> There is one (possibly unintentional) idea here that I disagree with. And
> it's that learning starts when you go to university and stops when you
> leave (the '4 year degree').
>
> FWIW, I've never taken a programming course or an electronics course. I'm
> self-taught in both. I don't consider myself to be a particularly good
> programmer (I can program, my programs do the job, but in general they're
> neither bulletproof nor elegant), but I know enough to understand the
> reasons for choosing a particular language (and why one-language-fits-all
> is a very bad idea!), and to understand bits of OS internals and so on.
Me too. My degree is in linguistics, and soon an M.D. -- I got my previous
job as a programmer because I was trainable, not because I had the degree.
--
----------------------------- personal page: http://www.armory.com/~spectre/ --
Cameron Kaiser, Point Loma Nazarene University * ckaiser_at_stockholm.ptloma.edu
-- "I'd love to go out with you, but my eyebrows are too close together." -----
Received on Wed Aug 22 2001 - 21:03:15 BST