Well, for starters software is not engineering any more than garbage men. Next is the fact software is full of women and niggers and tons of indians making it a third world endeavor these days.
Well, for starters software is not engineering any more than garbage men.
Your an idiot.
I wouldn't go so far as to say software engineering isn't engineering, but it's definitely a different field then classical, Newtonian Physics engineering.
I also think the culture around software engineering is a problem, and a big part of when engineers fucking suck now.
A lot of the techniques used in software development just don't translate well mechanical/structural/electrical/whatever else.
A perfect example is design of experments. Sure, that shit works great when you can run thousands of iterations on a computer, and if something fails, you just restart. However, when you start trying to run DOEs on physical components, which need to be built, installed on testers, and run through however many cycles you need, it's just not practical to get enough iterations to have a meaningful data set.
And simulation man, fuck I hate simulation. Sure, there is value in using it, but without physical testing to verify the output, it's really easy to get lead down a dead end.
Also, if you can't simulate the hungover dude in the plant in Mexico that is actually going to manufacture the component, I would question the validity of your simulation.
At the end of the day, I blame millennials. My first engineering job was a bunch of old dudes who did amazing sketches with calculations on fucking engineering paper, then wrote memos to file to document the results. Since then, it's basically been a bunch of late 20s/early 30s morons who couldn't write a memo if it saved their life. They spend more time creating models based on empirical data then the do actually understanding how their component works.
Fuck this shit. Sometimes I wished I had just kept laying brick.
Well then I guess garbage men are engineers
Um...sweetie, they like to be called 'sanitation engineers'
(post is archived)