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by luizfwolf
1052 days ago
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EE Power systems Graduate but only work with power systems projects, migrated to CS in the middle of the course, but I come from Brazil (one of top 5 of Brazil) so be aware of that, Course completion total 5 years but average was 6.5 years with 70% dropout. The think about electrical engineering depends a lot on what field you work, the "projects field" are easier and more hands on, there is actually in my opinion very few eletrical engineering knowledge in here, on the other side everything that is affected by electromagnetism is very abstract and hard, almost a religion. Also debugging software is way more easy then debugging harder + software which is more common on electrical engineering like embedded systems for measurement. If you work with electronically devices which is a common think your problems can be related to external effects of electromagnetism that are generating impulses on the system, I don't have any experience on that but I have friends who work on development of electronics for power systems. CS for me always felt way more easier and practical, computers you can most of the time validate and check based on coding, it's easier to find errors, being that assembly, python, javascript. Also the community is so much bigger you can find so much stuff in the internet. So basically eletromagnetism is a religion that makes EE so hard, because it's highly abstract and is the responsible for generating tons of unpractical effects on EE daily life of work making hard to understand the daily problems in my opinion on the opposite side CS is coding and coding is executable and viewed in a computer with tons of tools to facilitate that. The problem with CS is not CS by itself but the quality of the professionals while in eletrical engineering I believe the trade by itself is already hard. |
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