u/Sadf207

For the people who have been working in the field for a long time: do you still like your job/degree?

Like do you still have the passion for it?

I love computer engineering and embedded systems, but I'm worried that I might lose my passion for it after like 10 years of doing a job in it

Because if I'm gonna hate my job either way, I might just get a degree in EE and work with uncle (who's also an EE) instead

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u/Sadf207 — 3 days ago
▲ 2 r/ECE

Should I go into ECE?

I want to be a hardware engineer. I'm interested in robotics, embedded systems, and maybe writing firmware for PC parts

I said from those I should go into computer and control systems engineering, but I heard it's more software than hardware

And my controls professor said if I'm planning to go into compE, it's better to go ECE to learn the hardware and it's easier to make a career shift from ECE to compE than from compE to ECE, so I started to look into ECE

So, what do?

Also, if there's any ECE who works in like software engineer, or a job that's like aimed at compE: was it hard to like go into the field or was it ok?

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u/Sadf207 — 23 days ago

computer and control systems engineering. Is it worth it?

Like the title said. It has ai, software, computer architecture, PLC, SCADA, and robotics in it's curriculum

My college also has ECE(electronics and communication), CCE(computer and communication), straight up ai engineering major, and mechatronics. But the last three are semi private (basically 4-5 times the enrollment fees of ECE and CCSE)

Every time I ask anyone they just say " just go EE and branch out later"

For me, I just find coding to make stuff move or just hardware stuff interesting and fun. All my experience was just making the y'know, basic projects like a calculator and just soldering some parts of a mouse, so I'm thinking of CCSE. Any thoughts?

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u/Sadf207 — 2 months ago