I'm thinking of going back to university for an EE degree after graduating with a degree in Biochemistry, these kinds of videos are helpful. Thanks for sharing.
Hi pal, I'm currently at my final year pursuing EE engineering bachelor in Canada, your content was really impressive, it make me claerly recall of what I have done in my 5 year university life, everything you mentioned just couldn't make more sense, thank you and have a nice day!
This was a good video. Made me realise that math is super important and needs to mastered before trying anything else
9:28, I think the low pass filter cuts of the higher frequencies haha. Great video though, very informative for those who are pursuing this difficult but intresting degree!
I also just finished my EEE degree from Coventry University. After seeing my friends doing mechanical or civil engineering, I must say EEE absolutely rocks. You get your electrical stuff but also a little bit from other engineering fields and programming. I also had pretty much the same modules however my last year was more power heavy, so stuff like power distribution and generation and what not. However, my project was predictive maintenance using machine learning which i know is opposite of power stuff i took 😂. PS. I absolutely hated electrical science B and the whole electromagnetism aspect.
I did 3 year Electronics. This was nearly 50 years ago. Looking back and what my various jobs demanded I regret not learning enough depth and making it stick. Everything I was taught during the 3 years I realised later had value and if I had applied myself more I would achieved more. This brought back hard memories of many of the areas you covered
The way you described your degree, it seems like a technology degree that is heavily on the communications electronics side
I'm super proud more successful study hard.
from the comments and this video......WoW that's pretty awesome to see how electrical engineering cariculam was framed the same across every continent.......In India we learnt the same for 4yr😮
Interesting on the path you chose during your third year, me I went the route of power electronics and instrumentation
VHDL: Very hard, difficult language. Thank god I worked in verilog
I would love to go back and get an EE Degree. All this stuff sounds like so much fun. I have been slowly biting away at it through self learning, but I have spent 5 years making it through 1st and 2nd year material. 😅
Just started the course and so far it has been good , we stay programming c next semester
Hi Aleks, great video! I had almost the exact same thoughts about the modules I did too! xD
like others have said, congrats on graduating and super interesting video regarding course topics (US EE senior). You seem super tailored to/interested in embedded systems and programming; is that what you hope to do for a career? I personally find no interest in coding or programming, and have only learned the minimal amount asked of me as I focused on power systems. But your video made me wonder if maybe the US could benefit from integrating more of those projects which implement software as well. From what I remember, only one introduction course was required for me and anything beyond that was up to students to learn on their own
god, in the UK the studies only last 3 years??, where im from its 6 years of electronics engineering. And most engineering careers are 5 years long.
well done on graduating, it seems like a lot of hard work which i might have underestimated myself picking it at btec level 3 with hopes of doing it at uni😠if i did foundation maths is there even a chance i could grasp even the first few modules of core maths in the first year or is it just too far out
Currently in 2nd. I hate vhdl as well especially since I have a bad lecturer
Worst thing about engineering -hairloss
@nilessamaniego2783