>>10398667An MS in CS will be taken more seriously by industry. The downside is it takes much more time and money than a bootcamp.
Bootcamps unfortunately churn out a lot of people who are really bad at coding. What this means is you'll need to have a lot of projects and whatnot to prove you can actually into cs.
If you do go with a bootcamp, try go for one that has an income share agreement rather than an upfront cost. There's a better alignment of incentives. Also go for one that puts a lot of effort into career searching.
I would also echo what
>>10398754 said. I work in biotech personally and bioinformatics skills are hugely in demand. Bioinformatics people get software engineer level salaries, not lab bitch salaries.