yes
yes
Applied Electronics and Instrumentation are subjects for applied engineering. It is a combination of Electronics and Instrumentation Engineering. The course has a great scope and is offered by many universities.
Hi i am an alumni of IIT- Kanpur (electronics and instrumentation ). I'm now in imperial college , London pursuing my MEng in artificial intelligence . well basically , there is NO difference between instrumentation and mechatronics . in India , institutes like the IIT's and BITS , NIT's and the VTU affiliated institutes call it instrumentation tech . some prestigious institutes affiliated to Anna university call it mechatronics . other deemed , private and under achieving universities like manipal , srm etc call it mechatronics . regarding the scope of instrumentation , there is not much scope for instrumentation there in India . but here in the UK and other countries like the US , Germany etc , the scope is intense . so for all those who might tend to give it a second thought , please don't . the scope is just too good .
electronics and instrumentation engineering it deal with measurement and control system with electronic base,it is all most same as ece
electronics instruments
yes
A. JaMES Diefenderfer has written: 'Basic techniques in electronic instrumentation' -- subject(s): Electronic circuits, Electronic instruments, Laboratory manuals
i think in future scope of electronic engineering will be better than bba in pakistan and rest of the world
A. D. McRonald has written: 'Electronic instrumentation for a shock-tube'
Electrical-Electronics: 1.Electronics came out of electricals 2.Electricals: base & Electronics: Speciality Electronics-Instrumentation: Specialities based on Electrical Electronics i a part of physical study of electrons emission. Instrumentation is a fiels of specialty related to monitor,calibrate electronics components.
Richard W. Henry has written: 'Electronic systems and instrumentation' -- subject(s): Electronic systems, Electronics
nobody gets a job if they reffer to them selves as 'one'