Ask HN: If you had to get a non-tech masters degree, what would you go for?

Is there any specific program / college / etc outside of tech that you would want to study if you could?

2 points | by highwayman47 18 hours ago

6 comments

  • bombcar 17 hours ago
    I like finance and business, not sure if I'd go to a masters but anyone doing tech is well rewarded for doing at least some business classes.

    Study what you don't know and what is outside your area, and you become substantially more valuable.

    E.g., a techie who has some legal understanding or a lawyer with tech experience vs those without.

  • raw_anon_1111 13 hours ago
    An MBA. I dropped out of graduate school almost 25 years ago. My heart wasn’t in it.

    I still plan on working for another 15 years [1]. I have been working in cloud consulting for 5 years and I’m a staff consultant now. It’s half management style “what you should do” consulting and half leafing implementations or doing it all myself for smaller projects. I specialize in app dev + cloud.

    The mid to end gane is fractional CTO I think or more management style consulting outside of just “application modernization”

    [1] don’t cry for me. I work remotely and we travel a lot and do long term stints away from home “digital nomadding”. Work isn’t stressful.

  • drakonka 15 hours ago
    Do I have to pick? I moved to a university town last year and started registering for whatever sounds interesting. There are so many fascinating things to learn about! My first ever university course ended up being about nuclear weapons. I just finished the second, about the research front in life sciences. Next term I'm hoping to take a cosmology course. And just unofficially dropping in to some philosophy paper reading sessions. I'm only taking one course per term, always part-time evening classes as I work full time so this is purely a recreational thing. I want to study _everything_.
  • giaour 17 hours ago
    I would probably go for natural resources management or population biology.

    Masters degrees are (from my experience in the US workforce) generally only professionally useful when there is an explicit requirement for one set by a professional standards body or codified in law. As in, you usually need a masters to get tenure as a teacher in a public school, and some government jobs have specific and inflexible degree requirements. But for private sector employment, masters degrees are mostly just for personal enrichment.

  • ryanchants 15 hours ago
    I went to college late, so I rushed through. Which meant I didn't take the time to really engage with non-CS classes. So I'd like to go back for that. Especially the below masters, which should attract folks with similar feelings.

    https://masterliberalarts.uchicago.edu/curriculum/

  • sloaken 15 hours ago
    If it is 'just for fun' then Philosophy.

    If I was recommending for a friend in tech trying to advance their career: MBA

    Otherwise something they enjoy.

    Looking for a masters in Beer drinking, or camping.