Originally posted by Hauldren Collider
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My dad's an actuary and after 10 years or so led a group at an actuarial firm. He started doing law 10 years ago and now he's a practice group leader at a law firm. He understands what he's doing. He doesn't apply tools, he creates them.
I won't deny you have a lot of understanding about what you do, but in different respects. I'm sure you know C++ backwards and forwards. I'm guessing Kuci is, compared to you, a C++ padawan. I'm not even that much. But knowing the theory of computer science is just as important as experience.
I won't deny you have a lot of understanding about what you do, but in different respects. I'm sure you know C++ backwards and forwards. I'm guessing Kuci is, compared to you, a C++ padawan. I'm not even that much. But knowing the theory of computer science is just as important as experience.
The value isn't knowing in how to use programming languages. That is the equivalent of a carpenter.
The value is in the aspect of Computer Science you are ignoring: understanding how the hardware & software interact and understanding good system design. My CS degree is far less math heavy than Kuci's was -- my concentration was in Software Engineering, which meant I spent classes in systems design theory when he spent it with math theory and monte carlo method nonsense. One of those is far more useful in the real world.
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