psh, show me a 20 something year old that makes 6 figures and I will show you a code S championship winner
college is scary - Page 5
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Race is Terran
United States382 Posts
psh, show me a 20 something year old that makes 6 figures and I will show you a code S championship winner | ||
CecilSunkure
United States2829 Posts
On August 17 2013 02:58 Race is Terran wrote: psh, show me a 20 something year old that makes 6 figures and I will show you a code S championship winner I know a couple! | ||
3FFA
United States3931 Posts
On August 17 2013 02:58 Race is Terran wrote: psh, show me a 20 something year old that makes 6 figures and I will show you a code S championship winner I've heard of a few. It certainly isn't unheard of, if that is what you are suggesting. | ||
Race is Terran
United States382 Posts
On August 17 2013 03:34 3FFA wrote: I've heard of a few. It certainly isn't unheard of, if that is what you are suggesting. its not, i was just suggesting that it is as rare as a code S winner, its a needle in a haystack kinda thing | ||
Aerisky
United States12128 Posts
On August 17 2013 02:51 Snuggles wrote: Like many others have said this is just a discovery phase for you right now. Some people aren't even sure what they really want to do after college. Some people find out what they want to do way after they had decided their major, and it turned out to be something that wasn't even remotely related. You'll come to that point where you have your "Aha!" moment eventually and decide what to do in the next chapter of your life. Just remember though, time is precious. Make use of the time you've spent in college. I sure as hell dicked around too but I can at least look back at the mistakes I've made and improve my life by learning from them. Ah gotcha, yeah I hope my moment comes soon XD definitely a time to make the most of. Also yes after college you could be making 5, 6 figures, but during college you get to party/have fun/chill/go out with people for a lot of the time--after college, you're going to be working full time (no homework but work isn't necessarily too easy and whatnot :X) and work takes a lot of your time away. So it's that much important to find a job you really like I guess :D | ||
babylon
8765 Posts
For college, grad school, and basically any career in academia, sure, you can work at your own pace as long as you get things done eventually, but you also pretty much have work on your mind all the time, and that can take just as much of a toll on you. Even in undergrad, whenever my friends and I went out to have fun downtown or something, we brought our work with us nine times out of ten. This type of attitude is especially prevalent at schools filled with academically minded folks (like Berkeley). | ||
Aerisky
United States12128 Posts
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Carnivorous Sheep
Baa?21242 Posts
On August 17 2013 03:38 Race is Terran wrote: its not, i was just suggesting that it is as rare as a code S winner, its a needle in a haystack kinda thing hardly welcome to finance and tech | ||
Burrfoot
United States1176 Posts
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Carnivorous Sheep
Baa?21242 Posts
On August 17 2013 11:14 Burrfoot wrote: Any random comp sci major working in finance is making 6 figures. High speed trading shenanigans. I wouldnt go that far considering the vast majority of comp sci people in finance are just your average run of the mill application developers at banks if they're competent they'll still be making 6 figures around late 20s early 30s though. it's jsut turnover is quite high. | ||
Recognizable
Netherlands1552 Posts
On August 17 2013 07:25 babylon wrote: Both work and college are tiring in different ways. If you do a 9 to 5 kind of job, it's not necessarily that it takes a lot of your time away, it's that it leaves you too drained after you come home to do anything except sleep and maybe watch TV. But you can shelve your work and not have to think about it until you go in to work the next day. For college, grad school, and basically any career in academia, sure, you can work at your own pace as long as you get things done eventually, but you also pretty much have work on your mind all the time, and that can take just as much of a toll on you. Even in undergrad, whenever my friends and I went out to have fun downtown or something, we brought our work with us nine times out of ten. This type of attitude is especially prevalent at schools filled with academically minded folks (like Berkeley). Aah. I love that though. Thinking about how to solve problems all day. Maybe discuss the problems with your friends. It's great when there isn't any stress like an exam coming up. | ||
]343[
United States10328 Posts
On August 17 2013 02:58 Race is Terran wrote: psh, show me a 20 something year old that makes 6 figures and I will show you a code S championship winner I'm pretty sure starting salaries at places like Google/Facebook are at least 90k | ||
Elegy
United States1629 Posts
On August 23 2013 15:08 ]343[ wrote: I'm pretty sure starting salaries at places like Google/Facebook are at least 90k Regardless, those are industry exceptions. Figures vary, but ~50k at least for a STEM major is fairly common for a fresh college graduate. With a few years of work experience, that increases rapidly. | ||
Shellshock
United States97274 Posts
On August 23 2013 15:08 ]343[ wrote: I'm pretty sure starting salaries at places like Google/Facebook are at least 90k I have a couple of chemical engineering friends that had 90k+ starting salaries when they went to work for big oil. | ||
b3h47pte
United States1317 Posts
Good luck! :D | ||
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