Indiana University, and I am not trashing the school. I respect the school, the professors there, etc. No doubt there are very bright faculty and students there, my argument is more along the lines of education in general is out dated and overpriced. I don't like that you have to get buried in debt to gain credibility and I just don't think it's necessary. I think if you are a hard worker and you use your mind you can find other ways to do it that are cheaper and possibly more effective than the college route. When I say out dated I do realize I am not on the west coast or any kind of top tech school and that does make a big difference and part of the reason why I am dropping out is so I can get out there where people are a lot more passionate about technology.
Isn't Dan Friedman and other PL gods at Indiana? Didn't Dan revamp the PL education and bring about a new perspective in learning about interpreters?
I read his book but I personally would kill to study under him and hang around with the students under him.
>education in general is out dated and overpriced.
You will be in debt if what the college doesn't find you bright enough and worthy of investment. Most of these schools have immense amount of funding, but they are very wise in who they give it to. I was denied funding in my early semester but I proved to them that I was worth their money. I got it. Now that I am working, I feel it is the same. Unless I prove to them that I am worth their investment, not many bother.
>I think if you are a hard worker and you use your mind you can find other ways to do it that are cheaper and possibly more effective than the college route.
No. If you are all that and you can PROVE it, colleges are the cheapest way to get educated in that amount of time. You do have to take time to consideration. You dont want to spend a year doing Analysis if you could take the hardcore route in college.
>I am dropping out is so I can get out there where people are a lot more passionate about technology.
You should have looked for schools that had better programs. You should have tried to get some research experience so that you could work on hard problems in those schools. You should have developed a credential and ability that would make the school of your dream fund you without a blink of an eye.
>No. If you are all that and you can PROVE it, colleges are the cheapest way to get educated in that amount of time. You do have to take time to consideration. You dont want to spend a year doing Analysis if you could take the hardcore route in college.
I still disagree that colleges are the cheapest way to get educated in that amount of time. Due to the structure of the curriculum it's impossible to avoid taking in unnecessary amounts of useless information. So I guess agree to disagree in that aspect.
>No. If you are all that and you can PROVE it, colleges are the cheapest way to get educated in that amount of time. You do have to take time to consideration. You dont want to spend a year doing Analysis if you could take the hardcore route in college.
If I wasn't ignorant high school I might agree with you here. I didn't even have the sense to think about proving myself then and now I just don't see the sense in wasting the time to prove to an educational organization that I am worthy when I can just go about making myself worthy on my own and start getting paid.
>You should have looked for schools that had better programs. You should have tried to get some research experience so that you could work on hard problems in those schools. You should have developed a credential and ability that would make the school of your dream fund you without a blink of an eye.
You are absolutely right I should have and wish I did. But again, now that I didn't do that stuff in high school I still feel at this point the best thing to do is cut my losses, stop the inefficiency and the accumulation of debt and start putting those specific skills for which I am most likely to get paid for.