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I didn’t go to a prestigious school for CS so I had a zig zaggy path through the defense industry before ending up in big tech. Yes, it’s true that you simply don’t get the same opportunities as someone who went to a reputed CS school and honestly I can’t blame the companies: as an interviewer, people with good schools on their resume tend to succeed a lot more at the interviews.

That said, if I went to a better school I’m not sure I would have had the chance to study CS in the first place. At places like the University of Washington for example it is extremely competitive to get in to the CS major - I know that I definitely did not have the grades to be competitive as a freshman. So, at my not so great school that lets everyone in, I had the opportunity to learn something I was genuinely interested in and eventually (with a bit of luck) turn that into a zig zag path into a job at a big tech co.

The way I see it, tech companies should keep whatever bar they have. Interviews suck but they’re a great opportunity equalizer (yes, people from prestigious schools fail these too). People from low income backgrounds can and absolutely do make it in big tech, and I’ve known many capable colleagues without degrees.



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