Weird message from Jack Henry and Associates? /u/Bluesyde CSCQ protests reddit

Weird message from Jack Henry and Associates? /u/Bluesyde CSCQ protests reddit

So this morning I got a text message from Jack Henry & Associates saying they liked my resume and wanted to talk more. The thing is I am 98% certain I never applied for any role from this company. I am not sure if it is a scam or simple mistake but what should I do in this situation?

submitted by /u/Bluesyde
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​r/cscareerquestions So this morning I got a text message from Jack Henry & Associates saying they liked my resume and wanted to talk more. The thing is I am 98% certain I never applied for any role from this company. I am not sure if it is a scam or simple mistake but what should I do in this situation? submitted by /u/Bluesyde [link] [comments] 

So this morning I got a text message from Jack Henry & Associates saying they liked my resume and wanted to talk more. The thing is I am 98% certain I never applied for any role from this company. I am not sure if it is a scam or simple mistake but what should I do in this situation?

submitted by /u/Bluesyde
[link] [comments]  So this morning I got a text message from Jack Henry & Associates saying they liked my resume and wanted to talk more. The thing is I am 98% certain I never applied for any role from this company. I am not sure if it is a scam or simple mistake but what should I do in this situation? submitted by /u/Bluesyde [link] [comments]

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Who’s up for a challenge? /u/MonsterRocket4747 CSCQ protests reddit

Who’s up for a challenge? /u/MonsterRocket4747 CSCQ protests reddit

So, as the title says, it’s been a few months (3) since I developed a goal tracker web app, but to be honest, I haven’t really put much effort into it because of my current job. It now has 250+ real users, and I’m curious to see how much it can grow and if it can become something more than just a web app with users, lol.

I’m willing to dedicate a bit of time to it and am looking for one or two people to work on it with me. You won’t need to dedicate too much time either.

EDIT: All I’m trying to say is, if you’re someone who would like to have another portfolio project to work on—but with real users, if that matters—let me know. I had to add this since people here always tend to misinterpret things.

Tech Stack
Frontend: Tailwind CSS + React.js
Backend: Flask/Python
Database: MongoDB
Other: SendGrid, Heroku

submitted by /u/MonsterRocket4747
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions So, as the title says, it’s been a few months (3) since I developed a goal tracker web app, but to be honest, I haven’t really put much effort into it because of my current job. It now has 250+ real users, and I’m curious to see how much it can grow and if it can become something more than just a web app with users, lol. I’m willing to dedicate a bit of time to it and am looking for one or two people to work on it with me. You won’t need to dedicate too much time either. EDIT: All I’m trying to say is, if you’re someone who would like to have another portfolio project to work on—but with real users, if that matters—let me know. I had to add this since people here always tend to misinterpret things. Tech Stack Frontend: Tailwind CSS + React.js Backend: Flask/Python Database: MongoDB Other: SendGrid, Heroku submitted by /u/MonsterRocket4747 [link] [comments] 

So, as the title says, it’s been a few months (3) since I developed a goal tracker web app, but to be honest, I haven’t really put much effort into it because of my current job. It now has 250+ real users, and I’m curious to see how much it can grow and if it can become something more than just a web app with users, lol.

I’m willing to dedicate a bit of time to it and am looking for one or two people to work on it with me. You won’t need to dedicate too much time either.

EDIT: All I’m trying to say is, if you’re someone who would like to have another portfolio project to work on—but with real users, if that matters—let me know. I had to add this since people here always tend to misinterpret things.

Tech Stack
Frontend: Tailwind CSS + React.js
Backend: Flask/Python
Database: MongoDB
Other: SendGrid, Heroku

submitted by /u/MonsterRocket4747
[link] [comments]  So, as the title says, it’s been a few months (3) since I developed a goal tracker web app, but to be honest, I haven’t really put much effort into it because of my current job. It now has 250+ real users, and I’m curious to see how much it can grow and if it can become something more than just a web app with users, lol. I’m willing to dedicate a bit of time to it and am looking for one or two people to work on it with me. You won’t need to dedicate too much time either. EDIT: All I’m trying to say is, if you’re someone who would like to have another portfolio project to work on—but with real users, if that matters—let me know. I had to add this since people here always tend to misinterpret things. Tech Stack Frontend: Tailwind CSS + React.js Backend: Flask/Python Database: MongoDB Other: SendGrid, Heroku submitted by /u/MonsterRocket4747 [link] [comments]

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Is there anybody here who has worked under both Chinese 996-type jobs and one of Elon Musk’s companies (Twitter, Tesla, etc.)? /u/backwardsshortjump CSCQ protests reddit

Is there anybody here who has worked under both Chinese 996-type jobs and one of Elon Musk’s companies (Twitter, Tesla, etc.)? /u/backwardsshortjump CSCQ protests reddit

If yes, then which of those two is the more draining/rigorous in your opinion? What about the rewarding part of those jobs – how do they compare?

Asking this question because I am trying to gauge which one is worse, haha. Thanks in advance!

submitted by /u/backwardsshortjump
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​r/cscareerquestions If yes, then which of those two is the more draining/rigorous in your opinion? What about the rewarding part of those jobs – how do they compare? Asking this question because I am trying to gauge which one is worse, haha. Thanks in advance! submitted by /u/backwardsshortjump [link] [comments] 

If yes, then which of those two is the more draining/rigorous in your opinion? What about the rewarding part of those jobs – how do they compare?

Asking this question because I am trying to gauge which one is worse, haha. Thanks in advance!

submitted by /u/backwardsshortjump
[link] [comments]  If yes, then which of those two is the more draining/rigorous in your opinion? What about the rewarding part of those jobs – how do they compare? Asking this question because I am trying to gauge which one is worse, haha. Thanks in advance! submitted by /u/backwardsshortjump [link] [comments]

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CS market 4 years out – Am I wasting my time? /u/Vishwa_K13 CSCQ protests reddit

CS market 4 years out – Am I wasting my time? /u/Vishwa_K13 CSCQ protests reddit

I realize that similar questions have been asked but I’ve heard many conflicting answers.

I’m a freshman (2nd sem.) planning to major in CS, and I’ve been interested in it for years. Given the current market, I’m unsure which specific area to pursue. AI seems saturated, so I’m wondering which CS fields are currently growing and offer the best prospects. Also, what are the predictions for the CS job market in 4 years when I graduate? I know it’s hard to say for sure but I just need to know if I Should seriously consider other majors?

submitted by /u/Vishwa_K13
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions I realize that similar questions have been asked but I’ve heard many conflicting answers. I’m a freshman (2nd sem.) planning to major in CS, and I’ve been interested in it for years. Given the current market, I’m unsure which specific area to pursue. AI seems saturated, so I’m wondering which CS fields are currently growing and offer the best prospects. Also, what are the predictions for the CS job market in 4 years when I graduate? I know it’s hard to say for sure but I just need to know if I Should seriously consider other majors? submitted by /u/Vishwa_K13 [link] [comments] 

I realize that similar questions have been asked but I’ve heard many conflicting answers.

I’m a freshman (2nd sem.) planning to major in CS, and I’ve been interested in it for years. Given the current market, I’m unsure which specific area to pursue. AI seems saturated, so I’m wondering which CS fields are currently growing and offer the best prospects. Also, what are the predictions for the CS job market in 4 years when I graduate? I know it’s hard to say for sure but I just need to know if I Should seriously consider other majors?

submitted by /u/Vishwa_K13
[link] [comments]  I realize that similar questions have been asked but I’ve heard many conflicting answers. I’m a freshman (2nd sem.) planning to major in CS, and I’ve been interested in it for years. Given the current market, I’m unsure which specific area to pursue. AI seems saturated, so I’m wondering which CS fields are currently growing and offer the best prospects. Also, what are the predictions for the CS job market in 4 years when I graduate? I know it’s hard to say for sure but I just need to know if I Should seriously consider other majors? submitted by /u/Vishwa_K13 [link] [comments]

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Masters in Data Science or Systems Engineering? /u/JustMeAndReality CSCQ protests reddit

Masters in Data Science or Systems Engineering? /u/JustMeAndReality CSCQ protests reddit

I’m currently looking to enter a masters next August and I’m having difficulties choosing which masters to study. My two options are Data Science or Systems Engineering. I have a degree in computer science and I’m currently working at a company where we work with distributed systems, parallel systems, machine learning, cloud, Kubernetes and we have to manage frontend too. I’m an SWE 1 so I’m still a beginner but I will have a solid knowledge in a couple of years because of the difficulty of my job.

Having said that, both areas are pretty interesting to me. The masters in Systems Engineering will have distributed systems, parallel systems, operative systems, advanced math, deep learning, etc. while the data science one is oriented of course to become a data scientist.

If I study the systems engineering, I will have the capacity of becoming really good at my job and achieve a very good salary or have better chances of being hired in the US in a FAANG company. Salary will be very good but at most I will be getting around 200k per year.

On the other hand, if I study data science, it will be a hard learning curve (given that my math skills right now aren’t that great) but eventually I will have better ideas on creating a company myself or even have greater salaries that a normal CS job.

Basically, how I see it is that a masters in Systems Engineering will give me better money short term, while the data science one will take me a bit more time but long term my salary could be far greater.

In the current job market state, what would you choose and why?

submitted by /u/JustMeAndReality
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions I’m currently looking to enter a masters next August and I’m having difficulties choosing which masters to study. My two options are Data Science or Systems Engineering. I have a degree in computer science and I’m currently working at a company where we work with distributed systems, parallel systems, machine learning, cloud, Kubernetes and we have to manage frontend too. I’m an SWE 1 so I’m still a beginner but I will have a solid knowledge in a couple of years because of the difficulty of my job. Having said that, both areas are pretty interesting to me. The masters in Systems Engineering will have distributed systems, parallel systems, operative systems, advanced math, deep learning, etc. while the data science one is oriented of course to become a data scientist. If I study the systems engineering, I will have the capacity of becoming really good at my job and achieve a very good salary or have better chances of being hired in the US in a FAANG company. Salary will be very good but at most I will be getting around 200k per year. On the other hand, if I study data science, it will be a hard learning curve (given that my math skills right now aren’t that great) but eventually I will have better ideas on creating a company myself or even have greater salaries that a normal CS job. Basically, how I see it is that a masters in Systems Engineering will give me better money short term, while the data science one will take me a bit more time but long term my salary could be far greater. In the current job market state, what would you choose and why? submitted by /u/JustMeAndReality [link] [comments] 

I’m currently looking to enter a masters next August and I’m having difficulties choosing which masters to study. My two options are Data Science or Systems Engineering. I have a degree in computer science and I’m currently working at a company where we work with distributed systems, parallel systems, machine learning, cloud, Kubernetes and we have to manage frontend too. I’m an SWE 1 so I’m still a beginner but I will have a solid knowledge in a couple of years because of the difficulty of my job.

Having said that, both areas are pretty interesting to me. The masters in Systems Engineering will have distributed systems, parallel systems, operative systems, advanced math, deep learning, etc. while the data science one is oriented of course to become a data scientist.

If I study the systems engineering, I will have the capacity of becoming really good at my job and achieve a very good salary or have better chances of being hired in the US in a FAANG company. Salary will be very good but at most I will be getting around 200k per year.

On the other hand, if I study data science, it will be a hard learning curve (given that my math skills right now aren’t that great) but eventually I will have better ideas on creating a company myself or even have greater salaries that a normal CS job.

Basically, how I see it is that a masters in Systems Engineering will give me better money short term, while the data science one will take me a bit more time but long term my salary could be far greater.

In the current job market state, what would you choose and why?

submitted by /u/JustMeAndReality
[link] [comments]  I’m currently looking to enter a masters next August and I’m having difficulties choosing which masters to study. My two options are Data Science or Systems Engineering. I have a degree in computer science and I’m currently working at a company where we work with distributed systems, parallel systems, machine learning, cloud, Kubernetes and we have to manage frontend too. I’m an SWE 1 so I’m still a beginner but I will have a solid knowledge in a couple of years because of the difficulty of my job. Having said that, both areas are pretty interesting to me. The masters in Systems Engineering will have distributed systems, parallel systems, operative systems, advanced math, deep learning, etc. while the data science one is oriented of course to become a data scientist. If I study the systems engineering, I will have the capacity of becoming really good at my job and achieve a very good salary or have better chances of being hired in the US in a FAANG company. Salary will be very good but at most I will be getting around 200k per year. On the other hand, if I study data science, it will be a hard learning curve (given that my math skills right now aren’t that great) but eventually I will have better ideas on creating a company myself or even have greater salaries that a normal CS job. Basically, how I see it is that a masters in Systems Engineering will give me better money short term, while the data science one will take me a bit more time but long term my salary could be far greater. In the current job market state, what would you choose and why? submitted by /u/JustMeAndReality [link] [comments]

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What are/are there good sql/dbms/dba certs to get? /u/DirkTheSandman CSCQ protests reddit

What are/are there good sql/dbms/dba certs to get? /u/DirkTheSandman CSCQ protests reddit

I like sql stuff, just moving around a lot of plain text data feels very tangible in a way a lot of other cs stuff doesn’t (to me at least lol), but my last job wasn’t, like, a sql job, it just did a lot with it, so it doesn’t really sell the best on my cv. Of course i could/probably should just make it sound better, but i’d also like to have a cert (or two) to back it up. Also i just want to make sure i’m not overestimating my abilities. I saw AWS data engineer certs mentioned in a few apps, but i need to do a bit more learning in the AWS part of that equation first judging on the few example questions i saw kicking around

submitted by /u/DirkTheSandman
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions I like sql stuff, just moving around a lot of plain text data feels very tangible in a way a lot of other cs stuff doesn’t (to me at least lol), but my last job wasn’t, like, a sql job, it just did a lot with it, so it doesn’t really sell the best on my cv. Of course i could/probably should just make it sound better, but i’d also like to have a cert (or two) to back it up. Also i just want to make sure i’m not overestimating my abilities. I saw AWS data engineer certs mentioned in a few apps, but i need to do a bit more learning in the AWS part of that equation first judging on the few example questions i saw kicking around submitted by /u/DirkTheSandman [link] [comments] 

I like sql stuff, just moving around a lot of plain text data feels very tangible in a way a lot of other cs stuff doesn’t (to me at least lol), but my last job wasn’t, like, a sql job, it just did a lot with it, so it doesn’t really sell the best on my cv. Of course i could/probably should just make it sound better, but i’d also like to have a cert (or two) to back it up. Also i just want to make sure i’m not overestimating my abilities. I saw AWS data engineer certs mentioned in a few apps, but i need to do a bit more learning in the AWS part of that equation first judging on the few example questions i saw kicking around

submitted by /u/DirkTheSandman
[link] [comments]  I like sql stuff, just moving around a lot of plain text data feels very tangible in a way a lot of other cs stuff doesn’t (to me at least lol), but my last job wasn’t, like, a sql job, it just did a lot with it, so it doesn’t really sell the best on my cv. Of course i could/probably should just make it sound better, but i’d also like to have a cert (or two) to back it up. Also i just want to make sure i’m not overestimating my abilities. I saw AWS data engineer certs mentioned in a few apps, but i need to do a bit more learning in the AWS part of that equation first judging on the few example questions i saw kicking around submitted by /u/DirkTheSandman [link] [comments]

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Accepted a data science internship, what changes should I expect? /u/Background_Crazy2249 CSCQ protests reddit

Accepted a data science internship, what changes should I expect? /u/Background_Crazy2249 CSCQ protests reddit

Similar to how working in software engineering tends to be different from building basic personal projects (Cloud services, CI/CD, Agile, etc), I was wondering what big differences I should expect just writing code in a Jupyter Notebook.

submitted by /u/Background_Crazy2249
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions Similar to how working in software engineering tends to be different from building basic personal projects (Cloud services, CI/CD, Agile, etc), I was wondering what big differences I should expect just writing code in a Jupyter Notebook. submitted by /u/Background_Crazy2249 [link] [comments] 

Similar to how working in software engineering tends to be different from building basic personal projects (Cloud services, CI/CD, Agile, etc), I was wondering what big differences I should expect just writing code in a Jupyter Notebook.

submitted by /u/Background_Crazy2249
[link] [comments]  Similar to how working in software engineering tends to be different from building basic personal projects (Cloud services, CI/CD, Agile, etc), I was wondering what big differences I should expect just writing code in a Jupyter Notebook. submitted by /u/Background_Crazy2249 [link] [comments]

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How are you investing your money? /u/throwaway0134hdj CSCQ protests reddit

How are you investing your money? /u/throwaway0134hdj CSCQ protests reddit

Given this profession pays higher than most what do are folks placing their investments in?

submitted by /u/throwaway0134hdj
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions Given this profession pays higher than most what do are folks placing their investments in? submitted by /u/throwaway0134hdj [link] [comments] 

Given this profession pays higher than most what do are folks placing their investments in?

submitted by /u/throwaway0134hdj
[link] [comments]  Given this profession pays higher than most what do are folks placing their investments in? submitted by /u/throwaway0134hdj [link] [comments]

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