Message from @Kaytee
Discord ID: 389954827347689484
i dont want to imagine the "pure" math of things
@Droidbot go for it
do you like that doe?
i kinda just wanna audit some classes
just to expans my skillset and have _something_ a little stronger than certs to try and weasel into recommendations with
in my case i want to do a PhD in mechatronics to combined mechanical engineering with electrical/computer engineering parts. I say i should have studied comp. but whatever. Mechanical engineering was not bad by any means
CS is a meme degree, do an engineering degree and learn to code on the side if you wanna work in a field like that
past the super undergrad cs minor tier stuff CS is basically just philisopy pretending to be math
hell if i were to go back to uni and finish i'd probably just go for a phil major and minor in something "more practical"
How do majors and minors work though
I'm a bong so I don't understand that stuff
you have to take a couple slightly more advanced classes for a major
here, it's generally one subject only
a minor is a cut down version of the same program
i think minors are a meme
here in mechanical engineering they offer us the aerospace minor
i dont think is really worth it
here aerospace eng is its own major
so is electromechanical
if sports science can be a degree
it's really cool shit
@Kaytee nice
here we only have the classic engineerings
mechanical, computer, electrical, chemical and civil
in a way the university was cheap so
in a way that's why i want to do the PhD
to specialize
also stem people laugh at polsci and sociology but don't even understand how fkn mathy that shit is
also i like knowledge so
makes your cs degree look like you could fail algebra in middle school and be fine
@Kaytee kek
i thought CS was serious shit
cs really doesn't have you doing much math tbh
it's its own thing and i see it related more closely to philosophy than maths
I have heard if you dont do CS on the graduate level you have failed doe.. idk how right is that so
you're kinda just making really complex logical proofs with special computer syntax
on graduate CS?
cs in general
it feels way more like undergrad phil than undergrad maths
less reading about historical figures i guess