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Working for Asus

kennyreid95

Senior member
What online certification or degree is necessary to work for Asus? What does the Asus company look for in a Asus employee education background wise?
 
Do you want to work for Asus, or just work for someone else and repair Asus products and troubleshoot Asus software?

If you want to work for Asus then any job will list the qualifications needed.
 
Do you want to work for Asus, or just work for someone else and repair Asus products and troubleshoot Asus software?

If you want to work for Asus then any job will list the qualifications needed.

What do Asus employers expect or look for in somebody in order to be hired manufacturing motherboards job or working in Asus team job?
 
Why don't you create a LinkedIn profile and look for someone who has the job you want and then contact them through LinkedIn?
 
Because he wants us to spell the work out for him in an extreme general direction. With no clue what exactly he even wants to do.

From your post, start looking for a different job.
 
I want to become a computer hardware engineer working with asus laptops and asus displays monitors repair. I also want to work with Asus software engineering.

What do Asus employers expect or look for in somebody in order to be hired manufacturing motherboards job or working in Asus team job?

Hardware engineer, repair tech, software engineer, assembly line worker, "team job"?

I think you need to narrow your focus a bit. That sounds like 4 or 5 different career paths.
 
Learn PCB design and EDA programs like Altium. (ideally you'd want to try to find out which one they use) Electronics knowledge is going to be important too. General theory of how computers work like the buses etc too. Really depends what department you'd work in.

Sounds like this would be a tough company to get into though, it's like trying to get into Google or Microsoft, or the NHL.
 
Is there a college in jersey that has similar courses to this school?
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Computer science can open many doors in the IT field. Asus is a crap company though... better go with a private tech company. Some big companies like Asus offer an internship course? so you may not need a PHD.
 
Computer science can open many doors in the IT field. Asus is a crap company though... better go with a private tech company. Some big companies like Asus offer an internship course? so you may not need a PHD.


Inquiring mind want to know how you came to that conclusion about Asus.
 
What college in New Jersey has hands on learning courses for lcd screen or tablet screen repair and cyber security?

1) Cyber security is hard to do, it's well compensated, and it's worth doing.

2) Tablet repair is parts-swapping; it's easy, and it's pointless since new tablets are cheaper than fixing old ones. No money in it.

If you really just want to fix tablets, watch a bunch of youtube videos on how to replace cell phone parts, repair tablets, etc., practice on your cell phone at home, and get a job working for geek squad or some cell phone repair place. Many places will pay for your exams to get a certification or two. (A+ or similar.) But in 6 months you will probably despise it.

If you decide you want to do cybersecurity; ideally, NJIT in Newark. But you're not going to go there yet. Here's what you do:

This is their program list: http://www.njit.edu/academics/degreeprograms/

Here is one option for a bachelor's degree program that I think may interest you: http://catalog.njit.edu/undergradua...ing/technology/computer-technology/index.html - This program specifically states: "It is designed as a continuation of an associate's degree program in computer science, computer programming, computer networking, or computer software."

Contact the admissions office at NJIT, and also contact the academic advisor for the CMPT program. Ask which community college(s) they recommend, and which degrees they believe would prepare you the best to succeed in that program at NJIT.

There are 19 community colleges in NJ, which should have much lower tuition costs than NJIT. The admissions/advising people at NJIT should give you enough information for you narrow it down to 2 or 3.

Now go to ratemyprofessor.com. Search through those three schools and see who has the professors who are rated "best" for the classes you are most worried about. (For me, that was Calculus.)

Apply to that school to get an associate's degree in something IT-related. With the right networking and internships, this may land you a job doing network administration or network engineering that you'll enjoy and like. If so, wonderful. You're done.

If not, or if you want to do something more technical for (usually) better pay, apply to NJIT and (knock on wood) at least one other school with a higher acceptance and similar program offerings. Maybe Kean University. (That'd be your "safety" school.) Get your bachelor's degree, do internships EVERY summer, and network the hell out of your classmates. With any luck you'll land a job shortly after graduation.
 
What do Asus employers expect or look for in somebody in order to be hired manufacturing motherboards job or working in Asus team job?
Educational background, but above all an eagerness to learn, maturity, empathy, dedication, commitment, intelligence, courtesy, sincerity, passion for your work, your career...

The ladder is wide for the humble.
 
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