I mostly agree with your points, except for the one about hackathons. I'm not saying your advice is wrong, but I've noticed that many students tend to rely heavily on AI to create entire projects for hackathons, often just submitting those to win. Since most hackathons last only 2-3 days, it's challenging to develop a usable project based solely on university knowledge, leading to a lot of copy-pasting from AI-generated content. By the way, thank you for making this video! I'm also glad that I'm not overly focused on my GPA; my university attendance is around 50-60%. Instead, I dedicate my time to publishing research papers and working on projects that address real-world issues. Currently, I'm learning data engineering, and I have 1.5 years left to complete my BTech degree. I hope to reach an intermediate level in data engineering by then. I understand that the hackathon culture may differ in other countries, but here in India, this trend seems quite prevalent among students.
Yes, I was also a computer science student, with a high GPA & actually graduated valedictorian. But because everything that I learned was superficial, it was dilemmatic to start something on my own and study to be a specialist independently because a computer science degree isn't easy and most people do that at the risk of their own grades. I was like if I don't get good grades then what is the point of a degree? But if I focus on grades and don't start something on my own then I'd end up having zero applicable skills in the industry. I ended up focusing on grades based on sunken fallacy mindset thinking I could just study later on when I don't have to worry about these formalities. I ended up far behind than the people who got average grades and even dropped out because they decided to focus on their respective specialties instead. So even though graduating valedictorian is probably one of the highlights of my life, I wouldn't pursue a degree in computer science if I could turn back time
@@Aden-tm9xh Other STEM subjects where you can get technical skills but can do you good as a generalist like Maths or Statistics. Engineering also comes to mind where they actually teach you technical skills to become a specialist. In fact I would either study engineering or take statistics but minor in computer science if I could go back in time and choose
@@blast-t5h Do you think it would still be worth the degree if I worked a lot of internships and didn't care too much about my grades but still passed? I want to work as a business intelligence analyst or data analyst. What are you doing with your degree? I considered going into accounting, but they despise their jobs and the work they perform is dull, but it's stable despite the constant claims of AI it will just assist them. In my opinion. PS: I hope things are well sorry for all these questions sir.
@@foreignwarren7361 I do have passion but I want to able to take care of my mother she’s getting old and working two jobs she never went to collage so I’m just trying to make the right choice I hope you understand.
It's really important to understand computer architecture, operating systems, data communication (TCP/IP), and algorithm analysis. It's also important to know how to program in Python, Java, and C. Knowing programming paradigms like OOP, functional programming and procedural programming is also important. But what's REALLY important is whether you know how to build. Are you a master of React, state management using zustand, routing and query using Tanstack, Node, APIs, websockets, Express, Hono, auth using jwt or other technologies, and databases like mySQL or Postgres? How familiar are you with git? Have you used branching, forking, merging? Are you developing in a Windows OS env? Then why aren't you using WSL? All these are really important to become a software dev.
And all that for what? A dead end job in some boring company which pays a slightly higher on average salary? I swear CS is the biggest ponzi scheme in the world right now and these kids are eating it all up.
Same here Tim. I dropped out in 2021 and started to learn myself. And then I realized I learned maybe 7% in college and I didn’t know most of the stuffs. I went back for a semester later in 2023 and surprisingly I didn’t need to study anything at all. I could just do everything on my own and my grades weren’t even bad. I also agree with you not knowing what career path and what should I be actually doing when I started college. But now I know the options. Nice video.
Thank you Tim. Most if not all IT degrees require an internship/work experience component. A serious student would do more than the basic requirement. Ps i love all your videos so keep them coming esp on using various software tools, making saas products and current trends etc
The same literally applies to people with beginner certifications. Upskilling and learning are never done in this field. and you have to show your work.
Agree with the GPA part. Most of CS student waste their time trying harder to score high GPAs and miss important skills that actual jobs will be looking for.
Personally I just earned a Data Science AS. It was a few Java classes, SAS, Python, R, SQL, Tableau, PBI, machine learning, statistical analysis and modeling & MS Office. And others. Not bad for what I want to do. But at the same time I earned certifications. Right now I’m more interested in earning a non-data BS/BA in something that I’ve always wanted to study - Anthropology or even Communications or Literature. I just feel like most jobs just require a box checked and with my CV showing my portfolio, my certs, my AS Degree, my extracurricular clubs and events, will be a well-rounded CV. Right now, while I look for a job I’m studying for the Comptia A+. Just bc it’s my weak spot. I’ll keep earning more certs even after I get a job. And hopefully this particular cert will be a foot in the door for Helpdesk/Support at least. I just want a job. And most of the ones listed I know for a fact I’d do well in. But the BS/BA requirements are killing me honestly
Bro he’s not wrong. I’m on my second year of college majoring in computer science. I’ve barely had any programming classes. I bought programming expert so I can actually learn Python and do the 5 projects they have on there. I applied for 200-300 internships last summer. Luckily I got one. I went through dozens of interviews and coding assessments all of which I had a seriously hard time doing/completing. However, I had to convince my future employer that I will be working on multiple projects before the internship starts so I at least know something.
Honestly, great video Tim. Answered all of the questions that I, as a computer science student, ask myself all of the time. I loved the comment about hackathons, as I just applied for my first one at University of Montreal (my own uni). I don’t feel ready for it at all, but I’m gonna put myself through it bc of the experience. Keep it up
Honestly, this advice goes for pretty much all engineering degrees. A lot of what you say is also applicable to electrical engineers. A lot of students just focus on theory and very basic electronic circuit building which at the 4th year mark is not good at all...
@@TechWithTim You defo know what you're doing here. I've seen a couple of videos and titles baiting people about how there is "no job" in tech. Your face, "My Advice" and title speak volumes of what you want people to think
I didn't find any 'clickbait' in this video. On his channel, most of the thumbnails feature his face along with the video title. As for the title 'My Advice,' it accurately reflects the content, as he emphasizes that these are his personal opinions, and viewers are welcome to agree or disagree. A true clickbait title would be something more sensational, like 'The Shocking Truth About Tech Jobs!' or 'Why You’ll Never Get Hired in Tech!
@@coordinates_ apparently your not into what he's talking about and 'you must ve been living under a rock! It's a fact what he's talking about! Cs going forwarde is no longer what we used to know!
My advice: Get a computer science degree, if you want to be a scientist or a researcher. Get a computer/software engineer degree if you want to work as a software developer. Do not get a degree, if you just want to be a web developer. People have no right to complain about how they are not using what they learnt in a computer science degree, if they work as a software developer and not as a computer scientist. That is like getting a biology degree, but then working as a nurse, and complaining about how you can't use most of what you have learnt at uni.
@Eddd1e I have never in my life seen a software engineering job requiring a cs degree, and I have applied to, i would say, almost about 100 jobs. They might accept it, but it is never the only degree they accept.
@@leventegyorgydeak1300 no one ever said that it’s only degree they accept, but it’s there in 90% of the qualifications I’m seeing as I’m applying myself currently as a desired prerequisite
@@Eddd1e You used the word "require". Requiring means that applicants MUST have it, so if an applicant doesn't have it, they are immediately rejected. Which would mean it is the only degree they accept, that is why I was talking about that. Yes, many jobs accept computer science degrees, because it is related to software development, just like they might accept electrical engineering or maybe even a physics batchelor. I think that is just so that many more people can apply for the job and they have a highest number of candidades they can choose from, and generally people from these technical fields can all code.
@@leventegyorgydeak1300 yes the applicant MUST have either a CS degree or a software engineering degree never said degree singular, they’ll get thrown out by the filters beforehand otherwise. I doubt if I apply for any EE job I could secure it with a CS degree the knowledge on circuits isn’t there, just like they likely dont have the full-stack experience. I think CS has more extensive value over a larger field in the tech space
Thanks Tim, while still grinding to have a Computer Science Degree, it's very important to have solid projects along side in other to stand out in the job market. And making using of AI effectively.❤
Tim you are talking about degrees in the perspective of people in well developed counties were you can get a job without a degree, but here in india, especially like southern india a minimum qualification of degree is must for any kind of job😅
@JonBerisha-ti1vl BUT think about a situation where a school student in Indian , from a poor background watching this video, he or she will think that college degree is not worth it.. It leaves them with a bad impression and spoil there life, where the degree is the only way they can improve there life 🙂
The problem with CS is that they wasted so much time doing ENDLESS pages of algebra for calculus.. One assignment about REST was only 50 lines at most. Plus Bio/Chem?? See the issue here?
i graduated with a master in cs and you need to know how real stuff works don't just play with cpp and some rasberry on your free time, but look at the job market and actually learn to be employable, if you know architectures, popular frameworks, you master git and sql, can explain and create microservices for exemple or use aws it will make a big diff
I was interested in a computer science degree, but I found that a software engineering degree is more suitable for most people since you learn a lot of handy stuff, such as operating systems, networks and security, programming languages ( Python, JavaScript, Java or C#) modern frameworks and even version control.
I've been working for way too long on my degree. Sometimes it's just smarter to drop out. Don't listen to the people telling you, that you won't be able to find a job without a degree. Depending on where you live it's ridiculously easy to find a well paying job.
Actually you must be doing BS Software Engineering or BCA Bachelor of Computer Application. BS Computer Science is wrong Degree. You have to still study outside syllabus because it is not possible to cover everything in the degree. 😮 Degree only teaches fundamental or basic's. Also only use CoPilot+ AI Laptops for Programming.
There really is no point to do computer science at the university as all the programs will be written by Gen AI. I honestly think that universities should start offering degrees in hairdressing, and plumbing, etc.
Hi Tim sorry but I don't agree with you on the AI part. From everything we see happening and reality on the ground for me: my company asked the whole team to start using copilot/gpt an year ago and report on productivity increase. We all went back on rough number of 20-30%. They had 3 open positions for devs which they cancelled. We also just saw Zuck and Salesforce CEO saying the same things. I believe we're looking at drastic reductions in team sizes. like 70% so teams of 10 going to only 3 in probably next few years. After that we will see team consolidations as we don't need 2 teams of 3 people but one inter-disciplinary team of 6 people with one manager. Then the process continues. This will get even severe with AI agents which my company is introducing this year.
Sir.. Can u please guide me.... I'm currently doing engineering... I'm confused about what to learn and where to learn... And also I don't know which skill has more skill in the future... So please guide me😢
I was hoping to be apart of the private mentorship and had a time and interview set up, and I didn't hear from the interviewer. I waited the entire scheduled time. Any chance this opportunity is still open?
I can't for the life of me understand why tech youtubers keep going on about CS degrees specifically , there's at least 3 or 4 different subjects you could study at university which all teach some subset of programming and computer science (computer science, software engineering/information technology, information systems/business information systems and game development) regardless of whether you think university is worth it or not. Personally I had 0 interest in study computer science cos I hate maths but I studied software engineering , later on I decided to study CS in my own time for fun.
There are jobs, the hiring freeze is mostly on entry-level roles. If you have 5+ years of experience you have no real issue finding work right now, every company wants experts instead of investing in new talent
ofc software engineering. yk what you learn in computer science is mostly theories mathematics and physics with a touch of economy academic writing and some form of philosophy. basically only one or two max 3 classes will be related to programming. also you can do both computer science and software engineering. also you should define what you want to be able to do and see what each degree will offer.
At the time you will finish your degree there will be no jobs for you. 95% of software engineering can easily be automated by the new advanced and a lot cheaper to run models from 2026-2027.
AI is already decreasing the amount of demand for software engineers/devs. Is important to state this, AI will not ENTIRELY replace devs but will definitely decrease the amount of them, its a fact and is already happening.
@@pauloTx People were hiring like crazy in 2020 because they were trying to capture some new market created by COVID. Zoom has dramatically increased their market share for instance. But lots of companies had to take some business service remote and tried to do it via technology. Then the pandemic ended and growth expectations shifted. In many cases, these are fake hiring processes. It looks like they are hiring but all the applications go into a wall. Also, when you work at a place for a couple of years, you gain a lot of experience and require an increase in pay but instead of increasing staff cost, they fire them and then rehire less experienced people so the pay remains the same. Ai just came into real-world uses 2-3 years back "massive" layoff happening since 2018-19
The problem is; my friends who can't write code on their own, can simply write a few prompts to the AI and get the work done. So in the end, you learn prompt engineering in a week, but you need to spend years to learn the technical skills if you want to write the code on your own. Unfortunately, you as a CS graduate might get replaced by people who can't code, who have no technical skills but can just do the basic prompt engineering.
🎓 Get private mentorship from me: training.techwithtim.net
☆☆☆
☆☆☆☆☆
Got one back in December don’t regret anything at all… people aren’t ready to deal with the challenges. You have to be committed simple as that.
I mostly agree with your points, except for the one about hackathons. I'm not saying your advice is wrong, but I've noticed that many students tend to rely heavily on AI to create entire projects for hackathons, often just submitting those to win. Since most hackathons last only 2-3 days, it's challenging to develop a usable project based solely on university knowledge, leading to a lot of copy-pasting from AI-generated content.
By the way, thank you for making this video! I'm also glad that I'm not overly focused on my GPA; my university attendance is around 50-60%. Instead, I dedicate my time to publishing research papers and working on projects that address real-world issues. Currently, I'm learning data engineering, and I have 1.5 years left to complete my BTech degree. I hope to reach an intermediate level in data engineering by then. I understand that the hackathon culture may differ in other countries, but here in India, this trend seems quite prevalent among students.
Yes, I was also a computer science student, with a high GPA & actually graduated valedictorian. But because everything that I learned was superficial, it was dilemmatic to start something on my own and study to be a specialist independently because a computer science degree isn't easy and most people do that at the risk of their own grades. I was like if I don't get good grades then what is the point of a degree? But if I focus on grades and don't start something on my own then I'd end up having zero applicable skills in the industry. I ended up focusing on grades based on sunken fallacy mindset thinking I could just study later on when I don't have to worry about these formalities. I ended up far behind than the people who got average grades and even dropped out because they decided to focus on their respective specialties instead. So even though graduating valedictorian is probably one of the highlights of my life, I wouldn't pursue a degree in computer science if I could turn back time
@@Aden-tm9xh Other STEM subjects where you can get technical skills but can do you good as a generalist like Maths or Statistics. Engineering also comes to mind where they actually teach you technical skills to become a specialist. In fact I would either study engineering or take statistics but minor in computer science if I could go back in time and choose
@@blast-t5h Do you think it would still be worth the degree if I worked a lot of internships and didn't care too much about my grades but still passed? I want to work as a business intelligence analyst or data analyst. What are you doing with your degree? I considered going into accounting, but they despise their jobs and the work they perform is dull, but it's stable despite the constant claims of AI it will just assist them. In my opinion.
PS: I hope things are well sorry for all these questions sir.
you obviously dont have the passion.
@@Aden-tm9xh of course its worth doing the degree....but you need to love it!
@@foreignwarren7361 I do have passion but I want to able to take care of my mother she’s getting old and working two jobs she never went to collage so I’m just trying to make the right choice I hope you understand.
It's really important to understand computer architecture, operating systems, data communication (TCP/IP), and algorithm analysis. It's also important to know how to program in Python, Java, and C. Knowing programming paradigms like OOP, functional programming and procedural programming is also important. But what's REALLY important is whether you know how to build. Are you a master of React, state management using zustand, routing and query using Tanstack, Node, APIs, websockets, Express, Hono, auth using jwt or other technologies, and databases like mySQL or Postgres? How familiar are you with git? Have you used branching, forking, merging? Are you developing in a Windows OS env? Then why aren't you using WSL? All these are really important to become a software dev.
How do you learn this and how long does it take?
Dude just listed almost everything
Lmao tell me you're not employed without telling me you're not employed
And all that for what? A dead end job in some boring company which pays a slightly higher on average salary? I swear CS is the biggest ponzi scheme in the world right now and these kids are eating it all up.
10 years at least @@bboyVice007
as a 3rd year CS student i needed to hear this, ty
Same here Tim. I dropped out in 2021 and started to learn myself. And then I realized I learned maybe 7% in college and I didn’t know most of the stuffs. I went back for a semester later in 2023 and surprisingly I didn’t need to study anything at all. I could just do everything on my own and my grades weren’t even bad. I also agree with you not knowing what career path and what should I be actually doing when I started college. But now I know the options. Nice video.
I agree with the grades. Focus on learning.
Thank you Tim. Most if not all IT degrees require an internship/work experience component. A serious student would do more than the basic requirement. Ps i love all your videos so keep them coming esp on using various software tools, making saas products and current trends etc
The same literally applies to people with beginner certifications. Upskilling and learning are never done in this field. and you have to show your work.
Agree with the GPA part. Most of CS student waste their time trying harder to score high GPAs and miss important skills that actual jobs will be looking for.
Personally I just earned a Data Science AS. It was a few Java classes, SAS, Python, R, SQL, Tableau, PBI, machine learning, statistical analysis and modeling & MS Office. And others. Not bad for what I want to do. But at the same time I earned certifications. Right now I’m more interested in earning a non-data BS/BA in something that I’ve always wanted to study - Anthropology or even Communications or Literature.
I just feel like most jobs just require a box checked and with my CV showing my portfolio, my certs, my AS Degree, my extracurricular clubs and events, will be a well-rounded CV. Right now, while I look for a job I’m studying for the Comptia A+. Just bc it’s my weak spot. I’ll keep earning more certs even after I get a job. And hopefully this particular cert will be a foot in the door for Helpdesk/Support at least. I just want a job. And most of the ones listed I know for a fact I’d do well in. But the BS/BA requirements are killing me honestly
Bro he’s not wrong. I’m on my second year of college majoring in computer science. I’ve barely had any programming classes. I bought programming expert so I can actually learn Python and do the 5 projects they have on there. I applied for 200-300 internships last summer. Luckily I got one. I went through dozens of interviews and coding assessments all of which I had a seriously hard time doing/completing. However, I had to convince my future employer that I will be working on multiple projects before the internship starts so I at least know something.
Honestly, great video Tim. Answered all of the questions that I, as a computer science student, ask myself all of the time. I loved the comment about hackathons, as I just applied for my first one at University of Montreal (my own uni). I don’t feel ready for it at all, but I’m gonna put myself through it bc of the experience. Keep it up
I appreciated hearing your opinion on the topic.
Thank you for taking the time to talk about this, really.
Honestly, this advice goes for pretty much all engineering degrees. A lot of what you say is also applicable to electrical engineers. A lot of students just focus on theory and very basic electronic circuit building which at the 4th year mark is not good at all...
Can you quit tge "no job for you" type clickbait? You're past that
What? What’s your title suggestion
@@TechWithTim You defo know what you're doing here. I've seen a couple of videos and titles baiting people about how there is "no job" in tech. Your face, "My Advice" and title speak volumes of what you want people to think
I didn't find any 'clickbait' in this video. On his channel, most of the thumbnails feature his face along with the video title. As for the title 'My Advice,' it accurately reflects the content, as he emphasizes that these are his personal opinions, and viewers are welcome to agree or disagree. A true clickbait title would be something more sensational, like 'The Shocking Truth About Tech Jobs!' or 'Why You’ll Never Get Hired in Tech!
@@coordinates_ apparently your not into what he's talking about and 'you must ve been living under a rock! It's a fact what he's talking about! Cs going forwarde is no longer what we used to know!
@@coordinates_ i see no clickbait in this video's title, you're just sensitive
Tim how do you see digital marketing and Ecommerce as a career??
same as it was 50 yrs ago
@@looksmatteronly there was no ecom or digital marketing 50 Yrs ago man it emerge after late 1990s...
My advice: Get a computer science degree, if you want to be a scientist or a researcher. Get a computer/software engineer degree if you want to work as a software developer. Do not get a degree, if you just want to be a web developer.
People have no right to complain about how they are not using what they learnt in a computer science degree, if they work as a software developer and not as a computer scientist. That is like getting a biology degree, but then working as a nurse, and complaining about how you can't use most of what you have learnt at uni.
Then why do so many software engineer roles/postings require a CS degree?
@Eddd1e I have never in my life seen a software engineering job requiring a cs degree, and I have applied to, i would say, almost about 100 jobs. They might accept it, but it is never the only degree they accept.
@@leventegyorgydeak1300 no one ever said that it’s only degree they accept, but it’s there in 90% of the qualifications I’m seeing as I’m applying myself currently as a desired prerequisite
@@Eddd1e You used the word "require". Requiring means that applicants MUST have it, so if an applicant doesn't have it, they are immediately rejected. Which would mean it is the only degree they accept, that is why I was talking about that.
Yes, many jobs accept computer science degrees, because it is related to software development, just like they might accept electrical engineering or maybe even a physics batchelor. I think that is just so that many more people can apply for the job and they have a highest number of candidades they can choose from, and generally people from these technical fields can all code.
@@leventegyorgydeak1300 yes the applicant MUST have either a CS degree or a software engineering degree never said degree singular, they’ll get thrown out by the filters beforehand otherwise. I doubt if I apply for any EE job I could secure it with a CS degree the knowledge on circuits isn’t there, just like they likely dont have the full-stack experience. I think CS has more extensive value over a larger field in the tech space
The grade is not made by any one developer Thanks for your effort
Thanks Tim, while still grinding to have a Computer Science Degree, it's very important to have solid projects along side in other to stand out in the job market.
And making using of AI effectively.❤
Tim you are talking about degrees in the perspective of people in well developed counties were you can get a job without a degree, but here in india, especially like southern india a minimum qualification of degree is must for any kind of job😅
India has a lot of workers,so its not really a shocking factor
@JonBerisha-ti1vl BUT think about a situation where a school student in Indian , from a poor background watching this video, he or she will think that college degree is not worth it.. It leaves them with a bad impression and spoil there life, where the degree is the only way they can improve there life 🙂
The problem with CS is that they wasted so much time doing ENDLESS pages of algebra for calculus..
One assignment about REST was only 50 lines at most.
Plus Bio/Chem??
See the issue here?
i graduated with a master in cs and you need to know how real stuff works don't just play with cpp and some rasberry on your free time, but look at the job market and actually learn to be employable, if you know architectures, popular frameworks, you master git and sql, can explain and create microservices for exemple or use aws it will make a big diff
you are a genius bro !
This is helpful here cause I'm learning computer science on my own for front end developer
I was interested in a computer science degree, but I found that a software engineering degree is more suitable for most people since you learn a lot of handy stuff, such as operating systems, networks and security, programming languages ( Python, JavaScript, Java or C#) modern frameworks and even version control.
All of which you also learn in a CS degree 🤷🏻
Thanks for this tim ❤
You wrapped up my Computer Science degree!
Your this video is motivative, I have a good grasp of front-end web development, but I definitely need a backend roadmap. With python
I've been working for way too long on my degree. Sometimes it's just smarter to drop out. Don't listen to the people telling you, that you won't be able to find a job without a degree. Depending on where you live it's ridiculously easy to find a well paying job.
Tim you're absolutely right
Actually you must be doing
BS Software Engineering or BCA Bachelor of Computer Application.
BS Computer Science is wrong Degree.
You have to still study outside syllabus because it is not possible to cover everything in the degree. 😮
Degree only teaches fundamental or basic's.
Also only use CoPilot+ AI Laptops for Programming.
Here are my 2 cents: get at least the basic SE degree (if you really need to), but get into coding on the side yourself.
There really is no point to do computer science at the university as all the programs will be written by Gen AI. I honestly think that universities should start offering degrees in hairdressing, and plumbing, etc.
Hi Tim sorry but I don't agree with you on the AI part. From everything we see happening and reality on the ground for me: my company asked the whole team to start using copilot/gpt an year ago and report on productivity increase. We all went back on rough number of 20-30%. They had 3 open positions for devs which they cancelled. We also just saw Zuck and Salesforce CEO saying the same things. I believe we're looking at drastic reductions in team sizes. like 70% so teams of 10 going to only 3 in probably next few years. After that we will see team consolidations as we don't need 2 teams of 3 people but one inter-disciplinary team of 6 people with one manager. Then the process continues. This will get even severe with AI agents which my company is introducing this year.
Sir.. Can u please guide me.... I'm currently doing engineering... I'm confused about what to learn and where to learn... And also I don't know which skill has more skill in the future... So please guide me😢
I was hoping to be apart of the private mentorship and had a time and interview set up, and I didn't hear from the interviewer. I waited the entire scheduled time. Any chance this opportunity is still open?
Do you mind booking another call? I’m very sorry about that!!
@TechWithTim glad to do so look forward to the opportunity.
depend of the country.. in some countries are mandatory greetings
Thank you ❤
I can't for the life of me understand why tech youtubers keep going on about CS degrees specifically , there's at least 3 or 4 different subjects you could study at university which all teach some subset of programming and computer science (computer science, software engineering/information technology, information systems/business information systems and game development) regardless of whether you think university is worth it or not. Personally I had 0 interest in study computer science cos I hate maths but I studied software engineering , later on I decided to study CS in my own time for fun.
CS students are better equipped for a career as a software engineer.
If AI is not going to replace the jobs. Why are there lots of lay offs and hiring freeze?
Economy is bad overall,no money on the companies
There are jobs, the hiring freeze is mostly on entry-level roles. If you have 5+ years of experience you have no real issue finding work right now, every company wants experts instead of investing in new talent
Software engineering vs computer science degree??? Which should I choose for development?
software engineering bro
software engineering, its in the name
ofc software engineering. yk what you learn in computer science is mostly theories mathematics and physics with a touch of economy academic writing and some form of philosophy. basically only one or two max 3 classes will be related to programming. also you can do both computer science and software engineering. also you should define what you want to be able to do and see what each degree will offer.
great stuff🔥🔥
If I want to become a Top AIML Engineer in future, then should I focus on GPA or not?
Because it will be required for getting into masters, right?
Yes i will use AI in Interviews so i can pass their technical part and land a job :)
CS degree is needed for depth, software development for breadth
i wouldnt drop it if im getting high grades😂
Well I need a good GPA because I plan to apply for an Ivy league business school at some point for grad and they look for high GPAs
i reject the premise of your reality and insert my own... I will become a human science teacher and teach the artificial intelligence about humans.
whatsup Tim, if you're reading this I just want project ideas, I'm bored and want to add a new one to my Github.
The best advice is pivot, left the career is cooked by AI, start working on blue collar jobs
At the time you will finish your degree there will be no jobs for you. 95% of software engineering can easily be automated by the new advanced and a lot cheaper to run models from 2026-2027.
So tiresome that you went the clickbait route with your channel instead of actually generating worthwhile content.
Awesome video
Listen up??? Jawoll mein Herr!
3:09 preciseley
Move to india, thats where all the jobs openings are
😂 yeah bro you can get it jobs with even finishing schooliing 🤣🤣
"fortnite we need to talk" ahh video
❤
The first mistake of a computer science student is signing up for a computer science degree
Thumbnai picture l looks a fired programmer
You are just a scammer
Aren't we sick yet of the clickbait ?
first here❤
nah am 1 second ahead
!
First !
I was the first
Congratulations on this achievement. 😂
@@sa_0515 Thanks Bro
AI is already decreasing the amount of demand for software engineers/devs. Is important to state this, AI will not ENTIRELY replace devs but will definitely decrease the amount of them, its a fact and is already happening.
No it is not happening
@@A__GARV_SAXENA it is. Massive Layoffs and experience devs with difficult to get a job again. Why are you in denial?
@@pauloTx People were hiring like crazy in 2020 because they were trying to capture some new market created by COVID. Zoom has dramatically increased their market share for instance. But lots of companies had to take some business service remote and tried to do it via technology. Then the pandemic ended and growth expectations shifted.
In many cases, these are fake hiring processes. It looks like they are hiring but all the applications go into a wall. Also, when you work at a place for a couple of years, you gain a lot of experience and require an increase in pay but instead of increasing staff cost, they fire them and then rehire less experienced people so the pay remains the same.
Ai just came into real-world uses 2-3 years back "massive" layoff happening since 2018-19
@@pauloTxcoz it haven't happened lol
@ ok, all the news about it, all the posts of people saying the same, is all fakenews. You right and the world is wrong.
AI already DID replace your job lol... they don't need YOU b/c senior devs can be "10x" as productive with AI. Stop lying
So can junior devs use AI as well. You've never really done your research have you?
The problem is; my friends who can't write code on their own, can simply write a few prompts to the AI and get the work done. So in the end, you learn prompt engineering in a week, but you need to spend years to learn the technical skills if you want to write the code on your own. Unfortunately, you as a CS graduate might get replaced by people who can't code, who have no technical skills but can just do the basic prompt engineering.
from millions of views to thousands... when will he stop putting out the same regurgitated trash and actually make a good video
What video would you like to see? Any feedback welcomed