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I'm going to answer in a potentially disappointing way, but it's what worked for me: Study what you're most interested in. If you're equally interested in two alternatives, study what you seem to be best at. If that seems like the easy route, take the route that will let you learn more.

There's a pretty good chance that your actual work will have only a little bit to do with your field of study. I was an East Asian Studies major, and spent the first two years after college at Microsoft testing Internet Explorer's German and Japanese versions.

Don't sell yourself short this early; just because working at a "product" company seems far off and unlikely right now doesn't mean that it is. There are also lots of little startup software companies, too, and (I say with experience) they're more interesting than Microsoft. Also, they usually only have a small number of networking geeks, but plenty of developers and testers.

Don't overemphasize stability, yet, either. I spent 7 years at Microsoft when I was fresh out of school, when I least needed that stability. During the last 4 years, I've worked at a couple of startups, and a contract at that brought me back to Microsoft. The first startup I did was a contract gig that ended when we shipped the Japanese release I was hired for, and I moved into another opportunity very quickly. Four weeks ago, the startup company I was working for laid off 35% of its staff. Within 2 weeks I was working at another small company, choosing between competing offers. I'm not a rock star, but as long as you're in a technology-driven region, there are lots of opportunities, even in a dim economy. (If you've got startup experience, I think that you'll be even more in demand than if you pick a "safe" company for most of your career).

All jobs are temporary. Some of them are fixed-duration and you'll be ready for the contract to end, and some are "stable" but subject to unexpected changes in the business that you can't control, even at "big" companies. Some seem like a short-term gig when you start out, and 7 years later, you're still there.

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I'm going to answer in a potentially disappointing way, but it's what worked for me: Study what you're most interested in. If you're equally interested in two alternatives, study what you seem to be best at. If that seems like the easy route, take the route that will let you learn more.

There's a pretty good chance that your actual work will have only a little bit to do with your field of study. I was an East Asian Studies major, and spent the first two years after college at Microsoft testing Internet Explorer's German and Japanese versions.

Don't sell yourself short this early; just because working at a "product" company seems far off and unlikely right now doesn't mean that it is. There are also lots of little startup software companies, too, and (I say with experience) they're more interesting than Microsoft. Also, they usually only have a small number of networking geeks, but plenty of developers and testers.

Don't overemphasize stability, yet, either. I spent 7 years at Microsoft when I was fresh out of school, when I least needed that stability. During the last 4 years, I've worked at a couple of startups, a contract at Microsoft. The first startup I did was a contract gig that ended when we shipped the Japanese release I was hired for, and I moved into another opportunity very quickly. Four weeks ago, the startup company I was working for laid off 35% of its staff. Within 2 weeks I was working at another small company, choosing between competing offers. I'm not a rock star, but as long as you're in a technology-driven region, there are lots of opportunities, even in a dim economy. (If you've got startup experience, I think that you'll be even more in demand than if you pick a "safe" company for most of your career).