Laphonso-Ellis
Member
Yo aero135, you need to brush up on Maths before thinking about taking on compsci and other maths-related courses at uni.
Forbidden. said:excellent.
will hassle my lecturer(s) until i am confident i can get a HD for the course.
edit: i did shit in 3 unit and didnt take a bridging course and i was able to do many math1131 questions but the exam was just a killer. absolutely a violation to what i have learnt.
good post. i agree.darkwolfzx said:Relax man, everyones got their own take on whether IT is crap or not. The way comp sci people see IT is that its for the people who cbf to learn the real stuff, while IT workers see themselves as being able to keep a business running with whatever software is available to them (VB .NET, Cisco, Access).
Comp Sci students will concern themselves with finer detailed things. An example is the compsci program in UNSW has an elective called operating systems. From there we learn kernel level stuff like page faults, swap and so forth. The itty bitty things to put it that way. The pros with that is we understand how an operating system works and if we were evil we'd know how to write certain dangerous bugs and hacks. Again only consider if you were interested.
Whether or not you take IT is your choice. I myself have been tempted, but ultimately decided to stick.
EDIT: To add a real life scenario, my friend has recently graduated from UTS with an IT degree, he used to work in my job as an IT assistant, and now works for wesfarmers. Therefore, granted you have the skills and experience, you will still be able to get a job with an IT degree.
-_-. I get confused why its listed Assumed Knowledge in the handbook is 2unit Mathematics as well as the cutoff being listed as 85 in the business faculty handbook and the main unsw courses handbook of 83.25...me121 said:Information Systems - 3979 run by the school of business still needs MATH1131 or MATH1141 and 1231 or 1241 in 1st year.
looks like the same as comp sci, -discrete +some INFS & ACCT
So either way, you need to learn some maths.
No, he's right; VB is an absolutely horrible programming language and if you never once think about it again after school you'll be all the better a programmer for it.darkwolfzx said:Chill dude, you say that cuz you hate m$
hmm.. VB was the 1st programming language I have learnt, and personally I don't think it is so bad. Maybe i'll change my mind later when i see java, or haskell, or the like..Slidey said:No, he's right; VB is an absolutely horrible programming language and if you never once think about it again after school you'll be all the better a programmer for it.
Networking is one of many specialisations within computer science. Have a look here:lost1 said:I'm interested in doing computer science as well but am struggling to pick the right course (or even the right uni...) but am thinking of doing Computer Science at UNSW.
I'm tossing up between computer science and the new computer science/digital media combined degree course (I think that's what it's called??). I don't want to do the combined degree and find out that I'm no good at multimedia or don't have the interest in it that I hope for...What do you guys reckon would be the better course for me to do?
Also, I've done 4unit maths for HSC and manage to find all the concepts straight-forward but, like many, struggle with those much harder questions so I'm not 'too' worried about UNI maths. But what I'm worried about is that I'm not sure what kind of career I will be going into after graduating...Would doing either of the two courses mentioned allow me to say do programming, multimedia development, or even hardware stuff like networking? OR would it be better to stick to computer science for flexibility (as there are more electives) ??