Welcome to the RU-vid channel for the Department of Electronic Engineering at the University of York.
We are an internationally-recognised department of over 100 staff and 400 students specialising in a broad range of Electronics and Engineering subjects across 13 undergraduate and 10 postgraduate courses.
We hope our videos will give you a flavour of what it's like to be part of this vibrant and exciting community.
Where to find us: twitter.com/UoYElecEng facebook.com/electronicsyork/ www.york.ac.uk/electronic-engineering/
Good luck. I just finished my masters and am looking forward to starting in industry. It is difficult but well worth it in the end, I have received numerous job offers, even in fields unrelated engineering.
I came to know that there is not such a engineering called ece (electronics and communication engineering) in abroad. But it's one of the famous degrees in India. Some say ece in India is similar to ee (electronics engineering) in abroad. Is it really true? And will I have any disadvantage if I go for pg in abroad after completing ug in ece in India
no, mechanical is more dynamics course which has free body diagram and acceleration stuff.. physics. while electricity is more theoretical because you cannot see electricity. mechanical is limited because they cannot make creations infinitely small. however, mechanical is a very versatile degree which is great. I do not know about electronics. I'm transferring to a university and the degree is electrical/elcectronic engineering. they overlap in similar course.
Yes, I am acually studying Bc of electronic engineering, and I am on my 4th semester right now, but also we study a lot of electrical engineering subjects.
In most of the world, electronic, computer and telecommunications engineering is separated from electrical engineering, less so in the United States and in certain parts of Europe. Electrical engineering is just high energies and they intersect in power electronics. Differences in both (universal model, not counting the US as I mentioned before): - Electrical engineering aims to manipulate energy: generate, distribute, convert energy into useful work (motors, heat, etc.). - Electronic Engineering, for its part, aims to manipulate information: obtain, process and transport information in the form of electrical, magnetic, optical or electromagnetic signals. What I mean is that if you want to study advanced electronics, in electrical engineering you will not see it thoroughly (just basic notions, not to the degree of an electronic engineer). While in the USA model they see it much more advanced (from what I have observed, there is no electronic engineering as such), which causes me a lot of curiosity.
Hey everyone, the greatest success that i've ever had was by following the Gregs Electro Blog (just google it) without a doubt the no.1 info i've followed.
Two years ago, I had a PYP presentation about Electronics Engineering, and I put this video in it. At that time, I wished if this major exists in my country, and study it.... Now, I'm living the dream ❤️
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else wants to uncover introduction to electronics course try Letza Easy Electronics Lessons (do a google search ) ? Ive heard some great things about it and my co-worker got great success with it.
Super success super congrats. I am so happy to share this news with you that autonomous robotic nanofabrication will enable us to 3D manufacture of live cellular computers and quantum computers to scale to universe size and create ideal universes with better laws of physics to save our species from all possible extinctions. advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/36/eabb6987.full
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@@d.s.h6629 you can't learn Electronics without maths its really bad move, you will quit in the long run or you end up with bunch of facts that won't be consistent if you don't know how things really work not just it works then that's cool. I advise you to having a strong fundamentals of maths from preAlgebra, algebra, trigonometry and calculus so that you can learn a bit about classical physics, then basics of electricity, then finally you can tackle electronics (there is a good course on udemy called crash electronics course which is quite extensive more than 100 hours geared for beginners, where you can learn both theory not in depth tho, because you need to read textbooks to have that, but still it would give you the ground to enjoy the circuits that you gonna build throughout the course.
@@parkhyeri3073 sorry po obvious joke lang po yan, shs lang po ako. Ang ece at ee po magkaiba. Parehas po sila nagaaral ng 'electronics' pero mas focused po ang EE sa analysis, behavior, design, etc. ng circuit whereas and ECE po more of techniques on obviously 'communication' systems which of course marami rin electronics almost as much as EE. Ang ECE po ata ang pinaka mahirap na engineering, napaka hirap rin po ng EE pero ibang level po ang ECE dahil sa physics niya, lalo yung nga electromagnetic waves na di nakikita. Parehas po suntukan ang mathematics diyan. Pero kung mahal niyo mag aral kayang kaya niyo yan!
@@kylepacudan4857 pareho lang yan. Dating electronics and communication engineering naging electronics engineering na lang sya pero ece pa rin tawag sa kanya. Nasa batas na yan na ang tawag ay elecronics engineering na dati ay elecronics and communication engineering.