About the curriculum of business informatics major: It has programming classes from the first semester and programming projects with CS students, so I think it's not just a degree to set up enterprise software.
These programming classes are
-Practical programming I & II (OOP, Algorithms and data structures) together with CS people.
-Software Projects I & II (Classes about working as a team on a programming project with a big project on the side)
-Bachelor Project I & II (Again a big programming project, also with CS people)
The business informatics students can chose one of these specialisations:
-Computational finance,
-Logistics,
-E-Commerce,
-IT-Systems (That'd be the setting up enterprise software path).
I'd take the first specialisation 'computational finance' and could have some 'advanced' programming classes with CS students, like Introduction to AI, or Heuristically Optimization Techniques together
The business side of the major is (which I have mainly completed): Introduction classes to Accounting, Marketing, Logistics, Investemnts etc.
As I said, the business informatics major appeals to me because I could keep my grades (for which I've worked quite hard for) and would have lots of free time to spend on personal projects. The only problem with it, as I asked, if it's 'good enough' for good SE positions.
About the curriculum of business informatics major: It has programming classes from the first semester and programming projects with CS students, so I think it's not just a degree to set up enterprise software.
These programming classes are
-Practical programming I & II (OOP, Algorithms and data structures) together with CS people.
-Software Projects I & II (Classes about working as a team on a programming project with a big project on the side)
-Bachelor Project I & II (Again a big programming project, also with CS people)
The business informatics students can chose one of these specialisations:
-Computational finance,
-Logistics,
-E-Commerce,
-IT-Systems (That'd be the setting up enterprise software path).
I'd take the first specialisation 'computational finance' and could have some 'advanced' programming classes with CS students, like Introduction to AI, or Heuristically Optimization Techniques together
The business side of the major is (which I have mainly completed): Introduction classes to Accounting, Marketing, Logistics, Investemnts etc.
As I said, the business informatics major appeals to me because I could keep my grades (for which I've worked quite hard for) and would have lots of free time to spend on personal projects. The only problem with it, as I asked, if it's 'good enough' for good SE positions.