Well, what do you want to do?
on
CS vs CIS
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· Score: 1
Do you plan on going to graduate school after you get your B(x) or do you just want to be done with school and jump into the work force? Do you want to want to dive into the workings of the beast like an EE, make the beast jump through hoops like a programer, or become a systems/database/network admin somewhere? If you don't want to take an engineering route or programing route, do the CIS.
I graduated May '99 with a CS/Math double major and am now working for a networking company. The number of times I've used any kind of higher math besides converting betwixt binary, hex, and decimal I can count on no hands. If I had known then networking was going to be my gig, I prolly would have taken the CIS route and maybe tacked on a math minor to prove I could add.;)
Do you plan on going to graduate school after you get your B(x) or do you just want to be done with school and jump into the work force? Do you want to want to dive into the workings of the beast like an EE, make the beast jump through hoops like a programer, or become a systems/database/network admin somewhere? If you don't want to take an engineering route or programing route, do the CIS. I graduated May '99 with a CS/Math double major and am now working for a networking company. The number of times I've used any kind of higher math besides converting betwixt binary, hex, and decimal I can count on no hands. If I had known then networking was going to be my gig, I prolly would have taken the CIS route and maybe tacked on a math minor to prove I could add. ;)