Law School or Stay in Software
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Date: October 4th, 2014 10:29 PM Author: sepia wonderful hospital tattoo
I am fairly mediocre. I scored a 171 on the LSAT and have a 3.6 from a public school. I think that my numbers should get me into an MVP, maybe? I currently, however, work in software in the valley. I make around 130k as a SWE1(just starting my second year) at a major company, e.g., Google, Facebook, Twitter . . etc. The perks are great. I get free food and the ability to work on whatever I want one day out of the week, but the work week near a major release is more like 6 days a week. If the stock performs well, I can see bonuses that range widely from 10k - 100k. I am, however, worried about the bubbly nature of the tech industry and job security as I get older. I am also worried that I may be limited in my upside potential 10-20 years down the road when it seems like senior lawyers can start making it rain. What is the credited career decision? Go or not go?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26457964) |
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Date: October 4th, 2014 11:02 PM Author: henna irradiated black woman stag film
Sometimes it's more enjoyable. At least it's a lot more variety. I was working on the same code base for two years, and would've been doing the same for many more years if I stayed.
Job security is way worse. Supply and demand wise, programming is just so much more favorable than law, even patent law.
Earnings potential may be better if I can keep a good job my whole career. Doubt I ever would've made 200K programming like I make now.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26458138) |
Date: October 4th, 2014 11:47 PM Author: Emerald bawdyhouse
I've worked in tech (designer not programmer but I worked with plenty of programmers so I know what the deal is), and I'm currently in LS. Here's what I see the main concerns being.
1. The skill set. There are both similarities and differences between being a lawyer and a programmer. They're similar in that they're both "tedious" and detail-oriented. They're different in that one is mostly quantitative the other is mostly about writing. And there are areas of law that require a bit of salesmanship or if you prefer, showmanship (litigation related). Which type of "tedium" do you find more tolerable, research or programming? A lot of law is kind of like writing those research papers you did for college arts courses, only the research is more hair-splittingly detail oriented. Would you find that type of tedium preferable to the kind of tedium programmers have to deal with? Few would. There are people who program for fun, nobody does legal research for fun.
2. Career stability. Programming requires a lot of retraining and re-education, new standards are being introduced all the time. It's very easy to just be replaced too. Not so much with law, it's less "off-shorable."
3. Politics/personality. You generally deal with decent people in tech, in law you're mostly dealing with neurotic shitheads.
4. Salary. What do you make? In general, lawyers make a bit more than programmers, but there's a huge amount of variation here. A silicon valley programmer is making more than a public defender in some shit city, but the average income for lawyers is higher overall.
So as you can see there are pros and cons to both. I guess in general it comes down to, how much can you tolerate the ethical dilemmas involved in an advocacy-based profession, vs. how much can you deal with the asocial aspect of being a programmer? And lawyers have a slight edge in earnings but not that much.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26458416) |
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Date: October 4th, 2014 11:59 PM Author: sepia wonderful hospital tattoo
did you do UI/UX work? Yea, it seems that at a comparable seniority level, the compensation for a Biglaw lawyer tends to be higher. I do love the people I work with, though. They are all very intelligent and motivated. We work on interesting problems at work, and I get unlimited food of pretty much any kind. I will say, though, that the rosiness that is painted about top tech firms like Google are a bit too positive. You can easily become apathetic, deadlines suck, and the food isn't that great when you've been in the office for 72 hours because you have a product release deadline.
The thing is . . . These top tech companies are relatively young. They haven't been around that long. I constantly see younger and younger developers at work. And you're absolutely right about the re-education aspect. Every few years a new framework gets developed like Rails or Django. New languages happen all the time. . . .
Why did you leave?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26458469) |
Date: October 5th, 2014 12:27 PM Author: boyish useless brakes
i'd see which schools you get into and how much money you get.
also, can you get any kind of side gig doing programming during law school?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26460040) |
Date: October 5th, 2014 12:54 PM Author: Trip insecure internal respiration kitchen
SOFTWARE. LAw is a trap. You will lose 3 years of income and PAY for the privilege.
Unlikely that you will increase your overall income.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2692113&forum_id=2)#26460134) |
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