EE vs Physics

What is the better major?

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Gender Studies
$500k starting

> (OP)
>Gender Studies
>$500k starting
This

Makes sense. Genders are one of the most used things on the planet.

EE if you want a job. Physics if you want to get a PhD and make less than an EE with a bachelors

Mostly correct, but a Physics Phd who gets hired in industry can make more than an EE bachelor, but that takes talent and a bit of luck since the demand is small. EE is much more likely to get a job.

Something I failed to grasp when I was in college was those dullards who were working summers for the electric utility were working their way into easy jobs for life while my much more challenging design career path was great when I was employed and not so great when the inevitable downturns came around.

You can do ML, Big Data or any kind of meme analytics that requires high analytical skills as a Physics major because Physics itself is just data collection and extrapolation

Then you might as well go for CS because itll be 5x easier and more relevant than physics

Might as well take math

>Physics
>Physics
I would go with physics

EE. I’m in the bioelectrical engineering program at my uni to hopefully get in on the predicted biotech boom coming in a few years. But if I can’t find a biotech job I could probably find a normal EE job since I have internship experience in EE

Physics if you want to know why it works.

EE if you want to know how it works.

>Getting a CS degree in 2019
hahahahahahaha, you'll be BTFO of the job market by pajeets working for half your pay. Either go for a doctorate or don't get a degree in CS at all

Why do people spout this meme?

>Physics
only is quantum

Do you want to be in research or engineering?
Neither will help getting sales manager position, on other hand.

CS is fine as long as you don’t go into software development. Pajeets haven’t really infected the data analyst role yet, so if that’s what you’re into then CS is good

Whatever degree, and flight school.

EE

EE is a degree for a career. Physics requires company to put you through training to teach you how to do a job correctly. While some companies do this, it's more likely that they'd take someone who has interned throughout their degree and already knows 50% of what they need to make money for the company already.

Top physics grads tend to be good at problem solving and learning new things, so they do get jobs but it could be anywhere. Average physics graduates usually have to do another degree to make themselves marketable.

Real talk which jobs do grad studies student get? What skills can you get from that degree?

EE

You have fun AND money. Physics is pretty unintersting these days,maybe if you lived a century ago it would be cool, but now with computers it cant compete.

Math + EE

payscale.com/research/US/Job=Electrical_Engineer/Salary
$73,544

payscale.com/research/US/Degree=Bachelor_of_Science_(BS_/_BSc)%2c_Physics/Salary
$82K

So physics wins.

CS + Philosophy here
Please kill me

Really good EE jobs usually have requirements like "Master's degree or 5+ years of professional experience"; so you can spend five years making good money with your Bachelor's or spend two years going into more student dept.

With Physics there are very few jobs available to someone without a Master's degree.

Physics w/ specialization in Computational Physics here
Stay mad whitebois

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Bigger fries and drink, no ice please.

>fast food
You must be over 18 to post here

>please
we dun taek kinly to you kaind heiire

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EE is a meme, don't do it user.

Companies are dumb and want engineers because they think engineers are amazing, and the truth is 90% of them shouldn't bear the title engineer.

But business is changing and real skills are becoming much more valuable than a paper curriculum meme.

btw, EE student here

Then get the fuck out fat fuck

>no ice
are you masochistic?

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