- Feb 10, 2008
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I tell most people.. Internships.. I didnt have the best gpa but most people want experience.. a couple companies will pick up the 3.8+ GPA's for status quo though.
My GPA was about 3.8, but my degree program was a joke.
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I tell most people.. Internships.. I didnt have the best gpa but most people want experience.. a couple companies will pick up the 3.8+ GPA's for status quo though.
ouch.. that sucks.. my program was "okay" it could have been more career driven and hands on but they were too "theory" like for me.. so even though i learned things courses alone wouldnt have prepped me for the "real world". but at my school companies would pick the highest gpa guys train them and give them HIGH paying jobs for status quo.My GPA was about 3.8, but my degree program was a joke.
ouch.. that sucks.. my program was "okay" it could have been more career driven and hands on but they were too "theory" like for me.. so even though i learned things courses alone wouldnt have prepped me for the "real world". but at my school companies would pick the highest gpa guys train them and give them HIGH paying jobs for status quo.
dtb00201 technet Microsoft has some virtual labs where you can practice active directory on windows server 2012
Yep.. Sounds like good ole college right there.. They want you to remember every page in the book and in the real world, you work as a team. You ask for help.. You build things with others.. its teamwork not bookwork..lolWe did some hands on, but 99% of the time we were just quizzed on definitions and if you could memorize them. I went in with very basic knowledge and left maybe slightly better than when I started. Like I said it was my fault for not digging deeper into it while in school, though. BTW does anyone have any good resources for teaching yourself active directory? I'm looking for some help desk jobs and haven't really done anything with AD other than brief overviews a few years ago. I'd like to brush up before getting a new job.
What are the job duties?3 weeks of being a BI reporting developer. Enjoying it so far
still too much for me.. i have people there.. F that traffic and that HYPED up Cost of Living..
60K is more than enough. Most people get an apartment with roommates or live with their parents for the first few years. With a roomate you wouldn't be paying more than $500-$600/month on rent. There are places to live outside of DC seems like people forget that lol. Your commute also depends on where you live. I drive 30mins to work and 45mins home after work with traffic.
Man I missed doing BOXi Soo much.. that was the easiest crap ever... Do people still use that or is everyone 100% crystal now?
3 weeks of being a BI reporting developer. Enjoying it so far
$500 a month is too much? Thats nothing. IMO to make a lot money you have to be near a major city no way around it.
still too much for me.. i have people there.. F that traffic and that HYPED up Cost of Living..
No problem man CS is a great field and some people don't take advantage of the opportunities.
I think pushing back your graduation date is a bad idea. I have friends that graduated with
dtb00201 technet Microsoft has some virtual labs where you can practice active directory on windows server 2012
men should be aiming to live alone.. not go to a town making 60k and cant afford the 1.5k apartments (key word apartments).. average cost for rent here ranges from 600-1000 and thats the super rich uppity areas
$500 a month is too much? Thats nothing. IMO to make a lot money you have to be near a major city no way around it.
How much is rent is your area?
No problem man CS is a great field and some people don't take advantage of the opportunities.
I think pushing back your graduation date is a bad idea. I have friends that graduated with
Nothing wrong with having a roommate when you are 22. If you are aiming to live alone you have to start somewhere and save.
men should be aiming to live alone.. not go to a town making 60k and cant afford the 1.5k apartments (key word apartments).. average cost for rent here ranges from 600-1000 and thats the super rich uppity areas
I've been working in D.C for 2 years but live in Baltimore, been trying to get into the web development field, mostly front-end,
and back-end, I'm focusing on ruby. I was thinking about taking this boot-camp in Baltimore but they wanted 4300 or so and I
needed to buy a mac book air which is no problem but, I wasn't sure about their track record. Most boot-camps cost 10 times
more.
I make about 67k and still feel broke, I had to lower my 401k payments temporary to adjust my cost of living to see what's
costing me so much money. Oddly enough it's going out eating and drinking in Baltimore/D.C that's crazy expensive. I'm
lucky on rent at the present time.
Anyone have any experience with 12 week web development boot-camps? I'm really trying to get out of my current field
and into the web development work.
roomates are great when you know the person.. however even your best friend may or may not be as financially responsible as you all.. thats my only 0.02's but i agree.. CS degrees dont hold weight unless u got certs and know people.. most people now just want people to make them apps like they are gonna make a million dollars in the first year or something..lol
Nothing wrong with having a roommate when you are 22. If you are aiming to live alone you have to start somewhere and save.
You are just generalizing the area not all apartments cost that much, and not everyone is making 60K straight out I'm making close to 75K. With rent that low it can't be a big city unless its in the south.
Edit : All I'm saying is that relocating is a good thing and if that means you have to have a roommate so be it. Too many CS degrees going to waste, because the job market where people are from is not good. This is directed towards recent grads. Goodluck everybody !
DMV commutes are INSANE!!!... HOV (now HOT lanes).. and its a million cars on the road from the hours of 6-9am and 4-8pm..N to the O can do.You ever think about moving closer to DC? I know that commute has to be brutal. I'm in Largo and it's about a 30 minute metro ride.
You ever think about moving closer to DC? I know that commute has to be brutal. I'm in Largo and it's about a 30 minute metro ride.
This is me. Job market here is trash for recent grads (SC) & my location in SC makes it worse. :xNothing wrong with having a roommate when you are 22. If you are aiming to live alone you have to start somewhere and save.
You are just generalizing the area not all apartments cost that much, and not everyone is making 60K straight out I'm making close to 75K. With rent that low it can't be a big city unless its in the south.
Edit : All I'm saying is that relocating is a good thing and if that means you have to have a roommate so be it. Too many CS degrees going to waste, because the job market where people are from is not good. This is directed towards recent grads. Goodluck everybody !