
could be cool but one of them things where you are signing up for alot if you wanna be good/get higher paid positions or get paid to do pentesting and stuff
that isnt like a 4yr degree and your done, is like daily/weekly research into any possible 0 day, overflow etc stuff, any time any new version of any software thats popular comes out that uses the internet, operating system updates, reading changelogs for everything, throwing every program/script whatever you got at it
depending how deep you wanna go i guess. i mean the more basic it configure networks and more normal basic security stuff would more be look at apache/nginx whatever sql etc database configuration, paying attention to updates for those specific things
lot of different levels of course, basic soho my printer wont work, lot of datacenter type things prolly for network design at colleges/university, remote backup/cloud storage. bunch of isp more physically building networks and stuff, your higher level printer stuff, upgrades/maintenance on the big cabinet systems, replacing drives/general server upkeep for large data stores
lot of higher level computer stuff obviously, besides doin the whole moxie marlinspike whatever thing. just the whole fast paced industry is like warp speed on high security stuff, but similar with lot of the other tech stuff, everything they show you know will be outdated by the time you even have the degree/within like 5~10years prolly.
would be if can do electives into research/studies and stuff, as well as try to take the concepts/strategies of stuff more in mind then the real specifics for some of the stuff(baring those programs/version related issues will prolly change over time, to have them telling you, that you must do sysco routing or whatever might not matter that much)
edit: mean stuff like how to do research, organization/categorization techniques and stuff like librarians do, to curate reference material for future use