Studying electrical engineering?
In electrical engineering studies, do you also learn things like why a coil has a higher resistance at higher frequencies or is that a foundation on which you build?
I'm wavering between physics and ET, although unfortunately everything points in favor of ET….
Why? unfortunately?
If you prefer to study physics, then do this if electrical engineering, then study electrical engineering. I can only say one out of my feeling: if something starts with “satisfied”, it doesn’t sound like you want to deal with matter for a few years.
Why, unfortunately, well, because electrical technicians don’t do mathematics properly. To heuristic people
.
π = 3 = e
g = 10
Something similar I heard to mathematicians about physicists – but has nothing to do with what I wanted to say.
Electrical and information technology Yeah, I know. We also looked at it as it stood 😄.
It was also just a task, and that one should only be roughly beaten in the head. There was less about the result and more about the principle
I don’t know what degree you’re coming from, but even if you’re an electrical engineer, pi = 5 is so wrong, so that hurts right
With us was also π = 5. Hahaha.
You engineer!
No, but maybe that’s what he thinks about.
Yes, I’m sure you learn this in your studies: it won’t (it wouldn’t bring anything…), but you have to realize that the pace is much higher than at school.
I’m more concerned about that I’m already very interested in physics, but don’t see a perspective after studying and that’s why ET would choose an alternative, but fear that physics is coming too close
So all my former physics colleagues found a well-paid job. No one has ever become unemployed. I wouldn’t worry about it: physicists are coveted workers, and even if the Nobel Prize is not enough, the economy is always well paid.
What do you mean, “better”? And should it be, then it is up to the personality and not to study. Not a few physicists, like electrical technicians, have brought it to the top of world corporations. So “no perspective…” is bullshit.
I think you’re overestimated: what you do depends only on your own skill – what you’ve learned in it is almost side by side.
But at ET it’s clearly better, right?
This is what you learn in the ET
Do you know? Why knows?