Having gone in the opposite direction (Biology/Biochem/Biotech -> Computers) I can say without a doubt that biologists/biochemists can use more people with strong computer science skills. Many aspects of biochem and molecular biology are extremely computational intensive and in the past there was a large influx of computer programmers moving into the biotech arena.
Good luck and I hope you can find someone to help you manage Dovecot!
Stephen
On Thu, 2006-05-18 at 10:25, Jeff A. Earickson wrote:
Your acceptance into biochemistry would be a great loss for computer science. But I figure that you will find the cure for cancer. Good luck!
Jeff Earickson Colby College
On Thu, 18 May 2006, Timo Sirainen wrote:
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 18:40:23 +0300 From: Timo Sirainen <tss@iki.fi> To: dovecot@dovecot.org Subject: [Dovecot] Busy, again
Just a note to people if you're wondering why I'm not replying to most of my mails:
I'm trying to get into university to start stydying cellular biology (so I'm applying to biochemistry and biotechnology). Their entrance exams are next wednesday, so I'm trying to use most of my time left to study for them (and also do some work..). I don't know much about the subject, so I really need to study for them. :)
Then again, if I don't pass, my fallback plan is to go in via computer science and try again next year. Hopefully they allow taking the same bio-classes even if it's not my major.