Message from @Deleted User

Discord ID: 496149771204165642


2018-10-01 02:38:24 UTC  

Idk, I think if you have a plan and an actual passion, college works well. Also depending on where you live.

2018-10-01 02:38:36 UTC  

@Felix if you do something like wind turbine tech you can make good money with minimal cost.

2018-10-01 02:39:09 UTC  

That's interesting 🤔

2018-10-01 02:39:12 UTC  

Underwater welding is 6figure too.

2018-10-01 02:39:16 UTC  

It's survivorship bias, because the dumbasses just drop out. So, ya, obviously the ones that are left are gonna make big money, because they're big brain nibbas.

2018-10-01 02:39:23 UTC  

I'm a decent welder

2018-10-01 02:39:33 UTC  

Wind is a good bet. Solar is more dependent on rare minerals and therefore likely to fluctuate

2018-10-01 02:39:44 UTC  

I live in a place where school is incredibly cheap. You can get a degree from a 2 yr Uni for very cheap and instantly transferred to the nearby State school that is also very cheap and many times grt students hired straight out of graduation

2018-10-01 02:39:53 UTC  

There are schools for underwater welding @Felix In Tampa I think.

2018-10-01 02:40:24 UTC  

Solar install is like a yob that beans can undercut.

2018-10-01 02:40:40 UTC  

I've thought about solar power area or being a linemen

2018-10-01 02:40:47 UTC  

Wind turbine takes ballz

2018-10-01 02:40:57 UTC  

Lineman is excellent money.

2018-10-01 02:41:00 UTC  

I bet man..

2018-10-01 02:41:25 UTC  

And honestly, even if college *did* cause you to make more money, would it be worth it? Increases in income make a much bigger difference at lower starting incomes. Is it really worth living in poverty for 4 years just so you can make $70,000 instead of $60,000?

2018-10-01 02:41:31 UTC  

@Wotan Klan-GA I have a straight white male rural guy for HR now, its so much nicer to have after the gay boomer followed by the trans rights activist

2018-10-01 02:41:38 UTC  

I kinda want a job where I'm not coupped up in a office..

2018-10-01 02:41:43 UTC  

same

2018-10-01 02:41:51 UTC  

I probably shouldn't have chosen computer science

2018-10-01 02:42:02 UTC  
2018-10-01 02:42:03 UTC  

The more dangerous, the more money.

2018-10-01 02:42:08 UTC  

@Jacob depends on your debt load

2018-10-01 02:42:11 UTC  

CS is the most lucrative thing ever

2018-10-01 02:42:16 UTC  

@Jacob I did the exact same thing

2018-10-01 02:42:20 UTC  

I wish I had done ANY CS in school

2018-10-01 02:42:38 UTC  

underwater welding is dangerous as all hell

2018-10-01 02:42:40 UTC  

or just be non white and get in on "diversity" @ThisIsChris

2018-10-01 02:42:42 UTC  

@Felix If you do go, maybe do community college first and get an AA. Its easy to transfer and way cheaper.

2018-10-01 02:42:46 UTC  

in current year...

2018-10-01 02:42:51 UTC  

I dropped out to go into IT/devops. Im in charge of my entire dept at a small company rn making more than I would have made after going into physics research in either public or private sector

2018-10-01 02:42:55 UTC  

"Learn to code." we need a Dune style ban on A.I. non negotiable.

2018-10-01 02:43:22 UTC  

idk I don't have a lot of confidence in money making me much happier

2018-10-01 02:43:22 UTC  

Without a college degree or experience (besides a training course) my company hires fresh new programmers at 71k

2018-10-01 02:43:27 UTC  

For every Tay you're going to get thirty Zuckerbergs

2018-10-01 02:43:43 UTC  

@Jacob Money won't make you happy, I can attest to this personally.

2018-10-01 02:43:48 UTC  

if you have a masters in computer science from literally anywhere and one internship, then my company offers 125k starting

2018-10-01 02:43:59 UTC  

Money just masks underlying problems.

2018-10-01 02:44:01 UTC  

and my company doesn't even pay as well as most others

2018-10-01 02:44:23 UTC  

Hook it up @ThisIsChris 😁

2018-10-01 02:44:31 UTC  

ya but you have to live in New York

2018-10-01 02:44:42 UTC  

> tfw i have an art school degree, not CS <:sad:366743316475281408>