Yeah that is generally true. A CpE is much less likely to work in some EE areas like power, RF, emag, even controls. But a double major in EE can be just 3-4 more classes for a CpE, so they could still have the degree but not have more than one class in power or emag, or whatever.Originally posted by: BrownTown
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: BrownTown
I would think that an EE degree would be better, you can do any sort of electrical stuff not just computers. Thing is, a computer engineer would probably be fine doing other electrical stuff, but having a CompE degree people will think you only know computers at won't offer jobs in other fields.
compE, CSEE, EE they are interchangable.
Your degree doesn't really matter that much past your first job anyway.
yeah, but how many companies are going to hire a CompE to do electrical power for example? As an EE you could do both. Just think its good to have your options open, If I had by wish I would be a circuit designer for someone like Intel, but that just wasn't in the cards, so instead I'm working on nuclear plant construction. Might seem a little different between designing a tiny circuit verse a large nuclear plant, but with an EE degree you can do both.
Several of my EE friends have admitted that a CpE would be actually be a better fit for some positions at their companies, even though the companies tend to look as it traditional either EE or CS. But I agree that it generally limits your options. Still, we are hard as fuck.
				
		
			