[rescue] Small servers (was Re: WTT: 1.5G of PC2700 for 1G of PC100)
Shannon Hendrix
shannon at widomaker.com
Tue May 13 12:03:58 CDT 2008
On May 8, 2008, at 11:45 , Robert Darlington wrote:
> One of the classic questions I put out for interviewees is "Do you
> work on your own car?"
Hopefully you are joking, since a lot of tinkerers don't work on their
own car.
Not everyone tinkers on the same things.
Plus, when my car is under warranty, tinkering voids the warranty.
:)
> I personally can't imagine going for a CS degree. It's incredibly
> boring, not very challenging (unless you count all the crap homework
> assignments),
That depends highly on the school you go to.
> and I really don't see much change in the field since
> Knuth laid the groundwork in his books in the 60s. In other words,
> it's not for me. (I'm going for EE currently, specializing in antenna
> design, fields and waves, and signal propagation -most likely boring
> to most!)
EE is one of the easiest degrees to get in some schools.
It depends heavily on where you go to school, and what use you make of
the facilities of course.
I took some EE courses in college, and found them easier than most of
my computer science classes because the engineering work was a lot
more pragmatic and the theory was far easier.
I actually like the "computer engineering" degree some schools offer,
but it was too late for me to switch by the time it came around to my
school.
If I got back to school (meaning, if I ever get the money) I'm not
totally sure what I'd go after. I'm just as likely to go for an
engineering degree or something as continue in computer science.
A lot depends on what they can offer me.
Of course, with $11-50 thousand dollars masters degree programs, I
don't know when I'll ever have the money, and going for a 4 year
engineering degree is pretty much impossible right now.
--
"Where some they sell their dreams for small desires."
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