@darkin1484

CS Major - The Anime Opening.

Man just told u how to pass your training arc.

@fatimachaudhry4942

This video made me wanna take my life seriously

@aimankawsar

Great style of editing, the entire video felt like an anime opening

@stefan-eckhart

I was so frustrated with my OS course this semester and basically copied the assignments but seeing this I will revise it and prepare for the continuation next semester

@tawfiqmohammad7074

Banger video. College is the best opportunity you’ll ever have to learn these complex concepts.

@mahayahmed4567

CERTIFIED HOOD CLASSIC

@equinox-XVI

Learning assembly in college rn. This is hard as sh*t and we're still only doing the easy stuff. Needless to say I'll be back in the same class next semester, but my view on assembly has changed radically.

I used to look at it with dread at how much code I would have to write (and I still hate that part) but I've come to appreciate how free you are to do almost anything you want in assembly. I'm not reliant on the specific features of coding languages anymore. I can tell the computer exactly where I want it to put that 2. I control when the operating system is called upon, and I can move the individual bits of numbers as I so please. Its a lot work, but the end result is extremely empowering. I'll be back next semester and I plan to use this knowledge to demolish this class. Call it a late power trip if you will, but I worked my butt off now, so I'm about to have some fun later.

@jadenruan8997

Some good points just want to point out correlation does not equal causation. People who take these harder classes are likely self motivated and thus have things outside of class they are doing to help them land these big name jobs/internships.

@branm5459

When I started my major, the beginner/intermediate courses were alright, but I still didn't know what to do. 

Then I took low-level programming and my operating systems classes and discovered that I enjoy embedded systems like microcontrollers.

Now instead of wanting to die making react webpages, I want to die because I tried making an audio reactive wearable from scratch.

@jonathanwong7744

ML Engineer here. It’s competitive for general SWE and specialized positions as well. For specialized roles, you will likely need at least a graduate degree to pass a resume screening. Learn to be the best to get the job and stay in the industry. Your motivation must come from curiosity, not money.

@akialter

Enlightment is when you can de-abstract every single layer, starting from sand to what happen when I posted this comment

@AmeanAbdelfattah

When i was at my AS in Computer Science I could have taken it easy and take ez courses on my last semester. Instead I took Cal 3, Physics 2, and Differential Equations, all considered elective. I was thinking long term goals so I can focus on a concentration in my bachelors. Although it was years ago and I have work experience now, i am greatful i did that. Bc now i have so much options and directions without worrying about core requirements. Im not a straight A student nor am i from a really high end school. I failed more than I succeeded. But i never gave up.

@damianzoirbile

When he said "your gpa does not matter", and then me, "ok that what I need"

@BigBoiAlpha

just graduated with a degree in CS earlier this year and i’ll say this: when i took a difficult class i actually had to apply myself to it if i wanted to learn anything. when i took an easier class i learned a lot less because i didn’t have to try as hard. im wishing that i had taken more specialized classes as i probably would already have a job, im currently doing a part time job that i don’t particularly enjoy, but please PLEASE take advantage of the opportunity you have in college or whatever platform you’re learning through. I’m looking to go back to school after working for a while as that should allow me to have the opportunity to lock down some of these more advanced topics that i skimped out on before.

@AssasinsNLightBulbs

For new grads/juniors/college students, it's not about the knowledge you have. It's about presentation. Even if you specialize heavily into the theory behind a CS topic like ML, it won't matter if you can't get an interview. Companies won't waste time on you unless you catch their interest. That means becoming distinguishable from the crowd. 

In my opinion, taking a bunch of hard classes is not enough, especially if you aren't going to a top CS school. You have to go out of your way to make yourself noticeable. Solve interesting problems, and show off your solutions to companies and recruiters. 

Get your foot in the door, and everything becomes much easier.

@codeapprentice5123

When I started programming I started with web dev but when I eventually started building ML and data projects I started having much more fun, the more technical and mathy it got the more fun I started to have

@Dainesz

Fire AF video! I was the one that kind of skimped out a bit on harder classes like C or C++ along with data structures and algorithms. Wish I could go back and take those classes, but now I just need to lock in and learn the languages myself and how to use them to the most potential I can while also learning about algorithms. So far I've been enjoying the journey!

@newbie8051

Everything matters in the long run, life is a mix of unknown variables, you don't know which one affects a life decision, or which one closes doors for you

Keep working hard, you'll surely be better than your past

@ralkros681

Meanwhile discrete math is absolutely kicking my (entire class) ass 😢

@kevinpr.z

Commenting to be more conscious of the videos I watch. Great advice.