I think you'd appreciate Richard Hamming's book "The Art of Doing Science and Engineering: Learning to Learn". If you want a training program go do a bootcamp. The half-life of any specific technology is pretty short in this field, your CS degree in 2006 wouldn't be of much use today if they just trained you to use the bleeding-edge technologies of the time. If you want to just "get a job today", sure get really good at SQL, but I don't think that will help you with new problems the same way a CS background will. In my opinion, the glaring holes in my CS Education were computer history (so much important stuff to learn from) and software design (not "design patterns", but getting guidance and practice in elegantly designing a solution to a problem, John Ousterhout has some nice lectures on this).
Figured out 2nd years were using one of my repos because their assignment ended up being very similar. Soon after got an email about plagiarism and "this email being a final warning..." (They run all submitted assignments/code through plagiarism checkers). Only discovered it was public a few months after the email though 🙃😂
I think you'd appreciate Richard Hamming's book "The Art of Doing Science and Engineering: Learning to Learn". If you want a training program go do a bootcamp. The half-life of any specific technology is pretty short in this field, your CS degree in 2006 wouldn't be of much use today if they just trained you to use the bleeding-edge technologies of the time. If you want to just "get a job today", sure get really good at SQL, but I don't think that will help you with new problems the same way a CS background will. In my opinion, the glaring holes in my CS Education were computer history (so much important stuff to learn from) and software design (not "design patterns", but getting guidance and practice in elegantly designing a solution to a problem, John Ousterhout has some nice lectures on this).
Yes this is so true. 💪I'll check it - at the very least a gpt 3.5 summary...🙃
@@itsderman try reading Chapter 1 it's probably the most relevant. worrydream.com/refs/Hamming_1997_-_The_Art_of_Doing_Science_and_Engineering.pdf
hey, great video, especially since I started my own degree a few months back! What's the story behind the github repository tho xd
Figured out 2nd years were using one of my repos because their assignment ended up being very similar. Soon after got an email about plagiarism and "this email being a final warning..." (They run all submitted assignments/code through plagiarism checkers). Only discovered it was public a few months after the email though 🙃😂
good video flow you do you
Thank you that means a lot💪
Derman you beautiful man
Caleb you b-e-a-utiful specimen
Speci-man?