My suggestion would be that if you know that there is something in the program that you want to study and do some research and can afford it, go for it. Recessions in some places tend to be times for colleges and universities to see a spike in enrollment as some people go back to school to get trained for a different career, e.g. I know someone that used to be an IT worker who is working on getting an accounting diploma. To put this another way, why are you going for this degree? Is it to make more money, to get into management, because you enjoy studying software engineering, or something else?
How the market will be depends a lot on how you define "the market:" Is it just software engineers in Dallas, all of Texas, all of the U.S., all of North America, the world? Is it all Computer Science and Computer Engineering graduates that you are curious about how they will all do? There is also the question of whether you want to be in academia or back in the outside world and what kind of position do you want, as I'm sure there are some software engineers working down there in Texas but I don't think anyone has a good crystal ball to say how the world will be in the nearly 2 years between now and Jan. 2011.