|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
68.227.247.96
In Reply to: RE: Rick Schultz, former ownwe of Virtual Dynamics posted by fantja on September 22, 2016 at 03:30:28
I described MY experience with Rick over many, many years. I'm "pushing" nothing. Take it or leave it.
It sounds like you have your own agenda.
Follow Ups:
No agenda here. You did not answer Sue's query about Rick being an EE?
There are many, many flakes in this hobby.
If you are so concerned whether Rick is an EE, why not contact him directly? It matters not to me whether he is, or is not. And what does Rick being an EE, or not, have to do with my posting, on this forum or others?I know (and have worked with) quite a few very talented individuals who excel in this hobby (and business), that don't have the vaunted EE degree. They are no less qualified to do what they do, since they follow Ohm's Law, natural law, physics, and are quite adept with a multimeter and O'scope. Some of them are brilliant, and I'm fortunate to know them.
Edits: 09/22/16
After working as an engineer for 26 years in the design and test of large scale integrated circuits for implantable medical devices, the two most brilliant and creative electrical engineers I have encountered did not have electrical engineering degrees.
Claiming you are a EE, does not necessary mean you have that degree. It can simply mean that you function as an electrical engineer. If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck...
I rose to the highest engineering level at my company. My degrees are AT (associate degree in technology; i.e. TV, stereo repair) and an EET (electronic engineering technology) from ASU. When folks ask me what I did for a living I tell them I was an electrical engineer because that's what I did and did very well for 26 years before retiring.
One of the reasons I did so well is because I didn't get an electrical engineering degree. Roger Skoff wrote a great article somewhere explaining that an EE degree is the basically the same now as it was about 100 years ago; training to be a telephone engineer. I shot past many of the EEs in my company, many whom are still working. I believe one reason is that my degrees were more appropriate to modern technology. Another reason was that I am fully functional in a lab. Many EEs have to rely on their technicians for that.
Post a Followup:
FAQ |
Post a Message! |
Forgot Password? |
|
||||||||||||||
|
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: