2
7/28/2009 8:39:03 AM
ha I was just messing around when I said that. I know mechanical is a lot more applicable than aerospace. I just love aerospace, that's all.
7/28/2009 9:15:55 AM
I think my problem with going through EE/CPE was that I wasn't able to get any real world experience (lack of intern/co-op opportunities). And the engineering job market was just starting to pick back up in 2004. It was fairly hard to find anything without experience or a big brain/ego.So, I didn't really land anything in the field. Ended up doing a software related job. Now I'm in the IT field that I enjoy quite a bit. Which, I guess looking back at it, I could've gotten here without going through the engineering curriculum.
7/28/2009 12:11:12 PM
7/28/2009 1:15:05 PM
7/28/2009 7:02:05 PM
computer.
7/28/2009 7:37:27 PM
i wanna design traffic systems
7/28/2009 7:49:13 PM
Keep in mind that the Big Oil companies will hire you with a EE or ME degree and train you to be a Petroleum Engineer (and give you the paygrade to go along with it). If my job was exclusively developing software, in the long term I would be a lot more concerned with my job being outsourced.Within Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical you can pursue a job in an industry where you have to be licensed as a P.E. to do work and therefore your job cannot be outsourced.
7/31/2009 6:39:05 PM
7/31/2009 6:50:22 PM