Ask HN: Does the word engineer matter?
Hey HN :) I am a student from Portugal currently taking an IT degree.
This is almost exactly the same as Computer Engineering but its a bit more pratical and the main diference is the lack of 2 math courses and one physics course.
I just want to ask if i should change to the Computer Engineering degree, if that would make a diference in the future in the job market.
Thanks!
3 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 33.3 ms ] threadIf you're not highly adverse to math and physics, I would make the switch.
So in North America they would see it as a difference. Often there are agreements between ABET or APEG and other countries the local engineering association (Portugal in your case).
I think for getting a first job and maximizing your salary with your first job, it would matter. As time goes on and you gain experience, it will matter less, especially for Computer Engineering.
My understanding is that in Canada, it is a civil offense to denote yourself as an engineer of any sort unless you have a license. For that reason when I was employed by an industrial control systems firms, none of the computer programmers were called engineers, they were called computer programmers. Our engineers were all the Canadian equivalent of america's Professional Engineers.
I call myself a Software Engineer because I regard my work as being of the required caliber. My degree is in physics and my software expertise is largely self-taught.