>>11317720>>11318090>>11318105Positions in ML/AI almost always call for CS with a math heavy background or for a software dev to help core implementation. They generally do not lock by degree - most of these positions have phone interviews where they'll ask you a basic ODE question and maybe 1-2 other easy questions to verify you know the basics. Then you have a few more interviews that test some of your actual math skills, alongside an interview for technical competency in writing algorithms, etc. After that, they decide if you're qualified.
Recall that many positions hiring for your level aren't even looking for the rigor, ESPECIALLY if they're data science jobs. Those positions call for a PhD, and at that point, having a PhD in CS (usually theory concentrated in computational learning theory,), Math, or Statistics is what they look for. This is mostly a thread to rile up
>hurr durr CS degreewith shitposting