BS, I think your ego is obscuring your view. They do matter, but are not required. Not everyone wants to work in enterprise, neither should they want to. As a matter of fact I know 10s of devs that come out of CS degree and have less knowledge than self taught devs. Yup they might have the theory on some random algorithms, or how assembly works. But that does not make you a better dev in any way.
Good devs are the ones that have the most experience in their field, not the most amount of degrees. You can have 10 degrees, but if you don't put it into practice, you're as much as a noob as any other self-taught developer. Practice makes the master
I think this comment does not offer any value what so ever. Don't discredit other developers choices because it's not the same as yours.
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BS, I think your ego is obscuring your view. They do matter, but are not required. Not everyone wants to work in enterprise, neither should they want to. As a matter of fact I know 10s of devs that come out of CS degree and have less knowledge than self taught devs. Yup they might have the theory on some random algorithms, or how assembly works. But that does not make you a better dev in any way.
Good devs are the ones that have the most experience in their field, not the most amount of degrees. You can have 10 degrees, but if you don't put it into practice, you're as much as a noob as any other self-taught developer. Practice makes the master
I think this comment does not offer any value what so ever. Don't discredit other developers choices because it's not the same as yours.