#1 s
发表于 : 2024年 10月 24日 19:18
Ranking the schools enumerated in the question details:
1. Stanford, because the CS department is good, lots of startups come out of Stanford, and they have great relationships with local companies.
2. MIT, with unusually intelligent graduates and alumni doing plenty of startups, although the school doesn’t have a good history fostering relationships with people in industry.
3. Caltech. Graduates are solid, and Silicon Valley companies visit for on-campus recruiting.
4. CMU. I haven’t run into a bad CMU graduate.
5. Berkeley. BSD comes from Berkeley. Kirk McKusick, Eric Allman, Keith Bostic, and Van Jacobsen are all awesome. David Patterson got me into Recovery Oriented Computing which had a huge impact on the products I built. Unfortunately, today CS 162 Operating Systems is an elective and the last graduate I interviewed couldn’t write a simple program.
1. Stanford, because the CS department is good, lots of startups come out of Stanford, and they have great relationships with local companies.
2. MIT, with unusually intelligent graduates and alumni doing plenty of startups, although the school doesn’t have a good history fostering relationships with people in industry.
3. Caltech. Graduates are solid, and Silicon Valley companies visit for on-campus recruiting.
4. CMU. I haven’t run into a bad CMU graduate.
5. Berkeley. BSD comes from Berkeley. Kirk McKusick, Eric Allman, Keith Bostic, and Van Jacobsen are all awesome. David Patterson got me into Recovery Oriented Computing which had a huge impact on the products I built. Unfortunately, today CS 162 Operating Systems is an elective and the last graduate I interviewed couldn’t write a simple program.