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Wall Street's Collapse Is Computer Science's Gain

dcblogs writes "Thanks to Wall Street's implosion, the chairman of Stanford University's Computer Science Department says he is seeing more interest from students in computer science. Ditto at Boston College. Computer science enrollments crashed after the dot-com bust as students turned to hedge fund majors. And are computer science grads getting jobs? The professor at one university program that graduates about 45 students a year with CS degrees, wrote in a comment: 'Last year 87% of our seniors were employed before graduation. The median starting salary was $58,500. A majority of CIS students had multiple job offers. From where I sit, there is a huge demand for entry level IT professionals in IS and in CS.'"

33 of 435 comments (clear)

  1. bust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Computer science enrollments crashed after the dot-com bust

    Busts can spoil a career in any field, really.

  2. Damnit!!! by vertinox · · Score: 5, Funny

    Here I was finally thinking I'd get a raise this year because of labor shortage!

    Listen kids, there is no future in IT. Plumbers and lawyers is where it is at.

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    1. Re:Damnit!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ... and hookers!

    2. Re:Damnit!!! by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Mod parent insightful:

      If the US legalized prostitution and drugs but heavily regulated and taxed them, then our country would have so damn much money that a war here or a housing bust there wouldn't matter! :)

    3. Re:Damnit!!! by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...a war here or a housing bust there

      Too high to go to war, and excess housing converted to hookerterias?
      I nominate Ethanol-fueled as the Happy Fun Time party presidential candidate.

      A vote for HFT is a vote for fiscal responsibility.

    4. Re:Damnit!!! by nem75 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I don't know if you intended to, but you more or less quoted Frank Zappa.

      I'll give you a simple formula for straightening out the problems of the United States. First, you tax the churches. You take the tax off of capital gains and the tax off of savings. You decriminalize all drugs and tax them same way as you do alcohol. You decriminalize prostitution. You make gambling legal. That will put the budget back on the road to recovery, and you'll have plenty of tax revenue coming in for all of your social programs, and to run the army.

    5. Re:Damnit!!! by Ortega-Starfire · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The economy, I do not think you realize just how big it is. Realize that we could end up triggering a global depression in the next couple months if the politicians in power right now fuck it up.

      Bushism: "This sucker could go down."

      This time he's right. We've had bank runs in H.K., U.K., Tokyo, the U.S.A., and a complete market shutdown in Russia. We managed to fuck up the world, and we managed it not through wars for oil or failure to legalize and tax certain things, but with the best intentions in the world, to make sure everyone could have a goddam house.

      On the bright side, now that a deal has been made in Washington, we just might be able to hold of global total systemic economic failure.

      But do us and everyone you know a favor: If you live in the USA, vote every current politician in your area out of office.

      Republican, Democrat, or random, they all fucked up on this watch. Get some untainted blood into power, that at least for a short time, people might focus on doing the right thing rather than re-election.

      --
      ---- Liquid was a patriot ----
    6. Re:Damnit!!! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Not really. The numbers I've seen from legalizing drugs would only boost US Revenue by about 20-30 billion per year.

      That's 1/10th our peacetime defense budget. Not really a ton of money.

    7. Re:Damnit!!! by Gyga · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How much would be saved on police work? Without a prohibition like policy there would be less criminal activity surrounding drugs.

      --
      I don't preview or spellcheck.
    8. Re:Damnit!!! by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      collecting taxes on the un-sanctioned/black/gray market activities will mean you're still fighting the same exact battles as we are today.

      Exactly - just look at alcohol.. why the number of gin-runners and speakeasies is through the roof since the lifting of prohibition..

      err, wait.

  3. passionless technician by Speare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It always depresses me to see how many college students have no idea who they are, and just float about on the breeze of the moment, going for the buck instead of what they already see a passion for doing. They weren't reflecting upon their lives as a teenager, they weren't deciding what makes their hearts go faster, they were just assuming that someday their Fairy Career Mother would pop out of a cloud to tell them what they should do for the next forty years.

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    1. Re:passionless technician by areusche · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have an intense passion in classical music. Yet I want the ability to travel the world and support a life style that is atypical to that of a musician.

      Passion vs lifestyle. It isn't as easy as it sounds

      .

    2. Re:passionless technician by SoapBox17 · · Score: 4, Funny

      [citation needed]

      You put a whole lot of numbers in there, I'm betting there's a 77% chance you pulled at least 42% of them right out of your ass.

    3. Re:passionless technician by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I completely agree! When I was a kid, I knew I'd be a scientist one day - I just couldn't imagine otherwise. I am lucky I found my passion early on, and it never let me go, never. Being a scientist sucks bigtime if we look at salary, job security or social standing. But it's what I enjoy, and wouldn't want it any other way.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    4. Re:passionless technician by Gazzonyx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, but as a life long geek and software development major, I find that these kids are the best kind of competition. Seriously, I know a bunch of kids that just don't have a passion for CS, and I can run circles around them just from experiences I've had messing around as a kid. When it gets to the harder subject matter (SPARC ASM, anyone?), they just can't compete unless they've got a passion for the subject. Passion will get you further than talent any day of the week.

      We'd all be nuts to be in this line of business if we didn't love it... software bugs, technologies that change every few weeks, drinking from the firehose, late night server rebuilds, weekend bug hunts, the expectation to show up at 9am when our brains don't start working until noon, and chasing vendors away from the PHB before they give him any bright ideas... for me, personally, it's all worth it when I have a day or two when I can just dominate some code; when it flows off my fingers with poetic form. Everything else sucks, but it's the price for getting paid to write some awesome code, or design a new network, or whatever part of IT that you do and have passion for.

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    5. Re:passionless technician by timholman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It always depresses me to see how many college students have no idea who they are, and just float about on the breeze of the moment, going for the buck instead of what they already see a passion for doing. They weren't reflecting upon their lives as a teenager, they weren't deciding what makes their hearts go faster, they were just assuming that someday their Fairy Career Mother would pop out of a cloud to tell them what they should do for the next forty years.

      You're seeing the consequences of the modern philosophy that "every child should go to college", and the resulting dismantling of high school vocational education programs throughout the U.S. Based on my personal observations, I'd say that about half the freshmen entering college every year have no business being there. They have no clue why they're on campus (beyond the fact that everyone said they should be), they have no idea what they want to do after they graduate, and if they don't drop out they eventually switch to the easiest major they can find, even if that major has zero job prospects and doesn't interest them in the least. The college experience becomes just a four year extension of high school, but with more sex, drugs, and alcohol.

      I would much prefer re-establishing strong vocational education programs that would take those directionless 18-year olds and give them a job. Let them grow up a little and decide what they want to do with their lives, and then (if they find a professional career passion) let them enroll in university programs designed for older students.

    6. Re:passionless technician by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It always depresses me to see how many college students have no idea who they are, and just float about on the breeze of the moment, going for the buck instead of what they already see a passion for doing.

      And this is different from before in what particular way? It's always been like this - the few, the proud, the vast majority of largely clueless. The best "we" (the few, the proud, the idiots who sit on slashdot on Sunday) can do is to support anybody that doesn't fall into the big trap of life.

      Kill your television.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    7. Re:passionless technician by 4D6963 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't mean to sound like a hippie, but I'd blame it as a side effect of consumerism. What I mean by that is that as an effect of consumerism, people's goal in life is to become rich, rather than have a great career or reach any other sort of goal. Personal achievements are replaced by monetary and material gain, and what you have supersedes what you do or who you are. You are only as successful a person as how much money you make. People would do the dumbest job in the world if it paid well.

      I think it has to do with the fact that people genuinely believe that their goal in life is to become rich, have fun, good sex, then a wife, kids, all of which are supposed to make you a happy and accomplished man, or so they think. The Los Angeles mentality prevails, satisfy your basest instincts, make money, use it as a leverage to satisfy your basest instincts more, produce offsprings, die.

      In this context, genuinely caring about anything else makes you a "nerd" or "geek", which, seen under that angle, is actually a great thing to be. It's just a shame that our culture raises people to produce as much wealth as possible and nothing else. Actually I'm pretty sure you can interpret the movie Matrix as a critique of consumerism, in which people, being in the movie used as batteries, are in our real life money-making "batteries".

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    8. Re:passionless technician by ericlondaits · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I make a living as a programmer... and do acting, singing, and cooking as well but not professionaly.

      I don't want to live as an actor, struggling to pay the rent by doing bit pieces and commercials, nor the equivalent work as a musician, nor busting my ass in 14 hour days in a commercial kitchen... yet I somewhat enjoy a good programmer's grunt work. But certainly, I'd love to be able to have my same lifestyle by acting, singing or cooking and just program as a hobby.

      I'm thankful that my ability to program allows me to partake in other activities without the pressure of making money out of them.

      --
      As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
    9. Re:passionless technician by blahplusplus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Yeah, but as a life long geek and software development major, I find that these kids are the best kind of competition. Seriously, I know a bunch of kids that just don't have a passion for CS, and I can run circles around them just from experiences I've had messing around as a kid."

      Have you ever considered most kids don't have access to an environment that allows them to grow? Have you ever considered their talents will bloom with age? i.e. is their mind ripe for the task at hand, in terms of development and maturity?

      When I was a kid I needed guidance, I wasted a lot of years because the place I grew up was a small town filled with christian fundies, not the brightest bunch in the drawer. Not only that most teachers don't even have a clue what has been discovered in the neurological sciences over the last 30 years and how it undermines the enlightenments view of reason and enlightenment's view of education. Most people still operate under the enlightenment's view of reason

      (quick version)
      http://i35.tinypic.com/10fruxh.jpg

      Longer version:
      http://www.linktv.org/video/2142

      This idea that kids can be forced to develop is due to mistaken ideas of how reasoning works and how people's bodies biologically develop over time. No one understands fully what reason is, and how it works, not mathematicians, not scientists, not anyone right now, that is for certain.

      "When it gets to the harder subject matter (SPARC ASM, anyone?), they just can't compete unless they've got a passion for the subject. Passion will get you further than talent any day of the week."

      Passion can only take you so far, a retarded kid with a lot of passion will not get to the same place as someone who hates their job but has incredible ability and can focus and keep on task.

      The truth is they both matter, you have to have some amount of ability and some amount of passion. Passion can make up for some lack of ability, and ability can make up for some lack of passion.

      It still comes down to discipline whether you love your job or not, what drives a person to work hard and learn.

  4. hoax by nomadic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Employment rates at graduation are often incredibly skewed. Frequently only those with jobs will report the fact; a lot of people who still haven't found one won't. I picked the law school I went to partially based on its "percentage employed 6 months after graduation" number, plus it's median salary number. It wasn't until I graduated that I realized how fake the number was.

    If I had to do it all over again I'd probably major in pharmacy. Good money, good job security, good hours.

    1. Re:hoax by Bicx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My dad is a pharmacist. My 18-year-old brother considered becoming a pharmacist as well, but my dad discouraged him from it. Basically pharmacy has become largely about quality assurance (aka "sign off on this please", medicare management, and a bunch of bureaucratic paperwork. If you're entering the field of pharmacy because you love the chemistry behind it and enjoy the scientific aspects, you may be disappointed. My dad has a degree in chemistry and pharmacy, so I have a feeling he is a little disappointed with the changes over the years.

  5. Do to Computer Science, what they did to Wall St. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Funny

    Look on the bright side, we'll get a bailout in a couple of years

    Yee-Haw!

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  6. Re:Problems... by hackus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well,

          Everything isn't that bad. Really. I think the assumption of either a senior admin position or a entry level stuff is too simplistic of a analysis of our industry.

          There are lots of in betweens. Right now being 42, and about the middle of my career I am going back to school to finish all my degree work. I accomplished everything I wanted to do and now have on my resume the entire ball of wax, from admin to CIO.

    I just do not have the degree work which I want.

          On the weekends I put in VoIP systems for lawyers and doctors offices using sipxpbx. (That includes all of the nuances of reprogramming the network routers or installing routers that can do QoS). I can do a lot more, including coding middleware (apache axis), and also write backends for a lot of websites (servlets).

          But the point is, I am sure an industrious college grad could figure out to do these things and the point there is to be flexible.

          I started my career and built upon becomming an expert in:

    1) Software Engineering (C++ and Java)
    2) Relational Databases
    3) Networking

        Set your sights on these areas, and try to study them and become competent so that you are flexible to address most opportunities that come your way.

    If you cannot find a job, hit the pavement and cold call companies. I do it all the time, and it works!

    So if a old 42 year old geezer can do it, so can you.

    Finally, I think most people who enter the computer field think that it is like any other job, where you can just graduate and then start a job and just treat it like any other invocation.

    You have to continually learn, which means interrupting your career like I am doing to go back to school.

    If that prospect is daunting, you might not like CS as a career (I.T.). If you do not continually improve yourself you become fairly useless fairly quickly.

    So instead of playing games all evening or watching TV when you get home, start cracking the books guy. :-)

    -Hack

    --
    Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
  7. I Doubt It by Comatose51 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Finance is one of the biggest consumers of IT and development resources. My first job out of college was at a hedge fund as a IT developer. Many people don't realize that finance is heavily computer and information driven these days. The days of people working on gut feeling is dying out. At the hedge fund, there was only two traders who actually traded in financial instruments. The rest of the non-support people were analysts who came up with strategies based on models and information provided to them by quants and programmed into their infrastructure by CS people. Their infrastructure was maintained by IT people.

    My point is that finance going downhill is bad for IT and CS because that's one of the most information driven sectors outside of software and hire a lot of CS people out of college.

    --
    EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
  8. Do You Really Want Those People? by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    2007: "IT? That's sooo 2000! They all lost their jobs in the dot-com bust! Finance is where it's at!"

    2008: "Finance? That's sooo 2007! They all lost their jobs in the Wall Street bust! IT is where it's at!"

    Do you really want those people?

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  9. 'entry level' by sohp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since at least the dot-com era and maybe before, there's been a demand for entry-level software developers. It's the subject of Steve McConnell's essay Orphans Preferred. Companies like pulling cheap labor from colleges and grinding the people down until they either burn out or get wise and fight back at the bullshit, at which point the company replaces the burnouts and malcontents with the next wave of suckers.

  10. I don't think so. by CAIMLAS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A gain in college CS programs is not a net gain for the field of CS.

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but most of the actual beneficial gains in CS have not been made due to substantially increased student CS populations, or even as a corollary. Yes, it's had it's part in small breakthroughs, but in my eyes a lot of those small breakthroughs haven't brought on strictly by academia, and a lot of the big breakthroughs have been pushed by corporations - again, not academia. Seems academia has been largely "me too, let's do what's hot in business" when it comes to CS for the past decade+.

    And it certainly can not help the CS graduates themselves. More CS graduates means lower wages. There's already a hardly any "computer science" related jobs out there, even in academia. Sure, there's business programming out in the corporate world, but those wages would also decrease

    There are already too many people who want to work in IT/CS and have the degree, but are unable to do so due to the glut of IT workers. This is just going ot make it worse for recent grads.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  11. Re:You forgot something by British · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sadly, you are right. I'm on sqaforums.com, and 99% of the threads posted there are n00bs from India asking people to do their job for them. It seems a high percentage of people there don't want to learn on their own and figure out things. A lot of them just grasp on to buzzwords and ask vague questions about various qa test tools. Guess I should find a different forum. :)

  12. This is stupid by elnyka · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Actually, this is fucking disgusting.

    We do not need more tards in Computer Science. Even after the down-turn after the dot.com bust, we got these people who can't for their fucking life understand what a pointer is, writing the crappiest code everywhere they go.

    We need quality, not quantity. The more we get tards who just go and graduate into something because it's "the next thing in getting $$$", the lesser the quality of work being performed.

    Ugh.

  13. It's built into banking. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    but with the best intentions in the world, to make sure everyone could have a goddam house.

    Oh rubbish, the only intention is to make money (literally). The debt spiral has to increase exponentially (Running at 10%+ per year) to survive. That means selling debt to exponentially more people each year. Eventually, you have to find a way to persuade everyone to take on debt. How?

    Tulips?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulip_mania

    A good time had by all; The Roaring Twenties?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roaring_Twenties

    This time it was housing in America. In fact, it's irrelevant. The real cause is the fundamental nature of bank credit. When you take out a loan, new money is created, this new money "boosts" the economy, the stock markets. It's really mostly inflation. But along with the money, which doesn't change, you also get debt, which increases exponentially. So there is a boom which has to be followed by a bust, the longer the boom, the bigger the bust and to continue the boom, more and more people have to take out new loans... Remind you of anything?

    Eventually you run out of people... And it crashes anyway... You even read about it in the newspapers, they're giving loans to people who have no income... WTF? ... If you've read any Austrian economics, you can see the crash coming a mile off.

     

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    Deleted
  14. Computer Science's Gain by nick_davison · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you mean "loss."

    The dotcom boom brought about massive numbers of totally disinterested programmers who were only there for the perception of the money it was supposed to bring them and were thus only as good as a minimally passing grade required them to be.

    Worse, fairweather career chasers are always stuck behind the curve. It takes a couple of years for the media to pick up on a starting boom. Then it takes them four years to get the degree based qualification (admittedly less to get the MCSEs etc. that then got such a terrible reputation). That means they usually manage to turn up right around the end of any given boom... or often a little after... and bitch about how much they hate this career that was supposed to be an easy way out for them, all the while taking the few remaining jobs from the people who do want to be there.

    Combine terrible "just enough to qualify" attitudes, diluting overall quality, and creating a massive imbalance of supply over demand when the field's hurting the worst, pushing salaries even lower... and I left wondering if there's a single way computer science actually gains, as opposed to loses, from these people?

    Yes, Wall Street has had them for the last little over half a decade. And the sickening little idiots have leeched everything out of that market and crashed it around their own ears. They were also there, en masse, in the real estate industry. You remember the raging a-holes who figured they'd get BMWs and a huge paycheck out of raping anyone who wanted to buy a home during a housing boom.

    Please, for the love of everything holy, nerdy, or whatever you subscribe to... don't encourage them back in to our field.

    Go out to schools, colleges, career fairs...

    Tell them all about the long hours of unpaid overtime. Tell them all about management that doesn't get technical reality. Tell them about the stresses. Tell them about how tough the lean years were after the dotcom boom and how that's a cycle that will keep coming back.

    Then carefully only talk up the parts that'll appeal to those with a genuine love. Tell them about how they will get the latest IDEs and graphics suites paid for. Tell them how they'll get the satisfaction of seeing their own name in the back of a game manual. Tell them how their embedded code could end up, admittedly unheralded, saving lives in some critical application.

    But, for the love of God, don't make the mistake of thinking fairweather career chasers are something we want back in the industry.

  15. Re:Still a lot of money by Endymion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1) You cannot force people to change. Fascist techniques like forced rehab are good at costing a lot of people a lot of money, but do not have good success rates at actually enacting change. The bald assumption that throwing someone into rehab will magically make them change their life is stark ignorance at best.

    2) Forcing a huge taboo onto drug use most certainly has the effect of reducing the amount of people in any sort of rehab program. If you are worried about getting the book thrown at you and such, you are not likely to volunteer to get help even if you wanted to. It is of paramount importance to actively make people that actually do seek help feel comfortable in doing so - they are the ones that you have the best chance of changing.

    3) Sudafed... you do realize that's mostly propaganda, right? Real drug chemists don't do nickel-and-dime stuff like boxes of sudafed. They go for much simpler bulk reagents, like any chemist.

    4) You talk about "societal costs". But do you really think that people that want drugs have any difficulty in getting them now? Is the only think keeping you from going out and doing heroin the illegality of the chemical? Of course not. So the people that really want to are already getting all the drugs they want, just through unreliable and less safe means. So you are already paying any "societal costs". At worst, they would stat the same as they are now. At best, the reduction in taboo may allow some people to get help if the want it, and the safer supply will eliminate many of the supply-side problems associated with "drug use". This can only improve.

    5) And this is the big one: Making drugs illegal hinges on a fatally false assumption - that making something illegal actually reduces it's occurrence. This was obviously not true with alcohol, and is obviously not true for any other drug out there. Given that basic economic forces will happen any time there is a demand for something, we, as society, have a very important choice to make: "Who do we want to produce the supply that will inevitably meet the ever-present demand". Here, we have three choices: Private Industry, Public (government) Production, or Organized Crime.

    Personally, as a small-government loving citizen, I like the Private Industry option, but really... I'd gladly take either Public or Private production over handing all the profits over to organized crime like we are doing now! Are you seriously telling me that you want to hand the entire multi-billion-dollar industry of illegal drugs to the mafias of the world? So they can have the profit instead of legitimate organizations? Remember, you don't get to skip out on this question. By saying you want to keep drugs illegal, you are saying you want to hand profit to the mob.

    Note: none of this says that we have to make drugs something you pick up at the corner 7-11. You can have legal business and still regulate the industries, much like we do now with tobacco and alcohol. There are many options we can explore there.

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