AFTER 42 Le Havre

We work closely with the demands of companies to meet their current and future recruitment needs. Therefore, the 42 training program is perfectly tailored to meet the expectations of the job market, especially in the Normandy ecosystem.

WHAT TO DO AFTER 42

SUSTAINABLY INTEGRATE INTO THE PROFESSIONAL WORLD

As of today, many jobs in 2030 have not yet been created. Recognizing this, 42 does not train for specific jobs or technologies that will soon become obsolete. Instead, the emphasis is on the ability to reinvent oneself to be able to sustainably integrate into the job market. Training at 42 provides both generic and more specific skills. Graduating from 42 means being able to fill any digital position, whether existing or emerging.

CYBERSECURITY

FOCUS ON CYBERSECURITY CAREERS

Cybersecurity isn’t just about defending against hackers; it also involves ensuring that services, websites, applications, and software are robust and compliant with data protection laws. Information security is one of the most comprehensive fields today, requiring both strong programming skills and a good capacity for analysis and extrapolation.

Some examples of careers:

Site Reliability Engineer, Security Analyst, Cybersecurity Consultant, Security Engineer, Database Administrator, QA Engineer…

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

IN-DEPTH LOOK AT ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE CAREERS

With the advent of increasingly powerful computers, artificial intelligence is advancing rapidly. What was once a dream from science fiction is becoming a reality every day through new applications. Careers in this field are still emerging: what will they look like in a few years?

Some examples of careers:
AI Architect, Machine Learning Developer, Machine Learning Engineer…

GEEK CULTURE

THE "GIRLS OF ENIAC"

The ancestor of modern computers, ENIAC, was born in 1944… but it needed people to program it. Six young women were recruited for the task: Betty Snyder Holberton, Jean Jennings Barik, Kay McNulty Mauchly Antonelli, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum, and Frances Bilas Spence. The “girls of ENIAC” became the first programmers in history. Their legacy was largely silenced, forgotten, or ignored until 2013. A documentary by Kathy Kleiman, “The Computers,” explores the contributions these pioneers made to today’s computing.