How to get job with B.Sc.(Ele) Qualification

HI,

How to get job with B.sc. Qualificaition.

Reply to
Priya
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You might try McDonalds or Burger King.

Reply to
Don Bowey

Do they have McDonalds and Burger King in India ??

Reply to
Donald

McDonalds is EVERYWHERE ;-)

...Jim Thompson

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|  James E.Thompson, P.E.                           |    mens     |
|  Analog Innovations, Inc.                         |     et      |
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Reply to
Jim Thompson

There's a map on wikipedia showing global locations.

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's

Former locations listed are Barbados, Boliva and Jamaica. Wtf happened in those places? Yucky western food?

For locations see:

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D from BC

Reply to
D from BC

Camel meat!

Reply to
Don Bowey

Use google to find small or medium-sized electronics design firms near you. Go there and ask to see the chief engineer. Offer to work as a tech or an intern, at whatever pay they think reasonable (zero if you can afford it) so you can learn the practice. If you get such a situation, but you are not learning, quit and try again.

And read everything you can, especially the trade magazines and the more practical texts.

Keep in mind that, even though you have an EE degree, you may not be suited to doing engineering. If not, consider some allied job, in manufacturing or sales or customer support.

John

Reply to
John Larkin

With spelling and capitalization like that, journalism is probably the best option for the OP. ;-)

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John B
Reply to
John B

How's your written Hindi?

John

Reply to
John Larkin

There are several degrees such as EE, EET, and ET. You might elaborate on that and which countries where you are seeking employment.

Reply to
Charles

I was just about to ask that same question. It is all too easy for us, even for immigrants, to forget how difficult English must be for people from India, China, Vietnam etc. Switching between English, German, Spanish and so on is a piece of cake compared to what they must learn.

To the OP: Build stuff. Either in a company like John suggested or as a hobby (but then it must be tough stuff, not just copying a circuit from a magazine). Practical experience cannot be acquired any other way.

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Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

No chance - you'll need a B.E minimum.

Reply to
gyansorova

I didn't realise that jobs had qualifications...........

I'll get me coat!

Reply to
Brian MW0GKX

If that isn't the truth I don't know what is. I think the stats run 70% in the suitability category, they're done after five years.

Reply to
Fred Bloggs

I believe that situation is generally true across most, if not all, degrees. With the exception of those who are passionate for a field, it's an argument for getting a very good general education and then filling in some specialty blanks when the time and inclination are right.

Reply to
Don Bowey

Hey Priya, You could take a job at a call center, learn a little testing or do some certs and move into the IT industry, but I'm assuming you don't want to do this since you posted here. The pay in IT may be around 5-10K INR a month.

I would suggest learning how to:

  1. Solder properly.
  2. Use a EDA package like Eagle or Orcad (assuming you don't know this).

You could then work for small firms that help EEE students do their project - check the engineering college notice boards, or work as a marketing executive for firms selling EDA tools - this is a good way to learn the package for free, before moving on to bigger things. Unfortunately, they will send you all over the place which sucks. Pay may be between 2-5K for a fresher. You could also check out technical writing (documentation writing), but you will need much better punctuation and grammar.

Your best bet (money vs time vs future-earnings) would be to stay at home, bone up on math, and organise tutions for under-grad and school students. That way you earn some spending cash, you get time to study (GATE, GRE) , develop better skills and get more time to goof off :) I'm planning something like this if my parents agree

You could also try posting a resume to monster.com or naukri.com. Also, check out Yahoo groups - some forums there are frequented by head hunters from India. You could also ask on "Yahoo Answers" - i got some locale specific replies once.

Read: "

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". It's an article by Eric S. Raymond, on asking smart questions. You might also want to buy a book on punctuation. I would suggest: "Lynne Truss - Eats, Shoots and Leaves".

Where are you from? Bangalore? If you have the money and stay in Bangalore then MS.Ramiah has some master's level courses in a tie-up with some university in Coventry . I don't know how good it is and the info is a bit dated and second hand, but, apparently, all you need is dough to get in (2 lakhs, masters program - no GATE). I'm doing/almost- done my EEE, and i mostly lurk here. Don't get too cheesed off by some of the rude replies - Mr. Winfield Hill posts here (author of Art of Electronics) and lots of other very knowledgeable people. You will learn a heck of a lot by just keeping quiet and lurking. Usenet's a bit of a crock for newbies with trolls, spammers and other prickly inhabitants. Google groups is just a web front end to Usenet (Wikipedia has more info) and most of the regulars here will use something like "Agent". If you wish to continue posting to Usenet you MUST read that link i mentioned. Also, check: "

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wiki/Usenet_troll". Close threads you start with a thank you and don't leave them hanging. Ciao.

Reply to
Vivek.M

Our economy teacher used them as a gauge for the real purchasing power of local currencies. In particular he used the cost of a BigMac. And this was in the early 70's.

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Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

Yes, the "Big Mac Index" has long been used to gauge monetary imbalances:

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story_id=8649005

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  Keith
Reply to
krw

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