Texashiker
Lifer
If I were to go into engineering, I would want to be a biological weapons engineer.
I wouldn't want to be an engineer. I heard that it is painful when they remove half of your brain...
I chose "I wouldn't want to be an engineer" - I was on that path, and quit engineering right before the last semester of my senior year at college; I went through a couple more years majoring in applied mathematics instead. (After an internship, I found engineering to be a little... boring.) However, as a physics teacher, I take students back to that university (Alfred) each year to check out the engineering program & to get to do a few fun experiments. I am absolutely blown away at what ceramic/glass engineering is working on these days. The ceramic engineering program requires quite a bit of mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineering. One of my former students is working toward biomedical applications. The field is huge - I'd say on one end, you have this and on the other end you have that, but it's broader in more dimensions. Space shuttle tiles, gorilla glass, little glass things that you put against someone's skin and it diagnoses certain diseases via non-invasive methods, superconductors, better replacement bone/teeth, wine glasses that can be dropped onto a concrete floor from about 5 feet up and just bounce,...
What's the non-douchey kind? Oh sorry, never met one of those kinds of engineers. 😀
Serious, I'd want to design stuff I could see everyday. "See that bridge right there? Go ahead, jump on it, its not coming down anytime soon."
I chose "I wouldn't want to be an engineer" - I was on that path, and quit engineering right before the last semester of my senior year at college; I went through a couple more years majoring in applied mathematics instead. (After an internship, I found engineering to be a little... boring.) However, as a physics teacher, I take students back to that university (Alfred) each year to check out the engineering program & to get to do a few fun experiments. I am absolutely blown away at what ceramic/glass engineering is working on these days. The ceramic engineering program requires quite a bit of mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineering. One of my former students is working toward biomedical applications. The field is huge - I'd say on one end, you have this and on the other end you have that, but it's broader in more dimensions. Space shuttle tiles, gorilla glass, little glass things that you put against someone's skin and it diagnoses certain diseases via non-invasive methods, superconductors, better replacement bone/teeth, wine glasses that can be dropped onto a concrete floor from about 5 feet up and just bounce,...
In the late 80s, early 90s it was called Composite Engineering in WA (a good friend of mine was in the program). I don't recall Materials Science in BC universities, however Apply Physics, Apply Math, EE, ME, and CE may take some composite courses.Don't we call this field Materials Science? It does seem like a very interesting field, one that is evolving VERY fast, and one with a huge number of practical aplications.
TalonStrike appears to have vanished from the thread -- note the numbers now. 😀
lol really? I actually have a life and don't sit around internet forums all day. Also, you are no one to talk Mr. I have an EE degree yet I have an IT job and hate it even though I think EE is better than IT. Seriously, go back to EE if you think it's so much better.
Aw, someone is all hurt. 😀
I'm not hurt. I'm just pointing out the obvious fact that you are a hypocrite for constantly bashing IT even though you personally chose IT over and EE job, which you were qualified for, and could have had if you wanted it. You are throwing stones from an awfully big glass house.
Excuse me? I said I hate my particular position -- I don't constantly bash IT. I took a gamble and accepted a new position within my company and, well, it hasn't worked out like I hoped. This company, unlike my last one, provides training and I am taking full advantage of that to move on.
My "bashing" of IT has more to do with companies not giving it the proper respect, not providing ample training for their employees, and not resourcing projects properly. I looked at my resume the other day -- the last company I worked for provided 1 (ONE!) class in the 5 years I was there. Pray you don't end up at a company like that.
Which company was this? What type of work was it?
So, EE jobs are better in this regard then?
The big difference between many EE jobs and IT is that in most companies, IT is seen as a cost center and nothing more while EEs, in many companies, are making the products that sell. Sure, there are exceptions, but how a department is perceived by upper management goes along way towards the respect it gets and money it gets. My last job had virtually no training budget; this job, I get to take 2 or 3 classes per year.
fembot engineer
and wouldn't that be the same for software engineers?