I recently decided to go back to school and get a job in the tech industry. I’m looking at cyber security but I’m not looked into that decision.
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What degree would you recommend someone to pursue?
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What field would you recommend after graduating?
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What would you tell someone to avoid at all cost?
No one else can tell you what you should pursue. I didn’t know what I did or didn’t like until I tried a few things and figured out what aspects of them I like and what aspects were not for me. For instance, I don’t like frontend programming and I absolutely hate dealing with external clients. I do something more like data engineering, which a lot of people find deadly boring but I find perfectly satisfactory.
The other thing that’s been really important to me is decoupling my career from my self-worth. My job is not the most important thing about me. My job is something I do so I can get paid enough to do the things I actually want to do. I don’t need to LOVE my job. I need to like it enough to mostly not dislike having to do it 40 hours a week. For me this means I don’t find the work boring, I work with nice people, I mostly don’t have to do things I HATE (e.g. client presentations), and I’m not doing anything that conflicts with my values (e.g. I wouldn’t work on blockchain, or law enforcement projects).
I’ve been in tech for 30 years now and this is the really key advice. I’ve know several people who were very good developers but fundamentally do not like the process of software development. And they are completely miserable because of that. It’s great if you can find a job you love working at but that requires a lot of luck. Having a job you generally enjoy and it gives you enough money to do the hobbies that you really love then you are doing great.
On what degree to get, most of the time, outside of your first or second job, if a company cares about your degree more than your work experience then they are probably not somewhere you want to work.
All that said, anything security related will stay relevant as will as cloud system admins/engineers/architects. If you want a tech role that will last, doing something that is about designing and maintaining systems rather low-level implementation will server you a lot better.
Also, @funnyletter@lemmy.one what are you talking about? Blockchain is super useful for money laundering and blackmail and committing fraud and bribery and and… ok maybe not the best area to try and build a career in.
I know someone who’s company were dealing in payments and they were being targeted by persistent DDoS attacks, hacking attempts, and even supply chain attacks (received modified hardware).
No ransom were made. If you read the articles about the biggest DDoS attacks CloudFlare had mitigated last year? That was them.
The attackers had found when they took down their services banks would go to a fallback solution and not require 3D-secure. When they were down - they could buy bitcoins with stolen credit cards.
And this was their day-job. Attacks occurred basically for 8 hours a day, five days a week. They would take holidays, both seasonal and four to five weeks of summer holidays.
So clearly, fully possible to build a career in.
I should note that when the objective was understood they talked to their bank clients, explained the MO and they all shut down their fallback solutions.
I’m older, so I’m not looking to love my job or make a lot of money. I want something that I can be proud of and just like you, I will not sacrifice my values for money. Did that and I hated myself for it. I’m just looking for something that won’t take 10 years to have a good work/ life balance but also doesn’t have me suck dick behind the 7-11 to make rent.
I appreciate your comment, and I think it may be oversimplifying.
For example, it’s pretty universal that MSP’s should be avoided. And to be wary of businesses that push a “culture.”
I’d recommend looking at businesses that have a flexible WFH policy, or that are at the very least not pushing remote workers back into the office.
Agree 100% about Blockchain/crypto. I’m tempted to add AI to that list. It’s basically the new crypto-bro scam.
AI is at least useful in situations, unlike crypto. Though I am skeptical of how much more it will be able to do in the current form. Once it has more integrations into things other than chat and pictures I’ll be more interested. A way to find an optimal path through some work quickly should be the goal.
AI is the study of tasks where humans still outperform computers.
Once computers get better it’s just an algorithm.
People mistake LLM for general intelligence, but AI is such a buzzword.
Recently had a meeting outlining our business units current five year plan with our top executives (C-level). The amount of times AI was mentioned was ridiculous. The CEO even managed to suggest that “six years ago there was no AI”.
This is a company with a billion euro revenue, and you can play bullshit bingo in the executive meetings.
I do think that “AI” applications has much greater potential now than before, but that’s in part because of the availability of LLM’s and in part because of awareness of the field that ChatGPT has created.
It means we can now get funding to actually do a research project with an unknown outcome because the potential upside is 10x.
But using “AI” in business is certainly not new. The business intelligence people have been doing it for a good while, over a decade.
Not who you replied to, but could I know what "MSP"s are?
Managed Service Providers. Basically third party/outsourced IT for a corporation. Its where everyone involved sees IT as a cost to be eliminated likes its a necessary evil or something.