CS courses are the least demanding of all on computers.
Usually the other courses when it comes to computer would need either office suite or specific software, both are vastly more demanding than the CS toolchain that has been mature since the 90s.
That is, unless the course somehow uses Java, which practically forces you to use an IDE that are full of bloat.
gosh, I just remembered my first IDE I used in class, Dr. Java.
I honestly thought that the ability to interact with java code without all the boilerplate was a great way to introduce people to coding. That being said, I'm sure languages and interpreters like python's were pretty mature in 2010 too.
Usually the other courses when it comes to computer would need either office suite or specific software, both are vastly more demanding than the CS toolchain that has been mature since the 90s.
That is, unless the course somehow uses Java, which practically forces you to use an IDE that are full of bloat.