Originally posted by: Elemental007
I'd say, unless you have EE-level knowledge, you can max out at a 5. This includes programmers that do anything other than C or assembly for the x86 platform.
Originally posted by: Tyler
Originally posted by: Elemental007
I'd say, unless you have EE-level knowledge, you can max out at a 5. This includes programmers that do anything other than C or assembly for the x86 platform.
What the hell does x86 have to do with anything?
Originally posted by: Elemental007
I'd say, unless you have EE-level knowledge, you can max out at a 5. This includes programmers that do anything other than C or assembly for the x86 platform.If you can program well, in C, I'd say you can max out at a 6.5 Simply because, to truly understand why a C compiler works, you need to understand how the computer allocates memory, uses the stack, and stores functions. Such knowledge is fairly rare. With anything else, simply because it can be done through memorization does not make you a "computer" person. Just because you can memorize and spit back software configs and clock speeds does not make you a computer person. And certainly, playing games, reading forums, looking at web sites, or chatting is utterly worthless if you are trying to evaluate how much you know about computers.
So, on a Log10 scale, I'm a 5 now.
Originally posted by: Marshallj
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Originally posted by: Elemental007
That's why I said EE-LEVEL knowledge. Not holding a degree.
If you can understand everything an EE does on your own, of course you have the same knowledge.
OTOH I don't think most self-taught people understand WHY or HOW.....the fundamental principle behind engineering.
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: Marshallj
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