I’m a mechanical engineer working for a simulation company as a software tester. I predominantly do HPC & cloud Testing & benchmarking. I do manual and automated testing, automation is mostly with python.
This is a second part time job I do, but I’m kind of getting bored with it/not challenged. Does anyone have any advice on where to go from here? Is it possible without a CS degree? I’m kind of interesting in GPU computing, & HPC stuff, but I worry I won’t be as competitive without the degree.. I also don’t know where to start with the learning.
Any advice is appreciated
submitted by /u/Due_Education4092
[link] [comments]
r/cscareerquestions I’m a mechanical engineer working for a simulation company as a software tester. I predominantly do HPC & cloud Testing & benchmarking. I do manual and automated testing, automation is mostly with python. This is a second part time job I do, but I’m kind of getting bored with it/not challenged. Does anyone have any advice on where to go from here? Is it possible without a CS degree? I’m kind of interesting in GPU computing, & HPC stuff, but I worry I won’t be as competitive without the degree.. I also don’t know where to start with the learning. Any advice is appreciated submitted by /u/Due_Education4092 [link] [comments]
I’m a mechanical engineer working for a simulation company as a software tester. I predominantly do HPC & cloud Testing & benchmarking. I do manual and automated testing, automation is mostly with python.
This is a second part time job I do, but I’m kind of getting bored with it/not challenged. Does anyone have any advice on where to go from here? Is it possible without a CS degree? I’m kind of interesting in GPU computing, & HPC stuff, but I worry I won’t be as competitive without the degree.. I also don’t know where to start with the learning.
Any advice is appreciated
submitted by /u/Due_Education4092
[link] [comments]