My biggest nitpick about Georgia Tech was the lack of web-geared CS courses. The most "advanced" web-geared class was an 8-person class taught by a grad student about basic MySQL/PHP/Ajax. Of course I had the regular C, SmallTalk, Java, Matlab et cetera courses, but none of that interested me like LAMP, RoR and other stacks do.
Also not too many CS students early on have played with version control, and when they do it's CVS or something that was required by a class. SVN and Git should be more common in curriculum IMHO.
So I guess I'm suggesting you should address to these students where they can get started in web app development, because my university sure didn't help much when it came to that. Every semester I asked my academic advisor on their status of adding a Rails CS course and it was usually "same as last time.. looking for a professor that can teach it"
Also not too many CS students early on have played with version control, and when they do it's CVS or something that was required by a class. SVN and Git should be more common in curriculum IMHO.
So I guess I'm suggesting you should address to these students where they can get started in web app development, because my university sure didn't help much when it came to that. Every semester I asked my academic advisor on their status of adding a Rails CS course and it was usually "same as last time.. looking for a professor that can teach it"