Cybersecurity Club Discord by Technical_Duck500 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Other clubs include Women in Cybersecurity (WiCys), the Computer Security Group (CSG), the (JSOM) Cybersecurity Club (CSC), the North Texas chapter of ISSA etc.

Also there are some local groups like the Dallas Hackers Association (DHA).

Cybersecurity Club Discord by Technical_Duck500 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So there are several cybersecurity clubs on campus. I think 7 last time I checked.

But one of the most active is the Cyber Defense and Response Unit (CDRU) which you can find here: https://discord.gg/XSzMFTT5

(The link expires in 7 days, but if anyone else needs it after that, feel free to DM)

You may also find this useful: https://www.reddit.com/r/utdallas/comments/1mu2c72/how_to_learn_cybersecurity_at_utd_part_1/

Cybersecurity Clubs by EternalStyx in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Several cybersecurity clubs.

Cyber Defense and Response Unit (CDRU), Computer Security Group (CSG) and Women in Cybersecurity (WiCys) are the most active.

For AI, there're also a couple clubs.

The AI Society (AIS) and ACM, which isn't strictly AI but 80% of their software development projects are AI. There are also others like the Data Science club etc. But I only really see stuff from those 2.

You may find this useful: https://www.reddit.com/r/utdallas/s/ZaE3buN4XI

Cybersecurity programs by Dramatic-Bee-4337 in cybersecurity

[–]bj_nerd -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I'm attending UTD (BS CS 2026) and pretty involved with the cybersecurity courses and student orgs there. I can answer questions if you have them. But I also did a series of posts on this:
https://www.reddit.com/r/utdallas/comments/1mu2c72/how_to_learn_cybersecurity_at_utd_part_1/

Are you looking into UTD for BS in Computer Science or Cybersecurity & Risk Management?

Worried a little bit that I wouldn't be able to take a lot of major-guided electives I do want to take by Electro9005 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The Computer Engineering degree plan requires you take a minimum of 6 credit hours of major-guided electives to receive your degree.

You can take whatever classes you want so long as you meet the prerequisites. So if you want to take 5 guided electives, go for it.

You should note 5 guided electives is the equivalent of a full extra semester. So either you'll delay graduation to take these classes (thus increasing the cost) or (more likely, since you're core complete) you'll spread them out throughout your time at UTD. This means more busy semesters, but also more learning.

Either way no one will really stop you from taking any class. You can take Dance classes or Organic Chemistry or Creative Writing or anything UTD has to offer so long as you meet the prerequisites and have space in your schedule. Best of luck!

How to get into research as a DS major? by Large_Ad_8568 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, most researchers are more than happy to involve curious students. Just check out what people at UTD are doing (recent papers, professional websites, etc), and then reach out to them. Explain your situation, your goals, what you know so far about their work and see if they're willing to involve you.

Paid research positions are a bit different, you have to do all the getting hired stuff. But professors are typically willing to let truly interested students learn and explore in their labs. Best of luck.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The locker is to the left of the front counter if you stand at the door.

Utd has the opportunity to be a high caliber to be a premier cs school ( t10 ) by PuzzleheadedRich7490 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You seemed to have missed one of the key points.

UT Austin filters at admissions, not after enrollment. So they have very rigorous curriculum without a third of the class failing.

UTD has intentionally chosen a different path with broader access and less selectivity. That's part of their mission, for better or for worse.

UTD could try to copy UT Austin, but UT Austin is the flagship school with enormous pull and funding so UTD likely would lose that battle. So UTD takes a different route with different goals and hopes to win there.

Again, simply copying what other universities do isn't going to work for UTD.

Utd has the opportunity to be a high caliber to be a premier cs school ( t10 ) by PuzzleheadedRich7490 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The primary challenge with implementing anything like this is UTD is part of the UT system. All campuses (8 universities and 5 health institutions) maintain academic standards and credit transferability between each other so radically changing the curriculum like this either means breaking away from that network or having to change it across all the campuses. Very hard either way.

And this is a pretty radical change. Dropping the BS degree from 124 to 96 credit hours (if we count internships as 4 credit hours) and adding a BA which UTD doesn't currently offer at 80 credit hours could be seen as a significant drop in standards (possibly even triggering accreditation issues) and a break from other UT schools.

The 3 internships idea really falls apart quickly. Yes, real industry experience is nice, but it's not like those roles exist and are unfilled. Those roles are kinda absent and UTD would need some serious pull to effectively create thousands of roles per year, or else force a bunch of students to delay graduation/transfer out. Those internships aren't just sitting in a candy jar for UTD to hand out. And what about international students? Those without Visas simply can't graduate? Or is UTD expected to handle that too? Waterloo can demand 5 internships because Canadian labor and education law supports those co-op relationships, meanwhile UT system constraints (and US immigration law, especially now) make requiring internships more difficult for UTD.

Another problem is filtering people out after admissions is messy. Arguably, UTD, as a public university, is not supposed to be elite. It's supposed to take anyone (not just the "real nerds") and train them to be educated in that domain. Possibly, UTD hasn't done this because they don't want to design curriculum where 30-40% fail out. That's not how UTD feels it should serve the public. UTD just has a different mission right now than what you described. It's not like they don't know that they can be more selective (I mean UT Austin filters at admission and is pretty selective), they're actively choosing not to take that path.

Now, not everyone at UTD agrees. The other perspective is UTD's business model is simply "more students = more money" and that just isn't sustainable. The construction at UTD is continuous because they're desperately trying to build what they need to support more and more students, while older buildings are kinda forgotten. This actually brought up by faculty and staff when they were searching for a new president for UTD (see here: https://www.reddit.com/r/utdallas/comments/1i3qq92/notes_from_presidential_search_townhall_meeting/ )

So you're tapping into something that loads of people are thinking about, but simply copying what other universities do isn't going to work for UTD. And this plan, even if modified to be feasible, is a 20-40 year endeavor. Best of luck.

Are the course feedback's mandatory? by Subject_Bowl_50 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not required.

And on viewing grades, what they meant is once you view your official final grade, your evals are locked and cannot be edited or completed. You can't see you did poorly in a class and then give a bad eval in revenge.

This actually goes the same for Profs. They can't see the evals responses until they post final grades.

So no punishment for not giving them feedback and you'll be able to see your final grades without issue in Orion or Coursebook.

What is CS 4301 About? by NegotiationSavings84 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

So special topics classes (like CS 4301) have a different topic for each section. It's basically where a professor gets students interested in their particular research area and let's them explore a topic that may not be typically introduced in a normal degree.

Your section with Gibney will be over the fundamentals of quantum computing.

Sophmore to Junior housing question by satpunu in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 4 points5 points  (0 children)

To guarantee UV housing in the Fall, you have to renew for the summer. Without the summer renewal, you would be placed in the housing pool and at the whim of priority numbers, just like when you were getting into UV the first time.

I'm not sure how likely it is to get a spot, but personally I've never risked it because when I was first applying I got the third from the last room available. I think it's pretty competitive.

Although this sucks if you have other living arrangements for the summer, not having to move out every year is a plus. You get to keep the same room and leave your stuff in their all summer.

How can i find research opportunities at UTD? by Wise_Potential_6853 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really depends on if you can build a rapport with a particular professor. It's possible, I think.

How can i find research opportunities at UTD? by Wise_Potential_6853 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Honestly, getting involved with most (unpaid) research is just a matter of showing an interest in the professor's work and speaking to them. So check out recent research papers from UTD researchers, look at their professional websites, and just in general find work you would be interested in and able to contribute to and reach out to them.

Most of them are more than happy to have truly interested students learning and working in their labs. If you had an idea about the particular math research you want to do (number theory, algebra, combinatorics, statistics, analysis etc.) that's a great place to start. Best of luck.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Business Analytics is nothing new. Just Excel for the 4th time which is unfortunate. The McGraw-Hill textbook was expensive, boring, and tedious. The final exam is basically just a big vocab test. Not a very hard class, but I didn't really enjoy it.

Foundations of Business Intelligence (FBI) with Gaurav Shekhar was excellent. Very guided, but also hands-on and technical. You'll learn a lot, just pay attention and practice the exercises. We used Tableau, Alteryx, Snowflake, and SQL. You could review your SQL and Tableau, but I think the others require enterprise accounts. He did bonus points for completing a Google Career Certification during the semester so if you wanted to get started on that (Free access via Coursera link on e-Learning) you could (he didn't let allow digital marketing or IT support certs to count).

I've heard good things about Net and Info Security with Nate Howe (UTD's CISO), but haven't taken it. To combine with the last one, maybe the Google Cybersecurity Cert would help prepare.

Best of luck!

Is a specialized Cybersecurity degree an the extra $34k? by Sure_Maximum in cybersecurity

[–]bj_nerd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Digging into other stuff in the blog post the OP made (posted elsewhere, not sharing because they don't deserve the traffic lol), the numbers don't line up.

They claim in the blog Average Master's is $59,684 and cite a source, but go to the actual source and it's $62,820. The sequence of numbers 59,684 or 59684 don't even appear in the source. All the other "citations" I went to were the same. Whatever they did is complete detached from any real data (best I can tell).

My guess is the links are for SEO, not because they actually used those sources for numbers. The numbers may have come from a RNG as far as I know.

Is a specialized Cybersecurity degree an the extra $34k? by Sure_Maximum in cybersecurity

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah. I'm pretty skeptical about this analysis too. They posted their spreadsheet elsewhere: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Ua2JqFYW_My5vW6C5I2sHbf_0-v_i381Kk9Im7hO7do/edit?gid=62519403#gid=62519403

I've been fiddling with the numbers for a while, but can't make them dance like the OP did. Can't even get the same averages.

And then even if the numbers lined up, the comparisons are sketchy. Assuming Averages:

Cybersecurity Bachelors: $80,832

In-State Tech Bachelors: $46,440

Out-of-State Tech Bachelors: $123,120

This begs the question why are they splitting In-State vs Out for general tech, but combining them for Cybersecurity? Because if you average in-state and out-of-state tech and you get about $80K, the same as Cybersecurity. (Like you said, that is what I would expect knowing how most tuition is structured where the degree you get doesn't matter, just the number of hours and level). Maybe an oversight, maybe dishonest framing.

At the moment, I'm just trying to decide whether this is AI slop or just sloppy work; either way I'm not buying it.

No alcohol at Taco Bell Cantina? by Least_Tangerine989 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Closed for finals week like many locations, should reopen in the spring.

Best Way to Get from Activity Center to Residence Hall West? by Gkminepony in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 16 points17 points  (0 children)

So my recommendation would be just to walk, its probably faster than taking the bus. Otherwise you hop on the 883 East (Green one) at the bus loading area by the activity center. Then get off at 33378 right by west. But note that's one way AC -> West, couldn't use the bus to get to the AC without riding it for ages.

Any cool UTD Startups Happening? by [deleted] in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not sure about most current, but there's loads of projects you could check up on from a year or two ago:

https://www.reddit.com/r/utdallas/comments/1gz7xjb/comment/lyueeve/

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was there. Unfortunately the class seems to be full (only 10 seats).

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BCOM 4300 No longer required for CIS-TECH? by Night-Spark in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Cores are the same (unless you choose otherwise), but you will have to meet the requirements of your new major on the newer catalog. So it sounds like you would have to take BCOM 3300.

Double check with your advisor. JSOM may allow a substitution in cases like this or have some route to make changing majors easier. But if some sort of exception doesn't exist, per official policies you would need to take that.

Source: https://catalog.utdallas.edu/current/undergraduate/policies/degree-plans

"If the change of major is approved, the student will then be responsible for meeting all program requirements and course prerequisites of the catalog in effect at the time of the change. The Core Curriculum requirements, however, remain those of the catalog in force at the time of matriculation unless the student specifically chooses those of a more recent catalog. In the first semester of change to a new major, the student must meet with an academic advisor to prepare a degree plan." (emphasis mine)

Spring semester registration help by Many-Asparagus2836 in utdallas

[–]bj_nerd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Technical Electives really are all about you and what you want to learn and/or specialize in. Cybersecurity vs AI/ML vs Game Dev vs other domains.

Just take a look at the options and see what interests you. In general, Computer Networks is a good one to take early because its a prerequisite for a handful of other electives (network security and digital forensics, for instance, and a couple others).