<p>Mmm, it’s more in the range of applied math. A good deal of use in EE though.</p>
<p>sorry, comp sci is not engineering…keep dreaming</p>
<p>actually I would say that comp sci could almost be like comp eng.(It matters where you go)</p>
<p>Like PSU states that their program is 65% software and 35% hardware
I do agree that its not engineering but Citan seems to say it as though one would be wayyyyy off base to consider Comp Sci a type of eng. :P</p>
<p>(Well, more what I was saying is, the further along you go in engineering, the easier it is for the engineer to learn to program the more complicated stuff, rather than the comp sci person to learn the theories behind the engineering processes… My PC is bogged down with structural engineering apps written by civs… which is why I love my Powerbook. )</p>
<p>I still vote for ME and EE, but adding something to what the OP asked about the ease of going into management, in my field at least, you more or less learn your business skills along the way, and going into management is more or less an apprentice-type thing-- you mention to your boss that you’d like to start doing management stuff, and so he or she steers you in the direction of learning all the financial and project management skills that you need in order to do their job. Also, if management is really where you want to head, pretty much any engineering degree in combination with an MBA would be the sort of “golden combo” that’s very marketable for any management-related job, especially in a technical field.</p>
<p>I would say EE is the most versatile because peronally I have experience it for myself. I have had companies hire me for intern positions is marketing and finanical firms hire me for an analysis position. They like to hire EEs for investment banking positions becuase they feel as though they are the most versatile. Not to say Mech E aren’t. I think they are also but in a different direction. But overall EEs are. Plus EEs can go into the medical directions (after taking a medical electronics course) I can see how everything is related to electronics. Point blank you can hire an EE to do anything.</p>