Engineering Interviews Be Like
14:43
Getting Laid Off Be Like...
9:53
9 ай бұрын
How I Saved $100,000 By 24
16:49
Жыл бұрын
i got a job offer
9:57
Жыл бұрын
Are there girls in engineering?
21:34
Пікірлер
@a-bison
@a-bison 2 сағат бұрын
Quite a bit actually, you have to know all the numbers from 1-100 so that you can make a good approximation for something
@JeanmoïseNSerebé
@JeanmoïseNSerebé 9 сағат бұрын
S'il vous plaît sur quelle applicaction faites vous votre design
@rawyamohamed3046
@rawyamohamed3046 2 күн бұрын
Thank you for advice bless you
@jacobstarr9010
@jacobstarr9010 2 күн бұрын
I only had to take Calc 1-3 and diff EQ, no linear algebra. Also I’m a ChE major and have only taken Material and Energy Balances thus far but in that course the extent of math was just basic algebra and some basic integrals.
@Derek-mccain
@Derek-mccain 2 күн бұрын
You are a hero
@rogec7975
@rogec7975 3 күн бұрын
Due to employment documentation situations, I am not able to apply for jobs at the moment; That being said, Tamer, you are awesome. I started a business and your advice has helped me a lot in both my engineering and business journeys! Much love, all the best!
@shathan.10
@shathan.10 3 күн бұрын
Yea would like to see the raw footage of the interviews you did
@shathan.10
@shathan.10 3 күн бұрын
Keep up with these type of video about interview process I would like to learn more about answering questions preparing for interviews as well
@AbhishekPattar
@AbhishekPattar 4 күн бұрын
Can you do a video on how we can start an personal project?
@loworochi
@loworochi 4 күн бұрын
It’s enough that my associates will be in Mathmatics (Trig, Calc 1, 2, and 3 + Linear Algebra + Differential Equations not to mention Calculus based physics). Electrical Engineering Major btw
@bryanit
@bryanit 5 күн бұрын
Hey, how did you apply for an intern position with no work experience or skill…or did you have ?
@dazhaninfontillo1200
@dazhaninfontillo1200 5 күн бұрын
Thankyou this was very helpful
@takashi-lee3943
@takashi-lee3943 6 күн бұрын
At UAlberta I have taken / am gonna take (a full course list can be found online for every discipline at the UOA): MATH 100, calc 1: you learn everything about derivatives, a little bit about Taylor series, differentials, mean value theorem, etc and integration towards the end. Basically math 31+ MATH 101/calc 2: integration techniques, series, parametric and polar functions, 3D calculus stuff Math 102/ linear algebra: pretty standard linear algebra course everything from standard vector stuff, matrix’s, vector spaces, basis, change of basis, eigenvalues, etc Math 209/ calc 3: started with proper 3D functions, directional derivatives, Lagrange multipliers, then onto double and triple intigrals with everything that goes into those, then onto vector calculus with line intigrals, surface integrals, greens, stokes, and divergence theorem Stat 235: exactly what is said in the video about it I havent taken these yet but you also have math 201 (differential equations) and math 300 (partial differential equations with much more other stuff), and math 311 (complex analysis)
@nicajlenz3281
@nicajlenz3281 6 күн бұрын
1:45 The question is not specific about beam cross-section . Therefore you don't need assume that the beam has a rectangular cross-section. it can be a IPN , angle iron or whatever. It is a mistake i made in answering this question one and got the feedback later!
@Plus815
@Plus815 7 күн бұрын
Is the video interview actually talking to a person or you just taking a video of yourself with questions they ask you
@Plus815
@Plus815 7 күн бұрын
Do you think I have a chance with these grades: My adv func is 100, calc is 99, physics 99, chem 98, sixth course is 100. However, my English is a 77. Does this English mark really affect my chances? (No adjustment factor)
@Plus815
@Plus815 7 күн бұрын
Do grades actually matter in university? Obviously I mean you need a passing grade to move onto next year’s course but what if I get 2% higher than the passing grade. Do I still graduate the same way as everybody else?
@youssefEngineer
@youssefEngineer 7 күн бұрын
ممكن نصيحة ازاي اتعلمت إنجليزي
7 күн бұрын
Back in the 80's...working for NASA or IBM was a great engineeing job. Now it's any job where you are inspecting other peoples work is an engineer. You aren't really building a physical product.
@Brendan.Mullin
@Brendan.Mullin 8 күн бұрын
what if i already started
@eulerthegreatestofall147
@eulerthegreatestofall147 8 күн бұрын
There is a lot math behind some engineering careers at some extend. But, after the 1 1/2 years, there is not much heavy math involved, i.e., you do not need to be good at math to become engineer!!!.
@mostafanagy9153
@mostafanagy9153 8 күн бұрын
انت عربي؟
@mohammedcraft711
@mohammedcraft711 8 күн бұрын
wow wow 9:53 hahaha
@supreethsrivathsa2921
@supreethsrivathsa2921 8 күн бұрын
Me after applying this trick in jee 🤡
@theplasmacollider6431
@theplasmacollider6431 9 күн бұрын
As an electrical engineer who does a bunch of one off cad designs and doesn't want to pay a huge subscription, I use Solid Edge.
@imaNub69420
@imaNub69420 9 күн бұрын
Well, we have to show work for the answers and we dont even have multiple choice tests unless theyre finals or its a test before break 😂 really helpful though
@spicychickensandwichs
@spicychickensandwichs 9 күн бұрын
I found some truth on what he said on certhing things need to watch out for studying ,not sure about the rest. Hey, if that work for him, all cool.
@shathan.10
@shathan.10 10 күн бұрын
Very informative!!! 🔥👏🏼
@This_handle_is_not_avaible
@This_handle_is_not_avaible 11 күн бұрын
Bro! I have science test tommorow not math 😢😢😢
@billyoung8118
@billyoung8118 12 күн бұрын
Earned my BSEE (emphasizing CPU design) during night classes while working full time in a clerical role. Graduated in 2002, the height of the tech bubble burst. No jobs at any company, anywhere in the world for new grad CPU designers with zero experience. Never worked even 1 day in the industry. Ended up becoming a statistician in the insurance industry. At least I get to use some of that math. The most valuable math class for me (outside of the calc classes) is linear programming and financial math.
@angrypatriot9989
@angrypatriot9989 12 күн бұрын
Just finished my last math class in MechE undergrad. Seven college math classes behind me, it feels glorious
@nebraskaninkansas347
@nebraskaninkansas347 12 күн бұрын
For civil I have to take Calculus 1 thru 3 with analytical geometry. As well as physics 1 and 2.
@verdisquo97_arts
@verdisquo97_arts 12 күн бұрын
I hate to be that guy, but technically isn't the brain neurons nervous system all those different things under the branch of chemical and bioengineering?
@eliasmai6170
@eliasmai6170 12 күн бұрын
what about getting a ph.d in engineering?
@danyelongo
@danyelongo 12 күн бұрын
I got a master’s in ME paid for by my employer. For the knowledge, it’s completely worth it. For job prospects, I feel conflicted. If you don’t seek out different jobs that use this advanced knowledge then you won’t really feel a difference. You need to actively seek out new job opportunities that will utilize more advanced knowledge because otherwise the material gets forgotten quickly. I am starting to forget a lot of the material I learned in grad school one year after graduating because I don’t work in a field that requires it. A master’s in engineering is worth it but you need a purpose for it.
@anthonyshaw3129
@anthonyshaw3129 12 күн бұрын
Well done
@viscourtroy
@viscourtroy 12 күн бұрын
If you can use the 'trendline' in the Excel for some practical purpose(s) within the formulae and try to find out the curve forms from the Maths textbooks' articles or websites, you are stepping in the basic scientific fields edge! Then you can start to use differentiation... if you have tried the y=mx+c in some of the practical estimations, you are not bad!! if you know to record the data for long-term observations, you will be a expert in the related field(s)! if you further to do the practical application from your scientific calculator(s), ...
@TreeMQT
@TreeMQT 13 күн бұрын
I have a question (if you even care lol) at the beginning of the video, you had notes on a "stress-strain" curve. When did you take that course? 'Cause if you don't say first year imma scream.
@AbhishekPattar
@AbhishekPattar 13 күн бұрын
I graduated with mechanical engineering major an year ago. I have not done any remarkable and relevant projects during my degree. Can you please suggest how I can find projects and do them to boost my resume now?
@Jjyahoo321
@Jjyahoo321 13 күн бұрын
Step one don’t brag about common sense
@gabrielgarcia7554
@gabrielgarcia7554 14 күн бұрын
Hey Tamer, I finished my masters in mechanical engineering just today. It took me 4 years while I was working full time. Despite all the challenges I still think it was worth it but only time will tell I suppose. My rough calculations is that it cost me $16k USD. Before I even finished my degree I was able to leverage it to get a job that paid double what I was making earlier (from $70k to $140k), it has made more than its return on investment for me. However please know that masters degrees can be extremely theoretical. Even in more practical classes it is still a lot of theory. I still think it is worth it but you really have to take on projects outside your coursework which is what I did. I honestly do not recommend working full time and doing the masters. Even taking it part time and working is a lot of stress. The only time I would say it is worth to consider it is if your job is fully remote or the degree is or both. I understand the opportunity cost for not working full time but please believe me that it would have not taken four years for me if I wasn’t working full time. There were times I was sleeping in my car at the school I was so exhausted because the drive to home after work was just too much. I would not wish this on anyone. To me, if you’re going for this you have to commit all the way. This really has to be the top priority and focus, and it will cause a lot of stress. But it is much less stressful if you’re working part time or working remote or not at all. Just my take. Worst case is that you can try it and push yourself and see how it is and then reassess on how you did, everyone is different and maybe you have a higher stress tolerance than myself. Additionally I will say that the masters program is much better than undergrad. Undergrad has so much nonsense like the online portals for submitting homework that say you’re incorrect even if you’re not, to massive class sizes, to requirements like clickers, or buying the textbook new so you can submit homework. In masters they treat you like an adult, you turn in homework either online on Canvas/Blackboard or you hand it in to the professor on paper. The class sizes are smaller and they are genuinely wanting you to succeed. There aren’t weed out classes and overall the material is far easier because they know a significant number of students are also working full time or have families. Also because so few of us engineers pursue higher levels these programs are actually quite affordable. I think it is worth it to make you a stronger candidate for jobs and if you want to get into VP roles you’ll notice they all have masters degrees, so you might as well do it too to improve your odds. I dunno to me it makes sense. I think your reasons for going into this program make sense because I also love software and electronics as well and I understand where you are coming from. However honestly most of the learning you will be doing will be self taught and projects you give yourself. A lot of this is theoretical so please go in understanding that. A lot of these courses are actually the same courses that PhD students take surprisingly. That’s why they can “master out” of the program. To me a masters degree is quite low risk for additional reward and possibly really big payouts. I believe education or betting on yourself always pays dividends somehow. Also for dating having a masters degree significantly improved the quality of women I was speaking to, not that this should be a major factor but it really is a nice bonus. Other ambitious, intelligent and driven women will be attracted to the fact that you also share these traits, if they can see that then so can others and I really think this opens doors. If you’re on the fence I say do it. Don’t question it. It will take a lot of sacrifice and there’s a lot of nonsense but it is not as bad as undergrad honestly. You got this Tamer!!!
@AA1986.
@AA1986. 15 күн бұрын
Going back to school for engineering at 38 thanks for the great video bro!!!!!!!!!
@wyattb3138
@wyattb3138 15 күн бұрын
I interviewed at Relativity Space once and Blue Origin twice for engineering and felt so bad when I didn’t get either after applying to 10 different positions and making custom resumes for each position. I got an offer out of state for an aerospace structural engineer but I would move across the country with nothing. I ended up getting an electrical engineering job in my home town since I was too broke to move out of state and didn’t even have a vehicle. I wish that I had stable income during college to save up for a car but it would have been hard to do.
@ngj5.0
@ngj5.0 15 күн бұрын
Step 5 right now. Already failed my first midterm and finally found a good group of friends in engineering. Looking to my quarter life crisis tho
@Nictoblid2
@Nictoblid2 15 күн бұрын
Facts tho A is olmost never the corret anser and im 4th grade and i live in macedonia and i never got A as the anser in 4 years of school tests in MY LIFE! JC why just why!
@iskanderhamadi7663
@iskanderhamadi7663 15 күн бұрын
I am a computer science student, and believe me, i am taking 80% of all this courses in my first year.
@kamimaza
@kamimaza 16 күн бұрын
However, if you didn't open Baby Rudin, are you even doing math?
@kamimaza
@kamimaza 16 күн бұрын
Math are all there is in engineering. They're like Agatha.
@horanghaeapologist
@horanghaeapologist 16 күн бұрын
as an industrial engineering student my answer to how much math there is in engg is yes
@daan9094
@daan9094 17 күн бұрын
im in the first year of mechanical rn and probably 75% of what i’ve done is math