No.I don't think so.If u really want to grow up and want a handsome salary and good profile then it is better to do MCA instead of doing GNIIT
I would guess that biomedical engineering is a very difficult major. Any engineering field is difficult to get into, but if you are determined enough, and interested enough you should be fine.
There is not enough protection from the sides...
It just depends on who you are and how you think. To do programming easily, you need a logical mind and you need to know how to think in a step-by-step manner. Ideally, you should have memorized the common commands of the language, but if you don't, that's fine, because you will learn them soon enough with practice. Happy programming!
Tons of them! Everything from Aerospace, to Agricultural and Biomedical, to civil, computer, and electrical engineering jobs. If that's not enough, there is also environmental and solar engineering jobs.
I would say Yes. The reason is that software engineers can not just depend on salaries, they can also develop systems - or even just a mobile app - that can be a wealth-building machine once there's an investor interested in it -- income-generating systems that could provide more than enough for the cost of living in San Jose, CA.
For software engineering positions, most employers prefer applicants who have at least a bachelor's degree and broad knowledge of, and experience with, a variety of computer systems and technologies. The usual college majors for applications software engineers are computer science, software engineering, or mathematics. Systems software engineers often study computer science or computer information systems. Graduate degrees are preferred for some of the more complex jobs.
I would guess that biomedical engineering is a very difficult major. Any engineering field is difficult to get into, but if you are determined enough, and interested enough you should be fine.
Software engineering was spurred by the so-called software crisis of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, which identified many of the problems of software development. Many software projects ran over budget and schedule. Some projects caused property damage. A few projects caused loss of life.[3]The software crisis was originally defined in terms of productivity, but evolved to emphasize quality. Some used the term software crisis to refer to their inability to hire enough qualified programmers.Cost and Budget Overruns: The OS/360operating system was a classic example. This decade-long[citation needed] project from the 1960s eventually produced one of the most complex software systems at the time. OS/360 was one of the first large (1000 programmers[citation needed]) software projects. Fred Brooks claims in The Mythical Man Month that he made a multi-million dollar mistake of not developing a coherent architecturebefore starting development.Property Damage: Software defects can cause property damage. Poor software security allows hackers to steal identities, costing time, money, and reputations.Life and Death: Software defects can kill. Some embedded systems used in radiotherapymachines failed so catastrophically that they administered lethal doses of radiation to patients. The most famous of these failures is the Therac 25incident.Peter G. Neumann has kept a contemporary list of software problems and disasters.[4]The software crisis has been fading from view, because it is psychologically extremely difficult to remain in crisis mode for a protracted period (more than 20 years). Nevertheless, software - especially real-time embedded software - remains risky and is pervasive, and it is crucial not to give in to complacency. Over the last 10-15 years Michael A. Jackson has written extensively about the nature of software engineering, has identified the main source of its difficulties as lack of specialization, and has suggested that his problem frames provide the basis for a "normal practice" of software engineering, a prerequisite if software engineering is to become an engineering science. {Michael Jackson, "Engineering and Software Engineering" in S Nanz ed, The Future of Software Engineering, Springer Verlag 2010; Michael Jackson, Problem Frames: Analyzing and Structuring Software Development Problems; Addison-Wesley, 2001}.
Apply for what? Not enough information.
Anything is acceptable - if you do well enough. The best ones are the physical sciences, but latin and greek can give you an advantage. The standard is a sort of biology major. (I did an Electrical Engineering degree.)
There is not enough protection from the sides...
Each of these new challenges will undoubtedly obey the law of unintended consequences and have effects (for businesspeople, software engineers, and end users) that cannot be predicted today. However, software engineers can prepare by instantiatinga process that is agile and adaptable enough to accommodate dramatic changes in technology and to business rules that are sure to come over the next decade.
Of course not
The scope of Engineering management would be you can open up your own software development company where you have enough knowlege regarding the techinical field and have the managerial skills in you. Also only technical knowlege is not enough. the management skill will alsways help to analsea nd also manage the operation, project opr the rganization. so i think there is lots of scope for the Engg Managemnet
Because they are lazy. With the possible exception of very trivial projects, every project needs requirements engineering so that you can understand the requirements. Failure to perform the requirements engineering often leads to rework and lost effort. In point of fact, even the trivial projects get requirements engineering - its just that the experienced developer has already done that before and can apply that knowledge to the new task at hand.
Your fax machine should come with the software that you are going to need. Typically the software that they provide is efficient enough to use on its own.
I'd like to imagine engineering is for anyone who can become competent enough in the skills required of engineers.