Because it's so cool. You can't see electricity , but our present day lives depend on it. We can navigate in the fog, communicate around the earth, sense when it's raining, see aircraft hundreds of miles away, and so forth. We can control the oxygen level to our engines, hear music recorded decades ago, watch "Arrested Development" (ouch how did that get in there!), xray ourselves, etc, etc. We use the principles of science and math to arrange components to do all these cool things.
2007-06-14 12:37:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I will suggest you Electrical coz when I read your question I notice that Electrical Engineering does not rise any new question in your mind but Petroleum Engineering does i.e "Do i need to study chemistry for petroleum engineering ?" And today Electrical technology is developing day by day to replace petroleum technology. So looking to the future you should prefer Electrical Engineering rather than Petroleum Engineering.
2016-04-01 07:36:07
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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"Since I was in 9th grade Electrical Engineering has always fascinated me. I remember disassembling almost every electrical appliance in my home, just to see it working at the very basics. I have been interested to know how electrical engineering forms the core basis for the developments in modern technology. Circuit design, communication networks and modern electronics at the minutest level of that of size of a dust particle are few of the fields that capture my interest."
2015-12-23 21:25:05
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answer #3
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answered by chetan Abnave 1
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I'm with tlbs101 and Gene. I was taking radios, record players, TV sets, etc apart when I was in grade school. Sometimes they even worked when I put them back together. By 9th grade I had built a radio transmitter and had a radio license. It only got worse after that.
I simply _had_ to be an electrical engineer.
2007-06-14 08:23:59
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answer #4
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answered by dogsafire 7
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I got interested in electronics at an early age and got an amateur radio license at 11 and continued in experimenting. It seems to be a limitless field with constant challenge and constant fun.
2007-06-14 07:57:02
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answer #5
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answered by Gene 7
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Math, Money, Design, Forging new ground, R&D. These are some of the reasons for me
2007-06-14 07:32:54
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answer #6
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answered by Jared D 2
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I had a soldering iron in one hand and a transistor in the other hand as early as 4th grade. I was born to be a EE.
Perhaps my father's influence (he was a Civil Eng. -- city water, and civil defense -- all his life).
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2007-06-14 07:35:46
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answer #7
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answered by tlbs101 7
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It's interesting
2007-06-14 09:49:52
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I am glad someone likes it, circuits was my least favorite course in university.
2007-06-14 09:00:49
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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because I found it interesting and I love to learn more about wiring and something that is different.
2016-03-21 00:27:57
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answer #10
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answered by AMELIA 1
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