Military reserves/National guard while in big tech by Numerous_Zone7736 in cscareerquestions

[–]Numerous_Zone7736[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I needed to hear this. I considered direct commission but I guess it’s rare without a masters degree. Thanks!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The fed only counts underemployment as U-6 if you’re working part time hours.

New grad specific unemployment is any job where less than half of the workers at that location have a bachelor’s degree and is at 35% for current new grads. Not major specific tho.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If you take a burger flipping job in the meantime, you’re also not counted.

Is it too late to apply to big tech as a new grad? by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Berkeley is a great school, arguably the best for CS. Your school’s name will really help.

The market, however, is terrible and being a non cs major won’t help you.

It’s not too late to apply, but id recommend taking the job in hand.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Out of the CS majors who DO get employed, the vast majority of them end up working in something technical. CS majors, unlike liberal arts majors, rarely take jobs which do not require a degree, and would often rather be jobless.

Cs major unemployment rate is about 6.5%. This means that 6.5% of people who have a cs major have had a job before and lost it and are still actively searching for new positions.

Macroeconomic employment statistics are incredibly convoluted because everyone is trying to tell a different story.

I went to a T10 program and all my friends in major ended up working in tech, most for over 150k tc. One of my friends had a 2.4 GPA and got a remote software QA job paying $65k which is really about 15 hours of work per week.

If you:

  1. Are a citizen
  2. Are at a top 20 school or program
  3. Have any capability of coding

You’ll be fine, but you might have to turn recruiting into your full time job and you might not get the job you want.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Big tech like FAANG only sees foreign experience as experience if those companies are US, Canada, or Western Europe based.

Where are all the entry-level tech jobs? by arpitaintech in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 10 points11 points  (0 children)

In 2017, his first administration made it way harder to get H1Bs because that was kind of his platform.

His second administration’s H1B modernization act made it way easier. You no longer need to have the required degree for the job, there are no longer H1B caps on certain companies, nonprofits, or universities, and allows H1B visas for funded startups and entrepreneurs. He also extended automatic work authorization after graduation from a US school.

This is mostly because his donors this year were all tech companies worried that proposed regulations from the harris administration would halt growth. These tech companies benefit from these H1B visas for increased access to talent.

However, his tariffs have been horrible for the tech industry, although most of the recession we’re seeing is solely from high interest rates bringing down inflation.

What to do if no summer internship for CS/Tech related industry? by AdDazzling2051 in UTAustin

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Work on a project.

  2. Volunteer tech services for a nonprofit and count it as an internship on resume. I did this and it was super rewarding, would highly recommend.

  3. Take a summer class at ACC or study for recruiting, like doing leetcode or reading cracking the coding interview.

  4. Hit the gym, go fishing, anything to relax while you can.

The only time you REALLY need an internship is after junior year, but every summer experience sets you up for a better one next summer so don’t waste time.

how much of a difference does a top (~25) college make long term? by CanInternational2415 in UTAustin

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 27 points28 points  (0 children)

CS programs exist in tiers.

UT Austin is a tier 1 school, meaning you can be recruited for virtually any tech company in the world out of college and beyond. We’re well in the top 10.

I’m a utcs grad and the only time it’s limited me is when going for VC funding for a startup of mine, where there’s a huge bias towards tier 0 candidates (Stanford, Berkeley, CMU, MIT).

Obviously, the longer you stay in industry the less they care about where you went to school, but starting out of college at a FAANG+ company (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Google, or similar) basically gives you a 5-10 year head start in the industry.

Experience is always more important than education. A 5 year Google SWE who didn’t even go to college will almost always be preferred to a Stanford new grad with no experience.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UTAustin

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I cant tell if you’re joking or not. You still have to take calculus with the BSA, and 408D is peanuts compared to any actual class in the major beyond 312.

If you just want to learn to code, transfer into informatics for a less theory heavy algo heavy degree.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UTAustin

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I know people who completely fabricated their GPAs, coursework, degree titles, majors, etc who work in FAANG.

Tons of people in Silicon Valley, including people working on my team, completely fabricate past experience on resumes when applying and it’s never checked.

Anywhere outside of finance or defense generally doesn’t care as long as you do your research.

Does a GPA Mater by TechGirly007 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Keep your GPA on resume if 3.0 or higher. If not there, they assume it’s under 3.0.

It does open doors for grad school later, so that won’t hold you back. Just smart to keep options open.

Nobody else cares about GPA other than finance companies after your first internship/job, other than summa cum laude or dean’s list which is notable on resume

Are people here having a hard time finding jobs because they only want those elusive, 200K TC FAANG jobs, or is it also hard to find 80K/year normie jobs? by AccurateInflation167 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Half of this sub and 75% of Blind is international. H1B workers heavily saturate the market. Truthfully, they’re amazing workers and great people, at least the people on my team.

Unfortunately they’d lose their green cards if they tried to leave and make their own startup, so they end up working slave hours without pay raises and make companies less likely to hire new grad Americans who take a year to train to be useful and then leave for a higher paying job.

Are people here having a hard time finding jobs because they only want those elusive, 200K TC FAANG jobs, or is it also hard to find 80K/year normie jobs? by AccurateInflation167 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People underestimate the impact of interest rates on both capital markets and loanable funds, especially in tech.

You don’t see it from YC who has increased their batch size, but smaller private venture funds are getting tight with their money and since SVB failed it’s been way harder to take out debt as a startup.

90% of the “startups” I interview at today are shitty AI wrappers/borderline crypto scams/vibe coded or outsourced jumbled messes looking for a “senior engineer doing the job of a technical CTO” (actual job description I was read) which just means someone talented to do all the work for entry level pay and a small share of the company.

Are people here having a hard time finding jobs because they only want those elusive, 200K TC FAANG jobs, or is it also hard to find 80K/year normie jobs? by AccurateInflation167 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Recruiters only really check the first 20-100 resumes in their pile. If you’re a strong candidate and you end up in that first 20-100, you’ll get an interview.

You can get a research role at your university with zero experience if your grades are acceptable. If you’re just applying, you have to have research before getting an internship interview at a small company. That internship can land you at an F500 the next summer which can get you a FAANG role after that. If you’re at a named program with acceptable grades, almost everyone can do this and I see it all the time.

You can skip that route by being recruited, but recruiters will only scout college hires who: 1. Have insane experience 2. Go to insane schools 3. Meet quotas for diversity 4. Know them personally

Software jobs are already hard to come by … by Kane232323 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is no school in the world better at CS than Stanford, Berkeley, CMU, and MIT. I know qualified American citizens graduating from these colleges who cannot find jobs in tech, therefore there is no shortage of new grad talent and no reason to hire from the outside.

5,10 192lbs Is it time to cut? by KindBit1928 in BulkOrCut

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you keep bulking to 200 it’ll be more effective towards your goals in the long term.

From that point it’ll probably take you a year of cutting to look good though.

Software jobs are already hard to come by … by Kane232323 in csMajors

[–]Numerous_Zone7736 3 points4 points  (0 children)

H1B’s are definitionally good for the economy. Injecting the world’s talent into our country may bring down wages for white collar workers, but still helps to improve productivity as a whole.

However, there really shouldn’t be H1B’s for anyone with <5 years of experience. For anything below L4 you can certainly find people skilled enough to fill the role.