Engineers/Engineering

IT's just something I picked up whilst I used to work there - I may have been misinformed or misunderstood.

Personally I find it laughable that technicians call themselves "Engineers". i.e. a BT "Engineer"...

Why though? (Yes I know the thread has been there already :p)

Would 'BT Technician' be more appropriate?
 
You have to have a four-year degree (or three-year with a topup) to receive chartered accreditation from the Institutes here as well. This is the case with IChemE; I presume it's the case with the other institutes as well.

The educational requirements for Chartered Engineer (and other categories) are defined by the Engineering Council's in their UK-SPEC document which all licenced professional institutions have to follow. For CEng, this is basically a Masters degree although there are some alternate routes.
 
I do call myself an Engineer. I have a B.Eng with honours. I develop these:
systemsstoragediskstorw.jpg


That counts right?

Also, design is a very small part of engineering, even if it is the job that most engineers have in common. I design testing some of the time, but level 3 support (they're usually developers/testers doing support) don't get as much call to design stuff.

But on the developer side you don't come across support vector machines very much either?
 
Real engineers are very smart, engineer is Latin for genius. They will be exceptionally good at mathematics, physics and science using these to build technology. They don't get paid £60 an hour for nothing.

There is no science to installing a sky media box and I doubt if they could transpose simple formulas.
 
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