At my school MIS is more practical if you want to be able to work in general IT/Business type stuff. CS gives you more math, theory, and programming, and all of the CS people laugh at the MIS guys. I think CS is better for programming/developing/engineering side of IT. Also if you are thinking about continuing on to graduate school at all some of the upper level CS courses are great preparation for the master courses. I am also taking a minor in business so I get the practical stuff, just in case, without being a cheesy MIS major. If you don't like business a lot of the MIS stuff will be boring compared to the CS, and make sure you talk to the professors and skip as much of the lower division CS as you can if since you have 4 years experience.
Part of the telecommuting rules for my work stipulates the wifi security measure required when connecting from home.
1) WPA secured connection
2) Disable SSID broadcast
3) Enable MAC filtering
A new one I would add after the WPA crack, disable TKIP and only use AES encryption.
Before I started working from home I actually had left my wifi open for neighbors.
At my school MIS is more practical if you want to be able to work in general IT/Business type stuff. CS gives you more math, theory, and programming, and all of the CS people laugh at the MIS guys. I think CS is better for programming/developing/engineering side of IT. Also if you are thinking about continuing on to graduate school at all some of the upper level CS courses are great preparation for the master courses. I am also taking a minor in business so I get the practical stuff, just in case, without being a cheesy MIS major. If you don't like business a lot of the MIS stuff will be boring compared to the CS, and make sure you talk to the professors and skip as much of the lower division CS as you can if since you have 4 years experience.