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- From: buccb@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (Carlos Dragonslayer Butler)
- Subject: Re: Advice needed on relevance of Computer Science Classes/Major.
- Message-ID: <C0r6D4.HtL@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- References: <1itclaINNch0@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> <1993Jan12.144154.10467@nastar.uucp>
- Date: Tue, 12 Jan 1993 18:07:37 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In a previous episode on comp.misc,
- phardie@nastar.uucp (Pete Hardie) drops complete science:
-
- >In article <1itclaINNch0@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> am893@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Michael Hauben) writes:
- >>I would like to be able to study and contribute to the new
- >>field of computer networking and telecommunications.
- >>
- >>Is Computer Science a valuable major as an undergraduate
- >>student?
- >
- >Yes, yes, yes, a thousand times YES!
- >
- >CS is (IMHO) required to utilize computers in the most effective way.
-
- If you change "utilize" to "develop," would agree with you. CS
- at this institution, seems to be unrelated to computer "usage" and more
- related to "development." By "usage" I mean, end-user applications. A
- CS major would write the software, but may not use it.
- It's kind of a subtle distinction, and is hard for me to get the
- point across. A decent analogy is using a hammer. Stanley may be able to
- build a hell of a hammer, but it takes a carpenter to use the hammer
- effectively to build a house (or whatever). A CS major may know how to
- write one hell of a database, but it may take an English major, for
- instance, to effectively use that database (or database tools) to
- create the Wilson index.
- Why do I get the feeling the point is still foggy. :)
-
- --
- Carlos D. Butler, buccb@after.math.uiuc.edu
- President of Butler Services--DTP, typing, and information gathering
- Champaign, IL (217) 359-7632 Home (217) 373-4781 Pager
- "People often condescend what they fail to comprehend...
-