Digital Society wrote: » Graduated from SSD with a 1.1. Ive beaten many Applied Students to jobs. 5 jobs in total now at this stage. I only accepted one of course but i was offered 5. Also interviewed where people from other WIT courses but its Applied you ask about. I also work alongside people who graduated from most Software courses in WIT including Applied. One thing ive always noticed is that Applied are the only ones who actually seem to care about the title of the course. Im really not sure why. This strange arrogance that they seem to have. The programming languages we all work with in college and work are the same. A lot of the modules are just renamed with the same content. They lead to the same Masters and jobs. One thing is for absolute certain. Employers do not give a **** about the title of your course. Not by a long shot. In fact you will look like a complete prat if you say to a professional that your Software course is better then any other Software course. Also your last question there. the only course that drops Software in 4th year is I.T so basically anything else will lead to a career in Software if you want that.
_JimPix_ wrote: » Good to hear was getting worried when people (more then likely ac students) said on different threads how much superior the ac course is to the ssd course and how it has so much more programming etc compared to the ssd.
Digital Society wrote: » It depends on the student 100%. If you want to be good you have to sit down every single night at home and improve your skills. This notion of "More Programming" that people like to speak of is kind of nonsense. As ive said already they all use the same languages. SSD has really good business modules that open up business analysis jobs that wouldn't suit an applied student. Whereas a good SSD student could apply for all the jobs that an Applied student could apply for. Same could be said for Forensics and Physics students that neither SSD or Applied could really go for. At the end of the day they are all just 20 odd hours a week in college. You could easily put in another 40 hours a week at home. Therefore it should be fairly easy to say that what you do at home matters the most and not in class. The real work is put in after the 4 years when you get into a company anyway. No one would even entertain that arrogance bull**** then. You wouldn't even get the job in the first place if they get that vibe from you. Some clown from WIT acting as if they just graduated Stanford or Harvard wouldn't fit well into any place.
_JimPix_ wrote: » I have been teaching myself java, html/css and javascript the past year or so and hope to do a lot more during the summer, so doing a hour or two a night should be okay I really like programming so it should grand. I didnt do business in school, is the business in this course like leaving cert or is it about software businesses use?
J98 wrote: » Accepted this course yesterday, I had it deferred. Does anyone have any advice before I start in September? Like anything to look over or that?
Hijpo wrote: » All tutorials from downloads to installs are all based on Windows. If your used to windows stick to windows, no point trying to get to grips with a new OS as well as having to figure out course material.
J98 wrote: » I'm used to both systems, so I wouldn't be able to get the tutorials installed on Mac OS? Yeah I need to stay looking I want to try get something for around 1000 that can handle pretty much anything I want to develop like apps, websites, bit of photoshop and maybe unity without any hassle.
inna981 wrote: » I use a MacBook Pro with Windows 10 installed on it. I switch between Mac OS and Windows regularly and find Windows to be best for me. Most of the lectures use Windows PCs and Windows software. Its really what OS your more familiar with. One of my friends has a Asus ZenBook which is very similar to a MacBook Air. Get a machine with a SDD in it, made a massive difference to mine.
J98 wrote: » How does your macbook pro perform? If I was going to get a macbook pro I'd probably be getting the base model 13" retina which has the Ci5 2.7ghz and 8gb ram. Yeah I will definitely be getting a SSD. Would you get away with just using Mac OS in this course?
inna981 wrote: » I have an early 2011 MacBook Pro which has an i7 at 2.2GHz, 4GB RAM and a 250GB SSD. It has been a brilliant laptop considering its age. Keyboard and battery life are excellent. Not one problem with it. Although a RAM upgrade is due soon. I would say 13" might be too small, mine is a 15" non retina and it can feel a bit cramped at times. I think you'll be fine with Mac OS, just the first few months might be nerve wracking just getting used to it. And you can always run Windows in a VM or Bootcamp, if you really need it
J98 wrote: » The battery life, the portability, the power and the retina display of the macbook pro 13" is the reason I am looking to go for it, when I'm at home I'll just connect it to a monitor. What would I have to do differently to people using Windows? Or is everything in the course sort of based around windows? I'm still looking at the moment anyway just trying to figure out my options.
Digital Society wrote: » Dont bother with a Mac. What you want is an Ultrabook like a Dell XPS13, i7 8gb at least and 256gb SSD. Always a deal on for at least 10% off. You might think its crazy but i would go for this with a 4 year warranty which ends up about 1500. edit - links are ****ed. Just Google XPS 13 and look at the first i7. Battery life and portability is by far your priority in industry and college. Dell make solid machines. If i was starting all over again i would 100% get one of these. In about 2 years have the battery replaced and itll be good as new for the last 2 years. Think of it as an investment. You will be on about 30k-35k when you finish college. If you can afford it at all go for it. Absolutely the best 1500 you will ever spend. You're talking a highly paid 50 year career. Do anything that gives you a slight edge.
J98 wrote: » What sort of Java programs and websites do you create in first year?
John05sy wrote: » I'm now doing SSD - Year 2 in WIT. I swear to God that 99% of the students in both SSD & IT courses know nothing about Java and their levels fall short of "beginners"! Among 6 lecturers in this semester, only 2 of them are good and the rest are useless + arrogant ! I do not recommend SSD nor IT courses "at least" in WIT.
Deleted User wrote: » The programming teacher in year 2 SSD is brilliant If Im not mistaken you have two different ones at the moment? One for lectures and one for practicals? Both of them are briliant lecturers, what subjects you finding the lecturers bad in?
John05sy wrote: » Forget it dude, I do not want my post to go so far, at least not before I graduate. I ain't wanna create enemies of lecturers. Nothing will be changed, people in charge there knew and agreed on that throughout all the last years and I ain't think they change anything because it's so much obvious and doesn't need a student claim (scapegoat == me)!
Deleted User wrote: » Im in year 4 of SSD at the moment and I legit don't have a problem with the lecturers within the college, there is some crap ones for sure but majority are good. You just told people a few posts ago to not go near WIT for tech courses and that is such a stupid statement :rolleyes: I am in year 4 and I can honeslty say that I have loved all 4 years within the college and learned so much. Obviously over 4 years I have had some bad lecturers that is just down to numbers, some are going to be bad but there is some amazing ones.
John05sy wrote: » Of course there are amazing lecturers in WIT, I totally agree with ya. BTW, I did not say don't go near WIT for tech courses! I said SSD & IT particularly. But on the other hand, A.C and Computer Forensics are excellent courses which sadly I haven't had a change to join any of them! P.S. You're in the 4th year now, best of luck from my heart, but if ya accept a little advice from me, test yourself on stackoverflow.com to see how good you are in programming... try to answer some asked questions about java or whatever language you are good at.
[Deleted User] wrote: » If anyone has graduated year 4 of this course and is willing to answer a few questions will they please pm me? I am in year 4 and would like to find out a few things from past students experiences.