I saw the smart phones in the slides at the beginning and was like wait a minute . This was 7 years ago and yeah my phone looked like that wow we came such a long way. I learned a lot from this ted talk
Where is the support for the claim that "we need everyone to be fluent in computing" and "computing is the new literacy?" Why, exactly do we need this again? How exactly does knowing how to write code help a doctor or lawyer do their job? We specialize in different jobs for a reason. During the industrial revolution, did everyone learn how to smelt iron? No, because just because it affected everyone's lives, doesn't mean everyone had to play a direct role in the process.
I enjoy Ted talks but we really need to get beyond this pathological fixation with disparity. There are differences all over the world that’s what makes life interesting. Expecting computer science enrollment to reflect the population is like expecting the NBA to reflect the population. Most of the population can’t dunk, is less than 6ft tall, and isn’t interested sports. Same with computer science, you can tell everyone to start coding and offer more classes that’s great. It’s like taking theater classes. But the reality is that only a certain segment of society is going to commit to coding as a profession and even less as a hobby. That’s a good thing. There’s a lot of subjects to explore, there’s more to life than chasing whatever the popular degree is.
I looked at some salary statistics and engineering was scoring pretty low, Software engineering was so so. you think that has anything to do with what people choose what to study? I even know people that have re-educated themselves from software engineering to become plumber or electricians, why? better paid and 8-16 work hours. Don't get me wrong CS is great but as a career. . . companies seems to make a real effort to make it unattractive.
I don't understand what you mean. According to Amazon, as seen in the link below, Software engineers are one of the most suaght after jobs around. Not only that, in a survey from a 2015 survey from business insider, its also a reasoably well paying job, at 100k a year. And that is right out of a 4 year university. you can make much more with a higher level of learning. www.amazon.jobs/en/job_categories/software-development?base_query=&loc_query=&job_count=10&result_limit=10&sort=relevant&category%5B%5D=software-development&cache www.amazon.jobs/en/job_categories/software-development?base_query=&loc_query=&job_count=10&result_limit=10&sort=relevant&category%5B%5D=software-development&cache
DeathNote9006 could be that in the US you can get better paid. us usually lead the trends. but where I'm from csharp leads to not great paid jobs with a lot of expected overtime.
Yes. In the US, demand for software engineers because of how much tech and innovation there is is insatiable. In other countries, that's definitely less so. A new graduate in Silicon Valley could easily make $200k in total compensation from some companies, though of course the salaries are this high in part because the cost of living + rent is very high as well.
In México CS is a well paid job considering average salary from other carreers, around 40k a year, considering living here is way cheaper than living in USA, and the average salary in the country for all carreers is around 4k
I saw the smart phones in the slides at the beginning and was like wait a minute . This was 7 years ago and yeah my phone looked like that wow we came such a long way. I learned a lot from this ted talk
This guy is amazing
1:31 I bet you this guy had been having nightmares with those senators interrogating Mark Zuckerberg
Added to our conference keynotes playlist. :)
Such a great video!!! :)
Where is the support for the claim that "we need everyone to be fluent in computing" and "computing is the new literacy?" Why, exactly do we need this again? How exactly does knowing how to write code help a doctor or lawyer do their job? We specialize in different jobs for a reason. During the industrial revolution, did everyone learn how to smelt iron? No, because just because it affected everyone's lives, doesn't mean everyone had to play a direct role in the process.
Dang plans cancelled
Yay sylvia find me!!!!
I enjoy Ted talks but we really need to get beyond this pathological fixation with disparity. There are differences all over the world that’s what makes life interesting. Expecting computer science enrollment to reflect the population is like expecting the NBA to reflect the population. Most of the population can’t dunk, is less than 6ft tall, and isn’t interested sports.
Same with computer science, you can tell everyone to start coding and offer more classes that’s great. It’s like taking theater classes. But the reality is that only a certain segment of society is going to commit to coding as a profession and even less as a hobby. That’s a good thing. There’s a lot of subjects to explore, there’s more to life than chasing whatever the popular degree is.
I came here to be inspired, instead I got politics and equity.
I looked at some salary statistics and engineering was scoring pretty low, Software engineering was so so. you think that has anything to do with what people choose what to study? I even know people that have re-educated themselves from software engineering to become plumber or electricians, why? better paid and 8-16 work hours. Don't get me wrong CS is great but as a career. . . companies seems to make a real effort to make it unattractive.
I don't understand what you mean. According to Amazon, as seen in the link below, Software engineers are one of the most suaght after jobs around. Not only that, in a survey from a 2015 survey from business insider, its also a reasoably well paying job, at 100k a year. And that is right out of a 4 year university. you can make much more with a higher level of learning.
www.amazon.jobs/en/job_categories/software-development?base_query=&loc_query=&job_count=10&result_limit=10&sort=relevant&category%5B%5D=software-development&cache
www.amazon.jobs/en/job_categories/software-development?base_query=&loc_query=&job_count=10&result_limit=10&sort=relevant&category%5B%5D=software-development&cache
DeathNote9006 could be that in the US you can get better paid. us usually lead the trends. but where I'm from csharp leads to not great paid jobs with a lot of expected overtime.
Yes. In the US, demand for software engineers because of how much tech and innovation there is is insatiable. In other countries, that's definitely less so. A new graduate in Silicon Valley could easily make $200k in total compensation from some companies, though of course the salaries are this high in part because the cost of living + rent is very high as well.
In México CS is a well paid job considering average salary from other carreers, around 40k a year, considering living here is way cheaper than living in USA, and the average salary in the country for all carreers is around 4k