Seriously: Switch from law to CS at age 29?
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Date: May 29th, 2013 10:40 PM Author: twisted electric furnace nursing home
Don't do it. CS is 100% overrated. The real money comes from IT management. I can hire an Indian code monkey (which is all that CS is) for $5 an hour.
The money doesn't come from the coder, the money comes form the IDEA behind the code.
If you want to get an entry level job making ~$60k per year, then yes, CS is an option.But if you want the real money, skip it...
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2268783&forum_id=2#23295356) |
Date: May 29th, 2013 10:45 PM Author: cruel-hearted property
Nothing magical about the switch. Really, it's like any other career - if you enjoy programming enough to wrestle a few lines of code until 4 am on weeknights when you have to be up at 8, or are so hooked that you flake on a chill Friday night birthday party to run through a handful of tutorials, then you'll be able to make a decent living developing.
Pick up a couple of books for absolute beginners and give yourself 20 hours of work to see if you like it. Expect to spend a few hundred hours on a language before you can cobble together a resume, then a few hundred more to actually speak coherently about it during an interview.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2268783&forum_id=2#23295416) |
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Date: June 16th, 2013 11:49 PM Author: floppy flatulent garrison personal credit line
FWIW in the current bubble webdevs especially can make good salaries being thoroughly mediocre. You start out at 80k but after two or three years if you want to quit people will be banging down your door offering 120-150 if you're somewhat capable and can bullshit well through an interview. The dotcom 1.0ers have tons of money to throw around and small-midsize companies which are funded can afford to pay their staff a lot of money if they have even moderate experience.
of course there's little chance this will last long. I doubt fifteen years from now the same mediocre guy will push much past 120, although it's still a very good lifestyle if you don't mind coding.
these companies do seem to have a pretty annoying mindset though. they're in it either for a quick buck without ever turning out a real product or really believe in their retardedly specialized custom-social-lamp-sharing startups.
bigdata and analytics I would think is far more promising in the long term, but of course this is much harder to break into than being a webdev where someone in an unrelated field can take a year off to learn shit and provided he has enough dedication/adderall get a job.
edit: this is a really good article about how even mediocre webdevs are in demand, and that the ones who really think about what they're doing instead of buying into the "rockstar" bullshit tend to sometimes feel unsatisfied even while pulling down massive $$$:
http://www.aeonmagazine.com/living-together/james-somers-web-developer-money/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AeonMagazineEssays+%28Aeon+Magazine+Essays%29
this part in particular made me chuckle:
I have a friend who’s a mechanical engineer. He used to build airplane engines for General Electric, and now he’s trying to develop a smarter pill bottle to improve compliance for AIDS and cancer patients. He works out of a start-up ‘incubator’, in an office space shared with dozens of web companies. He doesn’t have a lot of patience for them. ‘I’m fucking sick of it,’ he told me, ‘all they talk about is colours.’
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2268783&forum_id=2#23411954) |
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