effects of recession or something more ?
Worst👎
Sachbolnewala
Stealth
15 days ago
Remember...there is a quota also in IIT
We all are seeing this 📉
IT is dying now. There is no requirement of IT employees. I am seeing many employees are not able to switch their jobs from the past 3 years.
According to the last decade, an IT career lasts for 15-20 years but nowadays even people with 5 years of experience are getting fired and no one is hiring them. HRs ghosting is becoming a new norm.
It's better to look into some other field else even survival would become impossible, forget about the dream of becoming rich will be a dream.
Don't be so negative bro. There is a need of good developers in the market. now most of the companies using gpts to to offload the work which can be done by automation. But In my experience problem solving skills is still not good of gpts. Only developers can solve.
Another clickbait headline. How many of them were opted in? How many are doing other things? What's the median pay? Which branches do the people belong to?
DaringTrain
Stealth
15 days ago
Median kya hai. That's the real question.
As far as I know placement season starts in December in iits. The real 2024 placements have not even started yet.
Don't know which stats are they talking about
its the quality of education now a days !!! no graduate can get job if you observe , thats why very less freshers are getting hired
At least in computer science, the syllabus hasn't been properly updated in almost 2 decades. It's true, recession is there, but even though jobs are there, we don't have enough people who are skilled enough.
For the syllabus part, look at the proposed new CSE syllabus from IITB. https://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/infoczar/lib/exe/fetch.php?media=public:dugc:ugcurriculum08.pdf
None of the textbooks are newer than 2010. For beginners they still use K&R C (1988) as reference text, which doesn't even compile in today's compilers. And they call it "modern"!
In their Artificial Intelligence course, the texts are from pre-2000. A lot has changed since then. There are better revised editions of the books.
UML and XML which are becoming rare in today's world are categorised under Database and Information Systems. XML makes sense as a carrier data format, why is UML under this category?
Students need to be introduced to API design much before teaching them distributed systems. Also distributed systems texts again are from 90s where things changed drastically.
Only proper core subjects are Data Structures and Algorithms, Principles of Logic and Design, Computer Architecture (not for everyone, only relevant for some roles today) and Operating Systems.
I'm not an expert, but this shows that there is a huge gap between academics and business needs.