<p>If someone is doing CS as undergrad with few EE courses, is it okay to obtain EE for grad?
Or should I just go get CS for grad?</p>
<p>The thing is I am really not interested in EE as of now but it seems that if you get older(ie 40)
there tends to be more opening for EE jobs rather than CS jobs.</p>
<p>Is CS concentration -> EE masters okay?</p>
<p>It’s good to be concerned with 20 years down the road, but don’t discount life until 40, either. A lot of life is living in the now, contrary to a lot of aspects about graduate school.</p>
<p>In any case, I would follow what you are interested in and interested in doing for a living.</p>
<p>In all honesty there shouldn’t be many concerns about landing a job as a CS OR an EE Masters student. Maybe if you were majoring in art history, but not in those fields.</p>
<p>There will never be a shortage of organizations that need a damn good CS person or a damn good EE person. Just make sure you are competent in the field/ area you choose, or specialize in it, and it doesn’t matter how old you get.</p>