INS-ANI said:Where do you see the following combination going?
1)A certificate course in Networking knowledge.
2)BE in Electronics and telecommunication eng.
3)A certificate course in Embedded systems.
4) and now a course in high speed PCB design.
Nora said:What is the approximate number where a board is considered high speed?
Is it mHz or GHz or faster?
For example, (this is a made up board) a board has a uP or DSP that processes signals at 30mHz.
Somewhere else on the board is an ethernet port that talks to a PC.
And there is a high speed i2c ADC that supports signals at 3.4mHz.
When laying out this board, are different sections of the board designed to accommodate the different frequencies....or is there just a general rule to the
whole board?
~Nora
Thanks for your advice sir. i am really encouraged.If you are any good in the areas covered by your education, you appear to be very employable in a number of industries. I suggest you investigate companies that design the sort of equipment that interests you most. You'll do best as a beginning engineer if you are inspired by the work, and you are among experienced engineers who share your professional interests.
Your educational combination fits automotive electronics, space instrumentation, industrial electronics, consumer electronics, surveillance systems, home entertainment electronics, and a host of others. Don't be afraid to interview - even if your background doesn't fit exactly into your dream job. You have a background in theory (BE), programming (embedded systems), information technology (networking), and physical hardware design (high speed PCB layout) - a well thought out combination.
Nora said:Can anyone recommend books on PCB layout?
-N_N
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