Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of jobs does computer engineer work in? DS interested in AI - should he look into computer science or computer engineering?
AI is typically more CS. If your son has any interest in both software and hardware then Computer Eng would be better.
Can someone explain the difference between computer science and computer engineering? The main difference I know is computer engineering comes under traditional engineering programs so their foundational training lies in engineering. What is the significance of this background and the difference between the two fields?
Anonymous wrote:Northwestern McCormick school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is ranked in USNews. https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-engineering-schools/computer-engineering-rankings
It has the usual suspects: MIT, Berkeley, CMU, GT, Illinois, Purdue, Caltech, Texas, Michigan, Washington, Cornell . . .
In Virginia, I imagine VT is ranked highest.
IMO it’s not worth paying OOS for most of those schools. MIT, Stanford, Cal Tech, yes, others, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of jobs does computer engineer work in? DS interested in AI - should he look into computer science or computer engineering?
AI is typically more CS. If your son has any interest in both software and hardware then Computer Eng would be better.
Anonymous wrote:This is ranked in USNews. https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-engineering-schools/computer-engineering-rankings
It has the usual suspects: MIT, Berkeley, CMU, GT, Illinois, Purdue, Caltech, Texas, Michigan, Washington, Cornell . . .
In Virginia, I imagine VT is ranked highest.
Anonymous wrote:DS is interested in computer engineering. It consumes all his spare time as he is building / coding / inventing constantly. His dream school is Stanford as he wants to be in Silicon Valley, but he knows it's an extreme long shot. Being in the state of VA, VT is an obvious choice. Should he even bother looking anywhere else?