Computer engineering? o m g s !?
As my high institution year is closing with graduation of late around the corner; I'm having trouble [and its bloodshed me] deciding the profession i want to pursuit. It's between Political Science and Computer engineering :[ I love technology and all of that electronic stuff. It grab my attention. I feel a burning desire to walk into it but at the same time I'm alarmed. I don't want to waste years and after switch to another career. I enjoy read that not many women are within this field [remember it's what i read] and that the women contained by this field are put down, given a complex time. Is it true? Well it isn't going to stop me. muuahahaha
-Does computer engineering involve computer programing?
-Where can i work if i do choose this field?
[of course i do plan on getting my degrees]
- Can you dispense me an idea on what you do and how it's close to?
-Do you travel?
Answers: I work with a number or enormously sharp women in IT and I really surmise that discrimination not going to be greater than other career and probably less.
First rotten I'll give you my regular urge - Don't get adjectives uptight over this decision. If you are the average personage you will change you main a few times while you are in college and you will move career path several more times while you are going through life. You will vary in your like and dislikes and your needs will correct too. So don't worry more or less the decision you are making today really locks you into anything. It doesn't. That one said also keep within mind that many employer don't care if you own a degree within the field where on earth they want you to work. So if you went to arts school and got a amount in computers and subsequently decided to do something else that debree would not hold back you.
Most employers look at a point as a calling card that shows you are teachable and can complete something you start. What the degree is surrounded by may be secondary because they plan to school you anyway. No employer expects you to hit the ground running when you are hired. They are going to train you to their way of doing things anyway.
Does computer engineering involve computer programing? If you want to be a programmer within are good opportunity for that. Many of my co-workers are not programmers and this does not limit them.
Where can i work if i do choose this grazing land? Companies of all sizes entail computing professionals.
Of course i do plan on getting my degrees - Good that will help out you get a situation for sure!
Can you give me an perception on what you do and how it's like? I am a systems contrive. I architect solutions, write scripts to automate processes, troubleshoot problems, work on security issues, work on project team, work with Active Directory, etc.
Do you travel? Only occasionally. Depending on the company you are aligned beside you could travel or not. That will often be moved out up to you to choose.
If you love technology and all that stuff,it sounds resembling you'd be perfect for computer engineering. It's true that men are more than partially in percentage language, but there are deeply of women, it's not that unusual (not like it used to be). At the places I've worked, here is very little nouns based on sexual category or race among the computer professionals -- they're much more plausible to judge you base on talent and productivity than almost any other professional group I know. Even at middle-management levels this is true. (At upper supervision levels, as is habitually the case, it's who you know as much as anything else.) I wouldn't agree to the gender issue slow you down one bit.
I'm surrounded by commercial software development (meaning I design and write software for mart, not for internal use); I like it considerably and enjoy been within it for many years. I travel sometimes for work, including internationally, but not normally enough for it to be a drag.
Jobs are largely concentrated surrounded by metropolitan areas, particularly contained by the high tech areas similar to Silicon Valley (California), Boston, the Research Triangle area surrounded by North Carolina, etc. But there are job elsewhere throughout the states and internationally, and even some rural ones pop up from time to time.
As for the types of jobs, I'll refer you to this IEEE site which give a pretty good description:
http://www.computer.org/portal/site/ieee...
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-Does computer engineering involve computer programing?
-Where can i work if i do choose this field?
[of course i do plan on getting my degrees]
- Can you dispense me an idea on what you do and how it's close to?
-Do you travel?
Answers: I work with a number or enormously sharp women in IT and I really surmise that discrimination not going to be greater than other career and probably less.
First rotten I'll give you my regular urge - Don't get adjectives uptight over this decision. If you are the average personage you will change you main a few times while you are in college and you will move career path several more times while you are going through life. You will vary in your like and dislikes and your needs will correct too. So don't worry more or less the decision you are making today really locks you into anything. It doesn't. That one said also keep within mind that many employer don't care if you own a degree within the field where on earth they want you to work. So if you went to arts school and got a amount in computers and subsequently decided to do something else that debree would not hold back you.
Most employers look at a point as a calling card that shows you are teachable and can complete something you start. What the degree is surrounded by may be secondary because they plan to school you anyway. No employer expects you to hit the ground running when you are hired. They are going to train you to their way of doing things anyway.
Does computer engineering involve computer programing? If you want to be a programmer within are good opportunity for that. Many of my co-workers are not programmers and this does not limit them.
Where can i work if i do choose this grazing land? Companies of all sizes entail computing professionals.
Of course i do plan on getting my degrees - Good that will help out you get a situation for sure!
Can you give me an perception on what you do and how it's like? I am a systems contrive. I architect solutions, write scripts to automate processes, troubleshoot problems, work on security issues, work on project team, work with Active Directory, etc.
Do you travel? Only occasionally. Depending on the company you are aligned beside you could travel or not. That will often be moved out up to you to choose.
If you love technology and all that stuff,it sounds resembling you'd be perfect for computer engineering. It's true that men are more than partially in percentage language, but there are deeply of women, it's not that unusual (not like it used to be). At the places I've worked, here is very little nouns based on sexual category or race among the computer professionals -- they're much more plausible to judge you base on talent and productivity than almost any other professional group I know. Even at middle-management levels this is true. (At upper supervision levels, as is habitually the case, it's who you know as much as anything else.) I wouldn't agree to the gender issue slow you down one bit.
I'm surrounded by commercial software development (meaning I design and write software for mart, not for internal use); I like it considerably and enjoy been within it for many years. I travel sometimes for work, including internationally, but not normally enough for it to be a drag.
Jobs are largely concentrated surrounded by metropolitan areas, particularly contained by the high tech areas similar to Silicon Valley (California), Boston, the Research Triangle area surrounded by North Carolina, etc. But there are job elsewhere throughout the states and internationally, and even some rural ones pop up from time to time.
As for the types of jobs, I'll refer you to this IEEE site which give a pretty good description:
http://www.computer.org/portal/site/ieee...