Originally posted by: Ameesh
Originally posted by: CanOWorms
That's just what I think and dozens upon dozens of engineers that I know think that, too. How is it not EE > CompE > CS? 😀 EE is not straight hardware. You don't even know what the hell you're talking about! 😕Originally posted by: Ameeshhow is EE > CompE > CS ? CompE is a mix of EE and CS, EE is straight hardware with little or no focus on Software and CS is the opposite. MIS is just a dumbed down CS ciriculum.Originally posted by: CanOWormsOf course something is always going to be generally perceived as easier/harder. EE > CompE > CS > MIS/(whatever gimmicky acronym), etc. (that order is just my opinion)Originally posted by: Ranger XHaha! I have to agree with Ameesh on this one. MIS is a joke. I've read the curriculum for MIS majors and CS majors and I must say, MIS is much simpler than CS.Originally posted by: AmeeshGive me a fvckin vreak youre a CS flunkie thats why you are MIS or Info Sys or whatever the fvck you want to call it. Computer Science was too hard for you so you gave to plug routers and switchs together and be some sort of bs paper/email pusher.Originally posted by: Gobadgrs CS is hurting... Info Sys Design and Management is still alright... Thank god Im an info sys major and not a CS one...
how many software classes does you EE Major have? post a link to your dept. website.
Here it is for UCSD:
<a class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://http://www.ece.ucsd.edu:16080/current/recommended-schedulesEE.pdf" target=blank>EE Class Schedule, there is only one lower division CS class required.</A>
<a class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://http://www.cse.ucsd.edu/undergrad/degreeprograms/bs-cs.html" target=blank>CS Class schedule, very few Hardware Courses</A>
-Ameesh
Um, by saying that they don't only do hardware that doesn't mean that I'm saying that they're mad programmers 🙂
However some fields of EE can be programming-intensive. Image processing, signals courses, etc. can be done with programming languages. Personally I had image processing, computer vision, and signals courses as an undergrad which were pure concepts and programming those concepts. Obviously the non-advanced courses don't take into real CS concepts that you learn in non-programming CS courses.
An EE program incorporates sciences (materials, semiconductor properties, etc.), signal processing, math, photonics, systems and controls, programming, hardware, etc. Saying that it's hardware-only means that you're ignoring a huge chunk of it!