u/Intelligent_Doubt_53

CS vs EE

Hello, I’m going to college soon and mainly deciding between these two majors

My main concern is money because frankly I like both of these fields, I’ve always loved technology and I’m fine going into hardware or software, so my main question is which one will grant me the higher income?

I know that the CS market has been pretty grim but who know how it’ll look in 4 years, I also feel like the market sucks for people who think it’s a get quick rich scheme, yeah companies aren’t hiring new grads with no sort of experience straight out of college with 100k anymore but I’m willing to put in the work with projects, internships etc.

So my question is which field should I get into to make the most money? I see people say a EE could get CS jobs but a CS major couldn’t get EE jobs, is this true and if so how could I go about learning CS while doing EE? Thanks.

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u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 4 days ago

CS vs EE

Hello, I’m going to college soon and mainly deciding between these two majors

My main concern is money because frankly I like both of these fields, I’ve always loved technology and I’m fine going into hardware or software, so my main question is which one will grant me the higher income?

I know that the CS market has been pretty grim but who know how it’ll look in 4 years, I also feel like the market sucks for people who think it’s a get quick rich scheme, yeah companies aren’t hiring new grads with no sort of experience straight out of college with 100k anymore but I’m willing to put in the work with projects, internships etc.

So my question is which field should I get into to make the most money? I see people say a EE could get CS jobs but a CS major couldn’t get EE jobs, is this true and if so how could I go about learning CS while doing EE? Thanks.

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 4 days ago

CS vs EE

Hello, I’m going to college soon and mainly deciding between these two majors

My main concern is money because frankly I like both of these fields, I’ve always loved technology and I’m fine going into hardware or software, so my main question is which one will grant me the higher income?

I know that the CS market has been pretty grim but who know how it’ll look in 4 years, I also feel like the market sucks for people who think it’s a get quick rich scheme, yeah companies aren’t hiring new grads with no sort of experience straight out of college with 100k anymore but I’m willing to put in the work with projects, internships etc.

So my question is which field should I get into to make the most money? I see people say a EE could get CS jobs but a CS major couldn’t get EE jobs, is this true and if so how could I go about learning CS while doing EE? Thanks.

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 4 days ago

Is it really worth going into?

Hi, I wanted to ask some people from the community if Amazon fba is really worth getting into

Let me preface this by saying that I know this is not at all a get rich quick scheme or that I won’t lose a lot of people before earning any, I 100% understand that. I’ve always believed that a lot of these “over saturated” ways to make money aren’t actually that bad, it’s just that people don’t stick to them and don’t put in the work. They just expect to make a ton of money immediately with no capital

Anyway, would you guys say it’s worth it? Given enough time and effort

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 4 days ago

Degrees that can reach 300k a year?

Hello, what are degrees that can lead to making 300k a year? I know everyone says to not go into a degree just for the money but I’m still curious, I plan on going into Electrical engineering but a lot of people seem to say that you can’t/ it’s very difficult to break into 300k a year in that field. Any suggestions?

Edit: by no means am I saying 300k out of college or even 10 years down the line, I’m willing to work hard and get education beyond those 4 years

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 4 days ago

So I currently have 40 hours (I know absolutely nothing lol) and I feel like I’m doing fine most of the time in comp, usually I don’t bottom frag which is nice but I wanna make sure I’m actively improving and not just playing to play, obviously I’ll improve by playing more but there’s definitely more to it then just queuing up again and again, I mean I’ve seen people with the same amount of hours be completely different skill wise, probably because one is actually practicing and the other is just playing, so my question is how do I practice properly ? How do I make sure I’m as good as I can be? Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 18 days ago

Hello, I wanted to ask mainly finance people if I should go into the major, I’ve been pretty set on electrical engineering as it’s something I do like, and while I like the topics relating to finance I would enjoy EE more, but honestly if I can make a similar amount of money if not more with finance I’d much rather do that instead. So my question is pretty much that, in concept finance is a no brainer for me but I just don’t know nearly as much about it as I do for EE, with EE I KNOW I’ll get a job and it’ll pay decently (in my area usually 70-80k starting), I’m just not knowledgeable enough in the finance job field in comparison to be as sure. Thank you

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 19 days ago
▲ 4 r/ucf

Hello, I wanted to ask mainly finance people if I should go into the major, I’ve been pretty set on electrical engineering as it’s something I do like, and while I like the topics relating to finance I would enjoy EE more, but honestly if I can make a similar amount of money if not more with finance I’d much rather do that instead. So my question is pretty much that, in concept finance is a no brainer for me but I just don’t know nearly as much about it as I do for EE, with EE I KNOW I’ll get a job and it’ll pay decently, I’m just not knowledgeable enough in the finance job field in comparison to be as sure. Thank you

reddit.com
u/Intelligent_Doubt_53 — 19 days ago