Silicon Valley and your rent-controlled apartment?
From memory. I'm still refining my Python script to scrap my 8,000+ comment history into a CSV file. From there I'll write an AI script to post on my behalf.
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If it's imitating you, even "Artificial Intelligence" will be too smart by half.
Most implementations of AI, at least when it comes to video games, stands for Artificial Idiot. Yes, my AI script will probably be smarter than me. :P
Bloomberg L.P. Has been doing this for years. (Score:3)
Easier to teach an engineer to program... (Score:3)
... than a programmer engineering.
My degree is Mechanical Engineering. I've been mostly Sysadmin in my career but did data analysis when I started and now do DevOps with more dev than sysadmin.
I couldn't do the development I do now w/o my sysadmin experience. Engineering made me learn to look at larger systems with an analytic eye. Programming was part of the degree; I had to write a FEM sing Chebychev differentiation to find the optimal spacing for fins on a plate for heat transfer. It was calculating values on a NxN grid with initial guesses of the initial values at the grid points. Each time through the N^2 calculations, you'd get converge. When the difference between n and n-1 values was close enough, that's be your approximate answer.
I wouldn't expect a CS programmer to be able to come up with the formula, though I would expect them to be able to code it once it was broken down.
Masters (Score:2)
CS != Programmer (Score:2)
Many computer scientist do programming, some didn't even like to program at all!(Edsger W. Dijkstra) . Real computer science degree programs hardly focus on actual programming, it is more related to theoretical math. Rarely do you ever find someone that just learned to programming that has spent the time to understand computer science.
But I can see just having some programming grunts for the mundane tasks. Anything that is little more involved can quickly turn into a clusterfuck really quick. Worse items I
Baking vs. Chemistry (Score:2)
Baking is all about chemistry. However, most jobs in baking do not require a degree in chemistry... in fact, a degree in chemistry in most cases wouldn't help get the job done.
All the easy jobs have gone (Score:3)
Professionals do their own work with their own powerful computers.
Printer, fax machine, punch cards still need support per department? Accounting paperwork? Staff going to the bank during working hours?
Computers or outside contractors have taken many of the roles that normal working class staff could expect in the 1970's.
Legal is now a lawyer not a vast in house legal department with all its own support staff.
A real coffee machine has replaced a canteen full of staff to push a trolly around with coffee.
The phone system that needed a human to take a call, direct a call and keep messages is now a professionals own smart phone.
The role of poor people with no or few skills is not needed in vast numbers to support a few professionals or experts all day.
Working for a computer company in the past was doing maths by hand to get the work ready for computer programming, programming a computer by creating punch cards, ensuring the printer had paper. Waiting for the computer to print out why it failed, looking at the math by hand again and trying to work the complex math with on the computer again. Low paid staff had to help with getting the computer ready again.
Ordering more paper and punch cards, ensuring the supply of paper and punch cards was always ready for a larger project.
Keeping accounts on paper. Entering paper accounts in to computers, then paying bills on time and ensuring the generated paper work matched the computer records.
Connecting calls, taking messages, making coffee, greeting visitors and guiding them past departments full of support staff to meet the expert staff.
So a lot of people could claim they worked with "computers" or "programmed" a computer as a "job".
Doing the same "math" on "paper" all day to help a computer expert was not programming or a job with much internal advancement or good pay.
A few experts back then did all the real work like in 2017. Many other people with much fewer skills and low pay just ensured everything was ready for the complex tasks.
Tax rates and political import controls also helped. A company had to do all the complex computer work within their own nation or factor in complex import tax issues or for security reasons. Now a gov, mil contractor, the private sector can buy much cheap support globally.
The CRT allowed one expert to see and correct their all their computer work without staff having to prepare and load up the computer again.
So lots of low wage staff got to work on vast projects that only ever really needed a few smart people and better computers.
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Translation: work long hours for minimum wage.
I got a software job without a degree post 2010. The company I was working for said I was doing a great job and gave me $30k a year, despite performing better than developers they were hiring that have been in the workforce for 5-10 years that they had to pay well over 2x as much. It's a joke to get talent for cheap.
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Jump up and down until your balls drop. Then get a better job.
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Are you still making that?
First professional jobs suck, so what? I know a kid right now who's literally _wiping old person ass_ for a first job. It can be a lot worse than coding.
Anybody who's been in the workforce, coding, for 5-10 years and only makes 60k, sucks. (exceptions might exist in deepest BFE or people slinging code for the 'Young Hot Nymphomaniacs Institute'.)
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No, of course not, not after getting a degree. The worth skyrockets even if your skills are the same.
And sure, he's wiping people's asses. So what? That doesn't have anything to do with trying to pay someone low for their skills because they don't have a cert or a piece of paper or whatever, and the end of the day the software ships and the customer doesn't care if a degree-holder wrote it or not. They just want it to work.
And yeah, it's kind of crap. I was given table level access to their databases yet st
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I know a kid right now who's literally _wiping old person ass_ for a first job.
I had friends who dropped computers for healthcare after the dot com bust. They make more money than I do but changing bedpans and wiping ass is all they do.
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Well, at least we won't have put up with you much longer.
I'm planning to live until I'm 120-years-old. Since I don't smoke, drink and keep my pants zipped, I'll probably outlive you.
At three hundred and fifty pounds... you're not going to make it through your sixties.
That's what they said when I was 10-, 20-, 30- and 40-years-old.
Rage harder, keyboard warrior, that deflated prune you call a heart can't burst soon enough.
I haven't had high blood pressure in 30+ years and my heart beat on the treadmill is 132 BPM.