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![]() Telamon wrote: SFTV_troy wrote: Phil Kane wrote: Perhaps after he has 40-50 years of experience -- Doubtful. Engineering is boring; you sit in a damn cube all day long, staring at a computer. I've been saving every penny, such that I will be able to retire at 40-45. Or semi-retire (only take jobs I like). Engineering is dull. Well you took a wrong turn didn't you but it's never to late to get into marketing where you can lie your ass off. It's very exciting, just ask Eduardo. I've worked in sales, but I tried to avoid lying. For example when I was in college I worked for Sears. They instructed me to "sell extended warranties" I complied, but I also told the customers that I thought it was un-necessary. Sears didn't like me very much - what with telling the truth. I'd expect an electrical engineer to be more knowledgeable than your posts indicate. If you think one person can possibly know EVERYTHING there is to know about the subject of electronics/electrical devices. For example: - Do you know what VHDL is? - How about a state machine? - Synchronous DDR? - PCI Express? - Flip-flop? - What does GCLK mean in the context of FPGAs? - What are constraints? This is just a small sample of what I know, because this is what I work upon every day..... but I suspect a lot of it you have no clue what it's about. And that's fine. Because I don't expect one person to know everything there is to know about EE. |