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I left electrical engr career for web career. How do I switch back ?
Source:Internet Author:Unknow Pubdate:2010-06-23  
canadaengineeringjob (Computer) 18 Jun 10 13:40
I trained and educated as an electrical engineer. However, during the dot.com boom, I switched to programming and finally settled for web programming. At the moment, I am considering going back to electrical engineering career. I have been in programming and web development for 9 years.
Please
I need advice on how to make a smooth transition.

IRstuff (Aerospace) 18 Jun 10 15:18
I think you need to be realistic and recognize that a "smooth" transition, by which, presumably, you mean a strict lateral transfer, is probably out of the cards.  You are probably going to find only jobs that are appropriate to and recompensing at the level you were at 9 years ago.

If you can find some EE work at your current company, you might be able to have a less abrupt transition in a few years. TTFN

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xwb (Computer) 19 Jun 10 0:19
Is it electrical or electronic engineering?  9 years of electrical is easier to catch up than 9 years of electronic.  You probably need to find out what sort of tools they are using now.

MacGyverS2000 (Electrical) 21 Jun 10 14:56

Quote (xwb):

Is it electrical or electronic engineering?  9 years of electrical is easier to catch up than 9 years of electronic.
Depends on your definition, then.  Electrical engineer usually means a well-rounded sparky who understands the basics of everything from microprocessor architecture to semiconductors (not just how to hook up an oven to 220V, like an "electrical" repair man).  Electronics engineer often means more of a shop tech repair kind of guy.  If those definitions hold true, I would think the Electrical Engineer would be able to run up through the ranks much more quickly as he relies more on theory for design and the Electronics engineer tends to rely more on experience (I'm generalizing, of course). Dan - Owner

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http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com


IRstuff (Aerospace) 21 Jun 10 15:46
Oh, we had a nuch different definition back when I was in college.  Electrical took power classes; Electronic took IC design classes. TTFN

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MacGyverS2000 (Electrical) 21 Jun 10 19:37
Region-specific, maybe?  In my area (time?), the Electronic Engineers were the ones who didn't have (or want) the chops to handle the theory, they were more attuned to practical solutions.  We need both types, and I'm somewhere in the middle. Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com


IRstuff (Aerospace) 22 Jun 10 1:34
Perhaps, it was a West Coast school... TTFN

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MacGyverS2000 (Electrical) 22 Jun 10 6:28
Ah, I'm an East coaster... Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com


IRstuff (Aerospace) 22 Jun 10 10:05
And, I suppose, it was more a matter of relative levels of theory and practicality.  

We got communications theory (2-D Fourier Transforms and the like), circuit design (Ebers-Moll, etc), but EVERYONE got AMa95 Intro to Complex Variables.  All in all, I only got 2 lab classes in EE. TTFN

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MacGyverS2000 (Electrical) 22 Jun 10 11:57
My BS (University of Florida) was more hands-on, my MS (Purdue) was more theory.

At UF, we did everything from semiconductors (using Chih-Tang Sah's lab notebook (he worked with Shockley back in the day), a HUGE mistake to try and teach ANY undergrad class with) to microprocessor architecture, to microelectronics.  I also took a string of mechanical classes like thermodynamics, two semesters of statics/dynamics, and some holography/optics stuff on the side.  Some really fun stuff, and some really scary stuff. 字串1

At Purdue, lots of intense math... probabilistic methods/statistics, analog/digital communications theory, etc.  Even took a cool class in hyperspectral imaging (where I learned that as dimension increases, the data in a Gaussian profile actually resides more and more in the tails rather than the center).  As fun as some of the classes were, it made me realize a PhD was nowhere in my near future Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com


mcgyvr (Mechanical) 22 Jun 10 14:03
A BS/MS in EE and you make blinky leds for the honduh ricers? :)

MacGyverS2000 (Electrical) 22 Jun 10 19:30
That's a side business, along with laser engraving/cutting.  Right now I'm doing contract work for a major medical device company writing firmware for some of their newer projects.  My prior experience ranges everywhere from embedded wavelet-based video codecs for parallel processors to digital communications compression algorithms, so don't let the LEDs fool you 字串3

Oh, and with a race-ready S2000 and a 370Z sport roadster in the driveway, I am one of those ricers... Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com


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