I enjoy working on personal programming projects, like building an OS or a 3D renderer. While these projects demonstrate my programming skills, they’re mostly educational and don’t introduce groundbreaking innovations and demonstrate about average performance and features. I love working on them, but I’m unsure if recruiters value these kinds of projects, especially in a competitive job market. Should I keep focusing on these types of projects, or should I shift my focus to something more impactful to improve my job prospects?
submitted by /u/Pewdiepiewillwin
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r/cscareerquestions I enjoy working on personal programming projects, like building an OS or a 3D renderer. While these projects demonstrate my programming skills, they’re mostly educational and don’t introduce groundbreaking innovations and demonstrate about average performance and features. I love working on them, but I’m unsure if recruiters value these kinds of projects, especially in a competitive job market. Should I keep focusing on these types of projects, or should I shift my focus to something more impactful to improve my job prospects? submitted by /u/Pewdiepiewillwin [link] [comments]
I enjoy working on personal programming projects, like building an OS or a 3D renderer. While these projects demonstrate my programming skills, they’re mostly educational and don’t introduce groundbreaking innovations and demonstrate about average performance and features. I love working on them, but I’m unsure if recruiters value these kinds of projects, especially in a competitive job market. Should I keep focusing on these types of projects, or should I shift my focus to something more impactful to improve my job prospects?
submitted by /u/Pewdiepiewillwin
[link] [comments]