What's /g/ studying right now?
Japanese
death
tits
Teacher is making us read the entirety of the IBM Redbook "Tuning IBM System x
Servers for Performance" from 2009. Fuck, /g/, fuck.
>>53651250
何年日本語が勉強しているか。
Mathematical modeling. Chapter we're on goes over modeling some nervous system behavior using a system of differential equations.
I didn't study CS because it is gay
can´t decide if i study c++ for them knowledges or c# for them jobs :(
Rails
>>53653712
Why not both? That’s pretty much what I am doing actually
>>53653712
I'm about to start some C# because I'm tired of my time at this PHP job being a fucking waste. I also know nothing about .NET, so it'll be good to go a crash course or something. Do you have any resources?
R and Python
>>53653810
I’m currently following “Visual C# step by step“, as a beginner I like it. I think I’m also following OpenClasroom’s C# book (only available in French tho).
I’ve heard good things about Murach’s books too, might be worth to take a look at it.
CompTIA[tm] Network+
>>53653810
I bought the book by rb whitaker, saw very good recommendations.
If you dont want to spend money you can follow the classes from edx
energy
Electrical engineering
Electrical engineering
>>53651176
I'd love to be studying piano, theatre, and Japanese, but I'm too busy wasting my life away for a degree I'm not interested in anymore. That being cyber security shit. So little time left before life just crumbles.
>>53651176
Mechanics of non-newtonian fluid flow
Computer architecture. Wrote a small compiler for RPN expressions in C just the other day.
>>53653918
Expect a bunch of security bullshit on the test. http://www.amazon.com/Network-Guide-Networks-Jill-West/dp/1305090942/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1458793124&sr=8-1&keywords=guide+to+networks
When I went to take it a month back, the majority of the questions seemed to have came from this book in particular.
>>53653667
一年未満
難しいです
>>53651176
I'm writing a basic shell for my operating systems class. The hardest part so far has been figuring out how to dynamically malloc everything so it won't crash/overflow if somebody executes gcc with a bazinga flags.
>>53653691
>not going somewhat neet for 4-5 years when you're young to be highly successful later on in life
LOL
NodeJS, AngularJS, Ruby on Rails, and obscure JavaScript shit.
For whatever reason they pay ridiculously well.
>>53653810
>PHP job
Learn Ruby on Rails. Everyone seems to be using it these days.
>Startups
Startups demand knowledge in Rails because they can find more devs than <FRAMEWORK>.js.
>Enterprises
IT depts are switching over from PHP because Rails is in the sweet spot of "young but stable". Also a lot of IT still considers Node to be too young for production.
>>53654061
The piano is great, breh. Go for it. Loads of fun, though the initial learning curve can be boring. It also may push you into composition, which is probably even more fun.
>>53654786
>For whatever reason they pay ridiculously well.
Because web programming is like all other forms of programming. It gets shat on because it's the entry point into CS for a lot of people ("babby's first language" maymay). That being said, GOOD web devs get paid a lot because they're too few and far between.
If you can conceptualize how a front end user and back end program intercommunicate with each other in a fashion that's reliable for both ends, you have nothing to worry about when it comes to salary.
>inb4 "just use C++"
>>53654846
I'm in a third world shithole, so the people looking for this tend to pay more than average because it's harder to find. We're all stuck with PHP, .NET, and Java. I'm liking both so I can't complain.
>>53654815
I have all the resources for it, but I hardly have the time, at least not the time I'd love to throw into it.
Software engineer.
>>53651176
OSCE