Is it really stupid to study computer science at university?


First of all, the conclusion: Do not believe the words of the admissions teacher. I have to report it, now I have passed this village without this store.
why? Will the computer (related) industry continue to go on fire?
Yes, I think this industry will continue to go down, but the demands on people are getting higher and higher.
The times have been changing. Fifteen years ago, a web page was written to allow the company to go public. Five years ago, it was better to attend an Android training class than to go to school. Now, it is very difficult for trainees to find a job. Soon, the transfer will also find it difficult to find a job. And all this is just the beginning.


Quoted below
It is foreseeable that once programming is introduced into high school, it will basically quickly eliminate the population "because of insufficient conditions and no access to programming." At that time, high school students who are eager to think and who are interested in programming will clear their goals before entering the university, which will lead to more computer graduates who are engaged in the Bank.
The real qualitative change will happen in the year when the students who have fully accepted the high school programming education have finished the undergraduate course, which is now six or seven years later. At that time, we will see a wave of graduates from high school, who have clearly ambitions before going to college, and who have gone through a complete undergraduate degree in computer science. The average quality of this wave of graduates will far exceed the age of their predecessors. At that time, not only the people who changed careers, those high school provinces did not start classes, which led to late entry, or the university’s focus on brushing GPA is not good, it will be difficult to find a satisfactory job in the job market – because the pits are more Strong people accounted for it. This kind of competitive pressure caused by the influx of talents has been passed down layer by layer, and it has actually appeared in CS applications and job hunting in recent years. The people on the top floor can't find a good pit. They have to go to the next level to find the next layer. The next layer has to go to the next layer. The layers are passed to the end, and naturally a group of people will be eliminated. Of course, it is still only a quantitative change, and the qualitative change has to wait until the time mentioned earlier.
So the subject, do you realize that you are now at a very critical time node? If you follow the advice, study non-computer related majors, and then graduate students turn to computers, then when you graduate, just meet the wave of people mentioned earlier. The main high school did not enter the line (as can be seen from the text), the university did not enter the line, wait until the graduate student to turn, imagine your competitiveness at that time. What's more, the pressure of competition is not limited to the job market. The average quality and enrollment standards of CS graduates must be improved. Now you may be planning very well, but by that time, it is not necessarily possible to apply for a satisfactory graduate student.
On the other hand, if you are studying computer-related majors now, you can catch up with a tail for four years, although the pressure at that time must be greater than it is now. Fortunately, the subject, if you ask this question two years later, it is really powerless to go back to heaven.
Always prioritize the process of history.

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