• UnreliantGiant@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    I come from Germany and it’s a mystery to me too. What I can tell you is that school is 100% not it. IT is heavily neglected in schools because there are barely any teachers who can use computers properly. School IT is also very Microsoft centric here. The closest thing to programming I had in school was writing VBA Macros in MS Excel, which didn’t go beyond basic for loops. This was also in the last year of school and only for students who picked the technical/mathematical branch.

    I heard from friends at other schools that they had better IT education, but still not great.

    • Tmpod@lemmy.ptM
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      3 years ago

      Haha I see. That’s exactly how it happens here in Portugal too, except we have more language choices (VBA, Pascal and C# that I recall).

      I wonder why this phenomenon happens 🙃

      • dinomug@lemmy.ml
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        3 years ago

        Here in Mexico, CS careers only teach you Java, if you are lucky probably C in a few cases, mainly hardware focused fields such as electronics.

          • dinomug@lemmy.ml
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            3 years ago

            yep. And mostly dependent on privative infrastructure. Services like institutional mail, hosting, office, communication, etc. are provided by Micro$ucks.

            • Tmpod@lemmy.ptM
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              3 years ago

              Damn that’s really unfortunate. In uni’s CS department we run a lot of free stuff ourselves, such as email, ownCloud and even package repo mirrors for a bunch of stuff (CPAN, LDP, the kernel, and a handful of distros).

      • Lightbritelite@lemmy.ml
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        3 years ago

        I’m guessing it’s to train to use commercial software for a potential job environment. That said, i haven’t touched a Microsoft officer product since the early aughts. Officer is an auto correct error, but i like it so it can stay.