From computer science to philosophy, these college majors can help you build a career in Al. Experts say that math and coding still matter most, but the field is changing rapidly.
ZDNET's key takeaways AI coding tools act like power tools for programmers.Programming jobs will change, but not disappear ...
Adrian Crane climbed mountains in Scotland with his father and uncle when he was a boy. He remembers using ice axes to climb in the winter when he was only 15. There is this “great feeling you get of ...
"We need the next generation of computer scientists to help program a better society," argues Marcus Fontoura.
It was only a few years ago that a degree in computer science was a golden ticket for persevering young people. Learn to code, and you could land a high-paying, stable job at one of the most valuable ...
If you are majoring in computer science or computer engineering right now, good luck on finding a good job when you get your diploma — even if you graduate from a top program. “Our students typically ...
The 2025 Allen School graduating class inside Alaska Airlines Arena at the University of Washington. (Kerry Dahlen Photo via UW) Breathe easy, computer science majors. Everything’s going to be just ...
Abraham Rubio has wanted to be a software engineer since childhood. On the gaming platform Minecraft, he loved tinkering with “mods,” or alterations to video games created by fans that change elements ...
For college students, saying you majored in computer science used to be code (excuse the pun) for a six-figure salary and job stability. Now some fear those days are behind us. Since 2014, the number ...
Melissa Sarnowski has been a game writer for over two years. While she's willing to dig into any game for an article, she heavily focuses on The Legend of Zelda, Resident Evil, Final Fantasy, and The ...
For years, tech leaders and politicians told students that learning to code was a ticket to six-figure jobs. That promise is faltering for today’s computer science graduates, many of whom are now ...
Turns out that learning how to code isn’t all it was cracked up to be. The New York Times has published a piece that I, as a Stanford student, am not at all surprised to read. Its title: “Goodbye, ...