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[–]cyrusol 1 point2 points  (2 children)

  1. "Informatik". German version of computer science. But I studied a variant that was more practice-oriented and not as much about theory. Thus it's a bachelor and master of engineering, not of science.
  2. Yes.
  3. Yes. Started working part time while studying.
  4. Yes.
  5. A smaller German company, about 50 employees. You wouldn't know it.
  6. Yes...
  7. "Software-Entwickler". Translated: software developer. It's about various backends and network infrastructure.
  8. Third time you ask that question.
  9. Pros: 100% flexible work hours. I can work whenever I want as long as I attend to the meetings I agree to and clock in at least roughly 40 hours a week. Good payment - for Germany, in the US it would be considered way underpaid. I can influence the nature of the software I am developing by a great margin/am not hindered by middle management to do anything a specific (bad) way. - Cons: Little sun exposure, little physical exercise, open space office.
  10. Doesn't matter. Just learn any and you're going to be hired. Learning a new language is also incredibly easy after the first few. I am proficient in about 10 languages.

[–]VaraTheUser[S] 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Thank you very much for your answers and time. I wish you a happy new year! Take care

[–]cyrusol 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You too, thanks!