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Is it worthwhile to be an electrical engineer?

Well, if you are a junior high school student, it's too late to transfer. I think you have adopted many core categories, which may not be transferable. The best choice is computer engineering, some of which can be transferred. Computer engineering and embedded system really happened today. Anything with a touch screen is an embedded system. To be honest, it involves everything from home thermostats to telephones, and it will only develop in this direction, so almost every modern device has a SW and HW component.

I got my bachelor's degree in ee with 3.75 gpa, but I haven't found the job I want. I used to work in EE, but that was not the job I wanted, because I never found a job to do anything related to it. Most EE jobs in the United States are given to Indian graduate students who come here to study. If you have been to a campus like Qualcomm or any large technology company (hardware and software), you will find Indian graduate students under the age of 35. Their views on school engineering are quite different from the real world. . My experience is that almost all high-tech companies (hardware/software) operate like sweatshops and have cheap imported labor.

They are looking for slaves. Most of my friends who graduated with me said the same thing. After 3-5 years, I earned 90k, but I have to invest 60 hours a week, hoping that my life will return to its original state. Now, if you earn 90k a year and work 60 hours, your income will be worse than that of a business student who works 40 hours and 70k a week. In fact, 90k for 60 hours a week is about $28/hour (depending on the time you put in), while 90k for 40 hours a week is about $43/hour. So from the point of view of value, it is essentially that you are working hard and get less return. In other words, your value is $28 per hour, not $43 per hour. Therefore, from the perspective of value, it is essentially that you are working hard and get less return. In other words, your value is $28 per hour, not $43 per hour. So from the point of view of value, it is essentially that you are working hard and get less return. In other words, your value is $28 per hour, not $43 per hour.

I told you a joke, and my old professor told me.

A student asked the professor, "I really like RTL coding. What should I do? " . He said, "Go to India". Most of these jobs don't actually exist here. If they do a lot, they are outsourced. This is very difficult for people who want to leave the design engineering work in the university. This is what they didn't tell you in college. Who wants to be a technical support engineer (yes, it's like answering a customer's phone! ) or a test engineer?

I don't regret studying EE, but the time I spent in the laboratory (up to 5 hours) and passed all these exams and final exams was not worth it in the end. Now, I almost forgot most of what I learned, but I answered EE's questions on Quora, so I won't forget these things.