Engineering is no harder than any other applied science.
Engineering is no harder than any other applied science.
[TW]Fox;20463318 said:Yea, thats totally engineering.
Doesnt that make everyone who orders something custom from a company an engineer?![]()
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)I think that there should be some kind of professional qualification in IT, at least in software development.
[TW]Fox;20463573 said:But harder than plugging in your new Virgin Media box.
Instrument Engineer in Oil & Gas, with a MEng in engineering and working towards my CEng.
I get wound up by the amount of Heating Engineers I see in their white vans. If you drive a white van for work, you aren't an engineer. Engineers should be stuck in an office. Anything else is a Technician.
I would agree with kiteloopy's comment earlier - Any monkey can choose a part off the shelf, but you have to know its going to communicate with the other parts.
Or in my case, not corrode in a matter of days if the wrong material is specced, or potentially blow up - if the correct pressure rating isn't chosen.

So what? Should everybody with a degree get a protected title?
[TW]Fox;20462312 said:If you don't qualify for chartered status then in my opinion you are not an engineer.
Engineers can also become chartered by experience.
But there isn't the confusion around the title Physicist, or Chemist as there is with Engineer though.

Is there? Really? I'm pretty sure that average Joe can distinguish between "engineers" who fix appliances/install cable/etc, and engineers who build bridges, tbh.
What are peoples opinions on Software Engineer, that's my job title, but I'm not sure I agree that it's really engineering. On the one hand I 'create' software/drivers, but on the other hand I don't create the actual physical product?
Never under estimate the stupidity of the average Joe.