<p>grapesoda is correct. you don’t need to know all the languages out there. i had to code in C# at microsoft (and of course i didn’t learn it at school) the summer after freshman year so they gave me about 10 days to ramp-up and learn the basics for what i need to do.</p>
<p>what did you even put on your resume after freshman year that would catch the recruiters eye?</p>
<p>i am currently a sophomore chemical engineering major.
how hard is engineering 183EW and 185 EW.
i will also be taking
ce102a
physics 1c
physics 4bl</p>
<p>thanks!</p>
<p>i had an interesting internship the summer after senior year in high school that caught their eye…so i was pretty lucky.</p>
<p>don’t expect to get any internships at big companies in your first/second year unless you have connections/have prior experience. i suggest applying to as many as you can and know what you’re looking for in an internship. also, the interview will be crucial to obtain your first internship</p>
<p>i have a question about how much work is in CEE 15 (MATLAB)? should i take cs 31 while taking it to make it easier? also which one of the two is harder: mechE 105A or ChemE 102 they are both about thermodynamics and i need to take one of the 2, which one should i go with…</p>
<p>got killed today by the cs131 midterm.</p>
<p>miss the good old days…when we only had to know one language :(</p>
<p>I guess taking EE103 and Math 132A is probably a bad idea then… Can anyone rank:
EE 110, 113, and 161? (relative to EE103 and Math 132A)?</p>
<p>Also, can you rank Math 132A vs EE103 in terms of workload? (I’m guessing 103 is more work?)</p>
<p>Rank :</p>
<p>ee 103
math 132
ee 113
ee 161</p>
<h1>ee 110</h1>
<p>ee 103 > math 132 (in terms of workload)</p>
<p>so far for my winter schedule i’ve got:</p>
<p>ee1
physics 4bl</p>
<p>but that is only like 6 units so i’m going to need 2 more classes. I’m a CSE major and after those two classes I’ll basically be done with all of my lowerdiv classes, and I still have all of my ge classes left to take, so I’m wondering would my best option be to take 2 GE’s with those two to make it a little easier, since 4bl and ee1 are supposedly hard? </p>
<p>Or, can any of you suggest any CSE classes that would not be too difficult and would fit well with 4bl and ee1? I’ve already done CS 31/32/33/35L/M51A and was thinking of taking the 2 unit seminar like cs 101(?) but its not offered this winter, so any ideas would be great.</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>Are there any CS majors here who have taken CS112 or CS170A? One of those two classes are required for the major, and I was wondering how they compared to each other. Is one more easy, beneficial, interesting, etc.?</p>
<p>From the reviews on Bruinwalk for the professors who teach the classes, it seems like 170A would be the better choice… Anyone else have suggestions?</p>
<p>is it stupid or not recommended to take eem16/csm51A senior year?</p>
<p>what major?</p>
<p>and my answer would be, yes</p>
<p>EE straight opt</p>
<p>why? its not needed for other classes…?</p>
<p>it is needed for future classes, that’s why i don’t recommend taking it senior year. i believe most students take it in their 2nd year</p>
<p>unless you changed majors and haven’t taken it yet or something. don’t really understand your question…</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>For which classes? I want to hear your supporting argument!</p>
<p>most upper-div labs (this applies to CSE majors, but should be same/similar for EE):</p>
<p>CSM152A
CSM151B
CS151C
CS152B</p>
<p>happy now, grasspuppet? :rolleyes:</p>
<p>Hmm, not really.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Unless you do the Integrated Circuits pathway, you won’t need CS-M51A/EE-M16 for the rest of the upper division courses, if you plan carefully.</p>
<p>
I took both CS 112 and CS 170A. CS 170A is altogether easier, more beneficial, and more interesting. :rolleyes:</p>
<p>i didn’t even know that EE majors had “pathways” :(</p>
<p>
I like how the EE Department offers three options (straight EE, EEBME, EECE), one of which has six pathways, for a total of eight different degree tracks, so half of the undergraduate degrees in HSSEAS are EE degrees. :rolleyes:</p>