Leverage what you have (Bach C.Sci) to learn things orthoganal that you don't already know.
Eg: Mineral Resources, Energy, and Farming will be important in the near and not so near future.
Rio Tinto and others are running robot fleets that move > 800 million tonnes per annumn of raw materials - there's raw processing circuits, refinement, processing concentrates to learn - a mixture of Comp Sci + mech engineering | chemistry + GIS etc.
I hear things are happening in renewable energy at a great pace, and farming has more data streams and Ag-bots than ever before.
I'd suggest getting a foot in the work force for the pragmatic exposure to new domains, then after four or five years picking up whatever further AI (or other skills) you need - keep in touch with CS as you pivot.
Eg: Mineral Resources, Energy, and Farming will be important in the near and not so near future.
Rio Tinto and others are running robot fleets that move > 800 million tonnes per annumn of raw materials - there's raw processing circuits, refinement, processing concentrates to learn - a mixture of Comp Sci + mech engineering | chemistry + GIS etc.
I hear things are happening in renewable energy at a great pace, and farming has more data streams and Ag-bots than ever before.
I'd suggest getting a foot in the work force for the pragmatic exposure to new domains, then after four or five years picking up whatever further AI (or other skills) you need - keep in touch with CS as you pivot.