Event Horizon said:
Man am I lucky to be only one city away from my college which offers a course in....... wait for it...... photonics engineering. Yeah. Nobody that I have ever spoken to has even the slightest clue what that is. But it boils down to essentially the following in order of importance: laser engineering, optical engineering, thin film engineering, electronics and a bit of fiber optics thrown in for good measure. I am so happy and the job placement rate is insane. One year down, two to go!
THAT IS SO COOL, i wish i had that kind of engineering here in argentina!!
NEVER, EVER heard of it....damn dude you're so lucky. please go for it, for me
rkcstr said:
[quote author=nikokapo link=1214183847/0#2 date=1214187501] i myself went for industrial engineering. 1st year and they're already given me enough to suicide
All my college friends were engineers (of various sorts), one being an IE (industrial engineer). Everyone would always call IE "imaginary engineering", since he typically was more involved with the theory of things rather than actually building something. But, he was a super-smart guy, full-ride for undergraduate AND graduate studies at a good school (University of Pittsburgh). I'd probably have gone into engineering if it wasn't for all of the math, which I'm terrible with ;D Instead, I've settled for medicine
I'd certainly agree that, for your interests, engineering would be the way to go. Probably almost any area would do, just so you find a researcher doing something in your area of interest and get to know him/her well
You can almost always take advanced courses in whatever field of interest you have, as long as you have pre-requitsites completed.[/quote]
yeah, it is sometimes referred as "the least of the enigneering-s" because some focus more on economical & administrative stuff, but i was told that i would learn a bit about everything, and that's what i wanted. to know at least something about everything. what i am interested in i will and am developing/asking/learning by myself, like i do here
i am also not very FAST with math, so i also went into engineering because it was a challenge for me, i'd have gone to abogacy (law school) or design or something else but i'd kick ass in those fields
, and i learn that by myself, so i wanted something DIFFICULT
to give me 5 or 6 years of pain so i can feel good when i finish it =)