On Thu, Jan 13, 2005 at 07:36:26PM -0800, John Coder wrote:
> I just graduated from the University of Oregon. I will attest that you
> will never learn as much in school(at least at the undergraduate
> level) as you will on your first internship or job unless you can join
> a programming club or a project on sourceforge.
> 
> Of course if money is not a problem and you have the grades I would
> have gone to stanford, carnigie mellon or mit because my favorite
> professors attened these.
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> Seung Hyun Cho wrote:
> | Hi,
> |
> | I am looking for the best university to study.
> | I am interested in security ,networks and open-source solution &
> mind.
> | I've heard that the leader of Debian project is studying in
> cambridge.
> | He is majoring... something like... 'the way to manage open-source
> | based project...'
> | Me is also like to study that or networks.. for my masters & PhD.
> |
> | Can anybody recommend me a good university? or the best?
> | (in the states or in england... or somewhere else)
> |
> | Thanks.
> |

I highly recommend RIT, based on our co-op program alone.  Most Computer
Science/Software Engineering/Computer Enigeering programs are all 5-year
majors, requiring a full year of co-op (highly paid internship *anywhere*).
Recruiters for are constantly on campus interviewing people (CIA (whom
are extremely close with RIT), NSA, Microsoft, etc).  Getting the work
experience while you are in college _seriously_ helps you in the long
run.

Aside from our co-op program, we have great security concentrations, and we
were the first college to offer a software engineering degree in the
country.

Also, I know at least one Gentoo dev has gotten his Masters from RIT
(seemant) ;)


luke

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