EmpoweredBizTech wrote: » you can't outsource a pair of hands but you can easily out source a coder. That's where I stand on it
rogue2shadow wrote: » What does your degree evaluation look like post the A.A.S.? ... know you would have to take 30 new credits no matter what.
knwminus wrote: » Post A.A.S is going to depend on what I decided to do. Right now, there is a big gap in my needed credits where the CCNA classes would go. If I choose to fill that gap with the A.A.S Software development then I would probably need a few math classes, a few gen eds, some adavanced CS classes and then I would be done. I would probably be at somewhere between 45-60 credits. That's if I do the A.A.S software development and the BSCS. If I don't do the software development track, then I probably won't do the BSCS and I would do the BSIT. I would probably end up having to do about 50-60 credits. That's why I have been thinking about this because, I want to be completely done at the end of next summer and I will have to make some adjustments to my schedule if I want to do the A.A.S software development.
uhtrinity wrote: » I love getting my hands on hardware and networking, not so much programming. So IT was for me.
earweed wrote: » Although I did enjoy programming back in my younger days (Fortran, Basic, some Assembly language on several different platforms, a little Unix) I could never see myself doing it all day every day. Yeah I am THAT old that they had Basic when I went to college after high school. CS does seem more theory than practical. You may choose that just for the challenge or for the programming exposure you may get. It's something you must choose for yourself Knwminus as your choices now will help determine your path in the future.
EmpoweredBizTech wrote: » you can't outsource a pair of hands but you can easily out source a coder.
uhtrinity wrote: » I love getting my hands on hardware
veritas_libertas wrote: » +1, Programming is not my thing. I find it boring...
dynamik wrote: » I'm really not going to be satisfied until I can write the tools/exploits myself. That's probably at least a year or two off though...
dynamik wrote: » Getting back to your original question, I really think you're over thinking it. The type of degree really doesn't matter as much as you think. It really is going to affect your ability to get a job after you obtain it more than anything. After that, your accomplishments and experience are going to be what matters the most. I'll have a degree in psychology. Others I work with have a variety of degrees (or none at all). Some have CS, but aren't as good of programmers as the ones who truly enjoy it. It's going to be up to you to make the most of whatever you do.
dynamik wrote: » You better get over that if you're considering a career in security. You're going to find yourself severely limited if you can't get beyond that. You don't have to write thousands of lines of code every day, but you really need to be able to write some basic scripts/programs. Just today, I got onto an internal machine and had no tools available. How do you enumerate DNS (no zone transfers)? How do you port scan (no nmap, or even netcat)? We were having trouble brute-forcing a web form with hydra, so one guy on our team wrote a custom tool over the weekend. He terrifies me, and I constantly strive to be more like him! YMMV, but I feel like no matter how much I learn about networking, operating systems, security tools, etc., I'm not much beyond a script-kiddie level. I'm really not going to be satisfied until I can write the tools/exploits myself. That's probably at least a year or two off though...
Hyper-Me wrote: » The question couldnt be easier. Do you want to program or do you not want to program? Scripting =/= programming, although they do have many similarities. The biggest hurdle is that HR people think CS covers anything IT, so they often put "BS CS preferred or required" in their job ads. However, HR people are stupid. Don't forget that.
knwminus wrote: » If you could go back and do it over, which one would you do (CS or IT)? Would you change your degree at all?
veritas_libertas wrote: » Oh, I understand that! I really have no interest in being a Pen-Tester though. I have taken C Programming and I still remember some of it. I also enjoy scripts which I have built and modified for various reasons at work. I also plan on trying to master Powershell over next year.
dynamik wrote: » I'd say programming will help you at pretty much anything. You may not have an interest in fuzzing apps for vulnerabilities and writing shellcode, but you will likely find a lot of uses for small programs <= 100 lines of code.
dynamik wrote: » My situation is rather strange. I went to college my last two years of high school (Minnesota program called PSEO).
veritas_libertas wrote: » When you say programs, do you mean scripts and VBS? I see myself eventually doing security administration (Windows/Linux), and eventually trying to move in to security audits.
dynamik wrote: » Whatever works for you; there's more than one way to go about that. You will definitely make use of tools/scripts when auditing.