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Can't really help you since I,m currently enjoying an alpha centric study (IBA)

What I will say though is that if you want to get a master (of science) degree I strongly advice you to choose a study that is very broad and is eligible for admission of the master study you"ll end up choosing (Mechanical Engineering or w/e).

In addition to all that I've mentioned in the paragraph above.If you are currently not residing in an English speaking country and don't plan on studying abroad is to choose a programme that's fully English. The main reason for this is to of course be able to work almost anywhere in the tech field but also because a lot of books that you are going to be using during your programme will be in English anyway so it's far more logical to just stick with a programme fully taught in English.

If you want to work at apple I'm assuming they will be looking for somebody with the highest (or almost) schooling possible in that particular field.

thanks for the advice:)

if i study mechanical engineer will that open doors to me for any engineering cause I am looking into design staff for apple os prototyping?

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Hello guys,

Since I might study aerospace or computer engineering is it will be a good idea to learn some electronics staff? right?

 

Do we have electrical engineers here in these forum , can you give me an upper hand expirience and how to get started

It can also be useful for creating staff

 

I think it will be great to write that I know electronics in my CV

I'm doing an electronic degree atm (first year is the same as electrical).

 

All degrees will start right from the basics with stuff like circuits and coding, so I'd learn some really basic principles like boolean logic and what a 'for' loop is, just so you hit the ground running with it (but the more the better), but it's not essential.

 

If you're wondering about prep for a degree, make sure you KNOW physics stuff like capacitance and at least acknowledge that integration is very useful as it will be used a lot, all it takes is a bad lecturer to completely throw you off. If you can take further maths at school that will help a lot in first year maths as you'll have already done most of it.

 

Also have a look at some chemistry, like electron spins and the like, I didn't do Chemistry A-level and the semiconductor part of the course is harder because of it.

 

Hope this has helped, I knew some C and had done a bit of HTML and CSS before uni (not that HTML will come up) as well as some rudimentary circuits (potential dividers and op-amps) but would really recommend doing at least a little bit of work related to the physics and chemistry I noted above.

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I'm doing an electronic degree atm (first year is the same as electrical).

 

All degrees will start right from the basics with stuff like circuits and coding, so I'd learn some really basic principles like boolean logic and what a 'for' loop is, just so you hit the ground running with it (but the more the better), but it's not essential.

 

If you're wondering about prep for a degree, make sure you KNOW physics stuff like capacitance and at least acknowledge that integration is very useful as it will be used a lot, all it takes is a bad lecturer to completely throw you off. If you can take further maths at school that will help a lot in first year maths as you'll have already done most of it.

 

Also have a look at some chemistry, like electron spins and the like, I didn't do Chemistry A-level and the semiconductor part of the course is harder because of it.

 

Hope this has helped, I knew some C and had done a bit of HTML and CSS before uni (not that HTML will come up) as well as some rudimentary circuits (potential dividers and op-amps) but would really recommend doing at least a little bit of work related to the physics and chemistry I noted above.

Great advice thanks so much :)

At A level I will take ICT, Physics , and further maths - I dont like chemistry at all

What I was looking was to design staff like a new mac book pro , an iphone, apple watch staff like that if you can help me in which major should I take ?

 

https://jobs.apple.com/us/search?jobFunction=HDWEG#&ss=Mac%20Product%20Design%20Engineer&t=0&so=&j=HDWEG&lo=0*USA&pN=0&openJobId=35954929

 

https://jobs.apple.com/us/search?jobFunction=DES#&t=0&sb=req_open_dt&so=1&j=DES&lo=0*USA&pN=0&openJobId=37790384

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Great advice thanks so much :)

At A level I will take ICT, Physics , and further maths - I dont like chemistry at all

What I was looking was to design staff like a new mac book pro , an iphone, apple watch staff like that if you can help me in which major should I take ?

 

https://jobs.apple.com/us/search?jobFunction=HDWEG#&ss=Mac%20Product%20Design%20Engineer&t=0&so=&j=HDWEG&lo=0*USA&pN=0&openJobId=35954929

 

https://jobs.apple.com/us/search?jobFunction=DES#&t=0&sb=req_open_dt&so=1&j=DES&lo=0*USA&pN=0&openJobId=37790384

If it's product design you want to do, then I'd take something more along the lines of a mechanical engineering degree or something where CAD and materials science is part of the course.

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If it's product design you want to do, then I'd take something more along the lines of a mechanical engineering degree or something where CAD and materials science is part of the course.

I might study something along the lines of electrical enginneer and mechanical

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is there such a course?

And I really dont want previouse expiriences with electronics?

Electromechanical engineering is a real course, or failing that, Electrical/onic engineering with mechanics.

I'm not saying that previous experience with electronics is bad, it's quite the opposite, but it's not absolutely neccessary. So while I encourage learning new things about electronics, don't sit around wondering if you've learnt enough to be able to get a place, because they teach things like circuit theory right from a very basic level (at least they do where I go anyway).

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Electromechanical engineering is a real course, or failing that, Electrical/onic engineering with mechanics.

I'm not saying that previous experience with electronics is bad, it's quite the opposite, but it's not absolutely neccessary. So while I encourage learning new things about electronics, don't sit around wondering if you've learnt enough to be able to get a place, because they teach things like circuit theory right from a very basic level (at least they do where I go anyway).

So I took the desicion to start looking at electrical engineering - how to get nicely started with electrical engineer?

 

an arduino?

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