My opinion on each engineering discipline

Jason Voorhees

Jason Voorhees

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Computer Science

This is what I did. Highest salary potential by far. Specialized top roles in AI/ML, DevOps, and cybersecurity can reach eye watering figures that other engineers can only dream of. Also relatively easy to learn and constantly changing so you'll never get bored. Con is the IT field is the most competitive because anyone can learn how to code, AI has already taken the entry level roles so you need to be good. Being lukewarm doesn't work it also demands relentless self learning. The degree provides only fundamentals, industry tools and frameworks must be mastered on your own all this results in High unemployment risk for those who fall behind. Wouldn't call it a very stable degree overall low job security.


Electrical Engineering

Strong and stable salaries especially in power systems, semiconductors, and hardware design. Sometimes reaches very high figures if you know VLSI. Good job security infrastructure and defense roles. But the degree is overall very tough imo. I've seen my friends struggling. Requires deep math and physics. One of t the underrated downsides is slow innovation pace so my mates tell me it does get kinda boring. There is also way fewer fuck you pay packages compared to tech.

Mechanical Engineering

Versatile and evergreen jobs in robotics, automotive, aerospace, energy, and manufacturing. Solid salaries with good employment stability. You'll never be unemployed for months like CScels there is less pressure to constantly upskill compared to other fields also. The main trade off is it I've never seen them getting paid very much because most of the companies they work for have such low margins that they can't give them good salaries. Also mechanical subjects are complete mind fuckery


Aerospace Engineering

Very Prestigious and interesting subjects. You will rockets, aircraft, defense. Pay is good but rarelt matches top CS levels. Job market is concentrated to a handful of mega corps like Boeing, SpaceX, NASA and somewhat cyclical. Most of them also need Requires security clearances for many roles. So you need to be citizen of the country you'll be working for. Outside of the US imo this degree is waste of time
It is also a high specialized role with 0 transferable skills so pivoting is impossible


Biomedical Engineering

Growing field driven by our massive aging populations and med-tech innovation and the recent crispr and gene editing stuff Salaries are meh imo but rise theysteadily in devices, pharma, and research. It also blende biology and engineering and is quite interesting and many of their subjects seem to be practical. Drawbacks is even a bachelor's degree is not enough. Most entry level roles often require advanced degrees master's/PhD. Jobs in this sector are scarce and market is competitive and uneven outside major hubs.

Civil Engineering

Ultra reliable demand thanks to endless infrastructure projects roads, bridges, dams, water systems. I can guarantee you that you won't stay unemployed for more than a couple months if you get fired even if you are below average engineer. Salaries are unfortunately the lowest in STEM and the subjects are also math heavy but I wouldn't call them too hard. Slow tech evolution means minimal retraining pressure but heavy bureaucracy, long project timelines, and dependence on public funding. So most of these jobs are quite boring imo.


Petroleum Engineering

Historically insane salaries especially during oil booms can rival top CS pay but during other times not as much but still very high in upstream roles at majors or service companies. The main problem is it is Extremely cyclical. Used to be the top golden major during high oil prices but also has mass layoffs and unemployment during crashes like 2014-2016 and 2020. Also geographically restricted to Texas, Middle East, North Sea future demand is also uncertain with green energy push

Industrial Engineering

Optimization and efficiency focus gives insane versatility. You can literally seamless enter any sector. Manufacturing, logistics, supply chain, healthcare, consulting whatever. Good salaries and excellent job prospects due to the abundance also easiest path to management/operations roles and very chill and technically less depth than others. Some of the best work life balance but salaries and growth is stagnant

These are my takes. Did I miss anything? Let me know and what are your takes on them?
 
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@imontheloose @Foreverbrad @Eskorbutin @Glorious King @mcmentalonthemic
 
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Which one is the easiest in ur opinion.
 
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@SplashJuice @Orka @EthiopianMaxxer
 
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read + bump
 
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@ngannou @Menas @Nexom
 
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missed materials engineering and computer engineering
Industrial Engineering or CS. In CS if you are good at math and logic you'll be chilling
i think it depends. I personally found CS harder than Civil Engineering and a lot of my friends who did double majors agree but it might depend on the university program, but EE is definitely hardest of them all. Some courses have 50%+ fail rates.
 
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missed materials engineering and computer engineering

i think it depends. I personally found CS harder than Civil Engineering and a lot of my friends who did double majors agree but it might depend on the university program, but EE is definitely hardest of them all. Some courses have 50%+ fail rates.
Computer Engineering is like an inbetween bridge imo CS and EE imo. Also a great flexible degree Materials I don't know much so can't comment.
 
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also i think cs is selling a bit short here like its hella competitive but cs isnt only faang jobs monkey branching with low security, its still very flexible, you can work in many niches, government, even military for cyber/intel/signals corps, banking and consulting sectors
 
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also i think cs is selling a bit short here like its hella competitive but cs isnt only faang jobs monkey branching with low security, its still very flexible, you can work in many niches, government, even military for cyber/intel/signals corps, banking and consulting sectors
That is also true. CS has many transferable skills. That's why you see CS grads pivoting into finance as quants, product managers, analysts etc. many trading firms love to hire CScels for algo roles. There's also remote freelance roles also. But my point of constant upskilling and extreme competition still remain.
 
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@PEENO08 @Swarthy Knight
 
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First 5 are all oversaturated with Indians
Idk about the others
 
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Wheres sound engineering at :feelshah:

1767595816396
 
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im scared about going into cs but i can't see myself doing anything else
 
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breaking bad oops GIF
 
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Computer engineering mogs CS EE
 
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Bump
 
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.
 
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@Leo @estonianslayerr
 
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I have 24 backs is there any hope for me?
 
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@savage21
 
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Read every paragraph
Does this only apply to USA ? I'm in europe
 
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Read every paragraph

Does this only apply to USA ? I'm in europe
mostly talked about it from a US perspective but a lot of what I said still somewhat applies in Europe the problem is that the gaps aren't as extreme. Switzerland and London have the best wages overall.
 
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@imontheloose @Foreverbrad @Eskorbutin @Glorious King @mcmentalonthemic
EE is employable but not going to make you rich, very true. I enjoy monotony so slow development isnโ€™t awful for me. Plus, youโ€™re underestimating how much we likely misunderstand about electrical systems
 
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thank you this will definitely help me
 
I have 24 backs is there any hope for me?
how? only you are someone who beat me in this. jfl there is no hope in india guys are plenty with 9 cgpa no backs.
we should open a tea stall
 
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how? only you are someone who beat me in this. jfl there is no hope in india guys are plenty with 9 cgpa no backs.
we should open a tea stall
19 now, should be cleared by end of oct
mostly cause I kept getting debarred by not maintaining 75 attendance

I earn more than any of my batchmates so im not worried
 
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19 now, should be cleared by end of oct
mostly cause I kept getting debarred by not maintaining 75 attendance

I earn more than any of my batchmates so im not worried
jajbaat badal diye. how? are you so skilled in coding and development or have family business
 

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