Finals!
ORIGINAL: Smokem
Anyway, answer this burning question for me, if you can. Why do young people attempt to imitate the most f'd up, ignorant sounding people on the planet with their speech patterns, looks, gesturing , etc? I graduated from Arizona State back in 1978 and have been an electrical engineer for 30 years now. If you ever looked, sounded, or communicated like the "trend" of the day, you were pretty much stuck in place, that's if you could get past the interview process in the first place.
SMOKEM
Anyway, answer this burning question for me, if you can. Why do young people attempt to imitate the most f'd up, ignorant sounding people on the planet with their speech patterns, looks, gesturing , etc? I graduated from Arizona State back in 1978 and have been an electrical engineer for 30 years now. If you ever looked, sounded, or communicated like the "trend" of the day, you were pretty much stuck in place, that's if you could get past the interview process in the first place.
SMOKEM
What do yo do as an EE? I'm an EE major myself.
Hatin? I aint be hatin, just statin.... The facts that is. If you look like, sound like and act like a moron, guess what? That's how peeps will be treatin ya. That's all. If that's hating, then I guess I'm one hatin bastard. Anyway,
I specialized in semiconductor physics in college as an EE, anticipating finding employment in the wafer fabrication and IC industry. I interned at a company called Micro-Rel in Tempe, Az and was hired permanently after graduation as an IC Product Engineer. It was medical electronics, heart pacemaker technology company. When I moved back East, I was again involved in Medical Imaging and was in on the first CAT scan machines and flouroscopy / tomography. From there I worked for 18 years as a Satellite Telecommunications Engineer. All told, 25 years of my career has been in Telecom including my current employment with NEC Corp as a VOIP System Test Engineer. It's always been fun and most of the time challenging. I test new product integration with our proprietary PBX switches for small and medium size deployments. EE is one of the more versatile engineering disciplines and you are definitely on the right track to a very rewarding career Good Luck to you.
Have a great Christmas and New Years!
SMOKEM
I specialized in semiconductor physics in college as an EE, anticipating finding employment in the wafer fabrication and IC industry. I interned at a company called Micro-Rel in Tempe, Az and was hired permanently after graduation as an IC Product Engineer. It was medical electronics, heart pacemaker technology company. When I moved back East, I was again involved in Medical Imaging and was in on the first CAT scan machines and flouroscopy / tomography. From there I worked for 18 years as a Satellite Telecommunications Engineer. All told, 25 years of my career has been in Telecom including my current employment with NEC Corp as a VOIP System Test Engineer. It's always been fun and most of the time challenging. I test new product integration with our proprietary PBX switches for small and medium size deployments. EE is one of the more versatile engineering disciplines and you are definitely on the right track to a very rewarding career Good Luck to you.
Have a great Christmas and New Years!
SMOKEM
How did the switch from semiconductor/IC design to telecom go? Since you studied semiconductors in college, wasn't your knowledge of telecom systems not as good as those who studed telecom? I'm still not sure what I want to go, but I have a pretty good idea of where I don't want to go. I'm pretty sure I won't be going into computer/logic design.
I'm a senior at the University of Central Arkansas. Finals were last week for me. I got my grades on Tuesday. 4 As and 1 B. I worked my butt off for those too. And by work, I mean sat in front of the computer writing 150+ pages worth of papers for a month and a half, gaining 10 pounds in the process...
Only 12 credit hours left.
Only 12 credit hours left.
ORIGINAL: AgentofDarkness
How did the switch from semiconductor/IC design to telecom go? Since you studied semiconductors in college, wasn't your knowledge of telecom systems not as good as those who studed telecom? I'm still not sure what I want to go, but I have a pretty good idea of where I don't want to go. I'm pretty sure I won't be going into computer/logic design.
How did the switch from semiconductor/IC design to telecom go? Since you studied semiconductors in college, wasn't your knowledge of telecom systems not as good as those who studed telecom? I'm still not sure what I want to go, but I have a pretty good idea of where I don't want to go. I'm pretty sure I won't be going into computer/logic design.
Learn everything you can both in school and when you get out. Also follow the old premise of "Lead, follow or get out of the way!"
Have a Merry and Happy !
SMOKEM
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



