ooohhhh!
Re: "field" of study: electrical engineering
12This outcome of this thread is a real shock. Wire you posting this shit?
BUH-dum...
BUH-dum...
We're headed for social anarchy when people start pissing on bookstores.
Re: "field" of study: electrical engineering
14Everyone's so negative. Or maybe i'm just out of the loop.
justice for sa'niya carter 3/11/2024-3/27/2025
Re: "field" of study: electrical engineering
15I believe the correct expression is "no fun".
jason (he/him/his) from volo (illinois)
Re: "field" of study: electrical engineering
16every good joke is grounded in reality.
justice for sa'niya carter 3/11/2024-3/27/2025
Re: "field" of study: electrical engineering
17It's a great undergrad degree if you don't have a desire to investigate the humanities. There's not much room for that kind of thing in an EE curriculum.
I only worked directly in the field for four years, then I went off to do other stuff.
But all that studying rewired my brain and made me smarter and vastly more employable.
Broadly, you learn how to approach systems logically, and there's not a field of work on the planet where that isn't applicable.
Also, many/most employers know it's hard to coast through an average EE program.
You pretty much have to put the time in, and it suggests that you can learn complex concepts and sets of details, which is a valuable trait.
All that said, i liked how focused it was, going back to school later than most, but it's not going to be for everyone. It's a trade-school type of thing, not liberal arts (which I personally value as much or more as engineering studies).
I only worked directly in the field for four years, then I went off to do other stuff.
But all that studying rewired my brain and made me smarter and vastly more employable.
Broadly, you learn how to approach systems logically, and there's not a field of work on the planet where that isn't applicable.
Also, many/most employers know it's hard to coast through an average EE program.
You pretty much have to put the time in, and it suggests that you can learn complex concepts and sets of details, which is a valuable trait.
All that said, i liked how focused it was, going back to school later than most, but it's not going to be for everyone. It's a trade-school type of thing, not liberal arts (which I personally value as much or more as engineering studies).