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/g/ - Technology
/g/ reading list - GTFIH if you love codecelling
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<blockquote data-quote="Ain" data-source="post: 52887" data-attributes="member: 442"><p>It depends on what kind of EE, mine was all over the place, a lot of physics and math, plus programming both C and assembly. I started learning about CS before getting the EE degree, but i was not that good and also too young to understand that i should have gone for a CS degree. After getting BA, I spend some time working as an EE, but the pay wasn't good and I understood that I enjoy programming, so I went to a bootcamp and got a certificate, and 6 months later I got a job, fully remote working for a bank. </p><p></p><p>>Did EE served kinda for everything?</p><p>I would say that I learned how to be an engineer while studying, and that is a great trait, many CS students don't really understand what being an engineer means.</p><p></p><p>If you go for EE you can go for anything that is about electronics to be honest, both programming, circuit design and etc. </p><p>You can earn very very good money if you study EE and analog electronics, most of digital circuits are done using languages like Verilog (I studied it) or HDL. But you can't really do the same with analog circuits. They are more complicated and their design is closer to an art. </p><p>And analog can pay really good because there are few people who go for it, it is a niche thing, but for example the best music players are all analog, some systems can't be created with digital ciruits.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ain, post: 52887, member: 442"] It depends on what kind of EE, mine was all over the place, a lot of physics and math, plus programming both C and assembly. I started learning about CS before getting the EE degree, but i was not that good and also too young to understand that i should have gone for a CS degree. After getting BA, I spend some time working as an EE, but the pay wasn't good and I understood that I enjoy programming, so I went to a bootcamp and got a certificate, and 6 months later I got a job, fully remote working for a bank. >Did EE served kinda for everything? I would say that I learned how to be an engineer while studying, and that is a great trait, many CS students don't really understand what being an engineer means. If you go for EE you can go for anything that is about electronics to be honest, both programming, circuit design and etc. You can earn very very good money if you study EE and analog electronics, most of digital circuits are done using languages like Verilog (I studied it) or HDL. But you can't really do the same with analog circuits. They are more complicated and their design is closer to an art. And analog can pay really good because there are few people who go for it, it is a niche thing, but for example the best music players are all analog, some systems can't be created with digital ciruits. [/QUOTE]
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