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by jandrewrogers 5163 days ago
To be clear, I chose this outcome. I am good with mathematics but not the mathematics usually needed as a data scientist and I have relatively little interest in investing the time to learn. Being a data scientist is a great job for some people but probably not what I would choose even if I was a developer again.

There is a continuum of skill balances; some people are more "data" than "scientist" and vice versa. The most useful balance varies from job to job. There are plenty of opportunities for people that have strong skills standing up clusters even if you have relatively weak analysis and model building skills. I would not dissuade anyone from becoming a data scientist, it will pay very well for the foreseeable future, but the skill set requires real effort to acquire. At a small company there is likely opportunity to learn the trade by coming at it from the infrastructure side of things.

It is a young enough area that it should be pretty easy for talented individuals to invent a career if they apply themselves.

1 comments

Thanks for the excellent summary. This line:

I am good with mathematics but not the mathematics usually needed as a data scientist

resonates with me. If you're thinking of data science, you're facing a loooooong road of coursework (scientific computing or numerical methods, linear algebra, PGMs, machine learning, AI, possibly some optimization too) to get your foot in the door. I'm going to try, but one could spend years finishing that work.

In some ways, getting a data science gig is the opposite of getting a web developer gig. In DS you're competing with a large supply of intelligent PhDs, so credentials are very important; for web dev, your portfolio goes much further than any credentials.