| EE-CS at a top 10 engineering college will net you $100k offers. Doesn't get much better than living in San Fran and making $100k at 22. |
| Second the patent lawyer suggestion, but really the answer is, the one you enjoy. Trying to be a square peg in a round hole gets soul crushing very quickly regardless of salary. If you're a mercenary type who doesn't really care what you do as long as you get paid well (and those people definitely exist), though, I think biomedical engineering and AI are the rising fields. |
| The choice of engineering flavor will also affect geographic opportunities, so if DC has a preference of where to live that's worth considering after what they enjoy. |
Can you elaborate on how patent lawyers can avoid Big Law? |
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| Is there really a better lifestyle than computer science -> exciting tech startup or blue chip AAPL-GOOGL-AMZN? $100k and stock options and every colleague is smart. These kids make $15k-25k per summer internship, too! |
Sanitation Engineering. I'm only half joking. They average close to $90K in New York. It's steady work. You can do it for 30 years and retire on a nice pension. |
Sure, it's fun for a few years. The big money long-term is in finance. Maybe patent law too. You might get lucky at a startup, but slim chances there. If you're looking for the money like OP. |
If you can make it through it will still open up doors all over the country in a wide variety of industries. Not just in software engineering. |
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honestly, in any kind of engineering, the more you love what you do, the more successful you will be. If you think about it first thing when you wake up, and last thing before you fall asleep, it is the right field for you.
If not, just get an MBA. |
I am Industrial Engineer with degree from Georgia Tech. (#1 in Industrial Engineering for last 30 years.) I know some people call it Imaginary Engineering. But believe me you need to be smart and good at Math to be good at it. It includes a lot, including simulation, operations research, advance statistics etc. |
| My 14 year old loves tinkering with electronics...like taking a motor out of an old vcr and wiring it into a different circuit to make something else...that sort of thing. Is electrical engineering still a thing? I know nothing about this stuff. |
| Everyone I know who did the fire protection engineer degree at Maryland is making big $$. They all work in oil, though. But they don't have petroleum engineering degrees. So I'm not sure how that really played out. I would not do a degree in petroleum engineering itself. That will be obsolete in 30 years. |
| What an odd question. How do you define best? |
EE is still a "think". My DC just took his first linear circuit analysis class as a sophomore in a "Top 10 Engineering school". |