Computer science or computer engineering?

Computer science or computer engineering?

Attached: cs.jpg (940x529, 222K)

eng no doubt

Eng all the way

Isn't it better to specialize in either EE or CS instead of taking the hybrid degree though

Attached: emoji.gif (498x498, 613K)

>computer engineering
>informatic engineering
>information systems engineering
which one?

ce > ie >>>>>>>>>> ise

IS/IT is known as the cs dropout degree

They are the same shit.

This. CE is too general imo. If you're more interested in hardware, do EE. Most EE degrees will teach you C/C++ to do embedded programming etc. If you're more Interested in software, CS.

computer engineering can be done by robots, you are better off in computer science

>cs dropout degree
please expand
Im switching from information system engineering to industrial engineering and they seems very similar right now

>computer engineering
what the fuck is that?

Usually information systems degrees have significantly less math and less rigorous course work compared to the cs/ce degrees. People that can't handle cs/ce but still are interested in computers do the ez degree. I've never heard of information system engineering though, so it could be different.

cs makes more sense

neither, pick a hard science where you actually do stuff rather than tacking bullshit on a computer, one of the easiest things to replace with a robot

material science, chemical engineering, EE, nuclear engineering

It's almost all the same courses as electrical engineering for the first 2.5 years then it splits off. EEs do power electronics and analog stuff while CEs do more digital electronics and programing. After graduation CEs tend to work in microcontroller, FPGAs, firmware, type jobs that require both knowledge of electronics and programing. A microcontroller datasheet looks like alien giberish to a typical computer scientist and electrical engineers only have a few basic introductory programing courses so neither is well suited to that kind of work.

Cs or software engineering?

Do you like hardware or software?
CS
Architects major in architecture, not "drawing buildings."

just computers

A degree that has the basics of CS/EE. Then in the later years you can choose between the two on what you want to focus on. Want to learn to program like a mad man? No problem. Switch and chips? Will learn.

As for what to take, do whatever is fits you best and just study on off time to fill in any missing gaps. Employers are going to give far more of a fuck if you do projects on your down time, blog, have work experience, or X cert anyways.

CE can do everything CS can and more

>I've never heard of information system engineering
its basic logic subjects (programming paradigms, discrete math, language syntax and semantics, os, etc but it focus on administration subjects like managers work, documents stream.
The book Administration by Coulter and Robbins is kinda a bible for the career

>tldr
information systems are like business administration + some computer sciences
fun fact everyone in my country refers computer things as "systems" and believes this career is for programming, also confuse it with industrial engineering administrative subjects