I completely agree. I spent over 7 years at SAP and AWS, and left AWS to develop end-to-end hardware and software solutions. Many companies face significant challenges with the hardware aspect, which is becoming an increasingly critical need. I founded a startup (Cosito sensors) to help companies implement sensor applications in minutes, not years.
SW + HW Full Stack Engineer? Is this an idea to squeeze engineers dry while expecting them to do everything? Tasks that need specialization should be divided appropriately. Do you expect a full-stack baker who grows their own wheat while simultaneously baking baguettes?
Well Said. Engineers are just the slaves of our century, which people from other sectors chant and applaud while doing their mundane, stable, unchanging jobs while paying engineers peanuts.
At entry level I’d expect every engineer to dabble into multiple fields before they specialise as they progress into the field they want wether that’s a specific field in software or hardware. That’s how it is, that’s how degrees prepare their graduates. Personally I expected universities to split disciplines. Instead of having just computer science and electrical engineering, have mobile dev, system integrations and for the other one control &/ automation engineer
Yes companies want to hire people now that can do 2 to 5 previous positions for only a few thousands dollars more than the lowest paid previous 5 positions
I'm an electrical engineer as described in this video, and let me just say that to get to the level of "full stack" competency is A LOTTT of work and learning and hands-on experience to grasp. Like she says about HVAC technicians, the future will be them training as Robot technicians, but there are a lot more elements in these systems than an HVAC system. This is no small feat, but I do hope some smart and motivated people out there do decide to gain knowledge in these area. We could start by bolstering grade school education in this country and have math, writing, and science classes that aren't a joke, it should've got rolling years ago but needs to happen now if we want to meet the demand of the future.
Engineering has always been 70% Hardware and 30% software. Software runs on hardware, However over the years software has made. significant progress, hence the need for hardware to catch up, which translates to the increasing demand for hardware Engineers. A full stack Engineer has an Edge because they have vast knowledge of both parts, which makes them more relevant.
Timestamps (Powered by SitrakAI) 00:04 - Job opportunities are expanding in hardware-focused roles, reducing the necessity for degrees. 01:36 - Demand surges for skills blending software and hardware engineering. 03:02 - New engineers bridging hardware and software are essential for future job markets. 04:28 - Robotic teleoperation creates new job opportunities without requiring a four-year degree. 05:46 - Heavy industries face labor shortages as automation rises and experienced workers retire. 07:12 - Demand is rising for full stack hardware engineers across various industries. 08:43 - The market drives innovation for hardware-software integration careers. 10:24 - Building a US-centric supply chain for robotics and manufacturing is crucial.
Used to be a robotic simulation engineer years back. Yes work was interesting etc. But I moved to data analytics after looking at how these companies never paid employees well unless you move to management roles.
LOL, I did electrical engineering back in the 2000s, and worked for a few years. Eventually, switched to software for more rewarding jobs. Now, they want the hardware back! America is always about the next quarter thinking rather than decades and long-term thinking.
In my experience pretty well everything comes back in time. I studied Engineering back in the 1970s & was sure then that the short back & sides haircuts of my father's youth were never going to be fashionable again.
Same here in india. I didn't even found more jobs related to electronics in mid 2014's . I think right now there might be some openings in electronics .
It can take years to acquire all of these skills, and you gain experience through many successes and failures. Unfortunately people who have this kind of experience tend to be older, and when you walk in the door with a few grey hairs you immediately get rejected. Most companies want good good cheap cheap.
That's me!! a full-stack engineer! I started my career designing integrated circuits and pcbs for 5 years.. then moved to high paying software engineering role and doing ai engineering and enterprise architecture design 😅😅😅
That's amazing ! I just graduated from electronics engineering and I do not see much job offers, and less in my country, I do find software/embedded and AI more intriguing, is it totally worth the change?
My son is graduating from Electrical and Electronic degree this year. With the knowledge and experience you have , can you advise or suggest what he should in terms of career please ? He is not sure.
I appreciate the guidance but I’m skeptical about anything that is supposedly going to be in demand. It seems like the only thing someone can get hired to do is what they did in their most recent position.
Erin is 100 percent bang on. SAIT in Calgary has one of the most advanced Materials and Robotics labs in North America, and has openings for students in its Advanced Manufacturing & Construction Program.
Sad it's in a fascist leftist country. #FreeCanada!! I would be more than happy to accept 90% of Canada as our 51st state. That last 10% is terrifyingly hostile towards free thought.
Not exactly! Embedded software engineering is a little bit different in a sense where it doesn't cover that much of hardware engineering, it's still in the realm of software engineering: just some low-level, firmware programming using the hardware interface.
@@TechCrack01bro, it's called Embedded Systems Engineer, not only Embedded Software Engineer. These are 2 different things. Embedded Systems involves Software + Hardware. I heard first time it's called full stack engineer. Full stack usually means from pure software side of view where developer can code multitude of languages or frameworks, I never heard any company or anyone says it's full stack where hardware involves. Its called pure Embedded Systems and lots of embedded engineers like me are so much experts in hardware + software + firmware + app development + cloud + linux. So it's quite common in the industry to call such an Engineer, Embedded Systems Engineer. Hope you understand. Thanks.
I’m a software dev just learned embedded and worked for the only company designing, manufacturing and assembling here in the USA. 3DR drone autopilots. So…. I love this chat but point me to these jobs please haha
I have the urge to start up a niche hardware manufacturing company in my country, but I don’t know what kind of skills to look for if I need to hire people
This is close to heart. I have let go of a career switch into a high-paying software jobs, instead still keeping one feet on hardware and other on firmware/software!
I think what some people are missing is that she is calling for hardware / software generalists. People with enough skill to cobble together a prototype to get something to work. Specialist can then refine it. We have a system for producing specialists, but the hardware /software /robotics generalist is the missing piece we need now.
The industry’s about to get a huge makeover, and the gap between software and hardware experts will only get bigger. How long before universities realize this and adjust their programs?
Hardware once installed, it is expected to work for at least 5 years. But within that period, it undergoes about 15 software iterations (major and minor), hence software engineers becomes in demand. And that will still happen because of the way things are.🎉
Yes it will come back to USA, manufacturing has in a large extent bring back to this country otherwise the foundation of USA will be shaken , we can not only depended on virtual enocomy, but how to overcome the major obstacle of cost, one of new technology is robots application penetrating into industry agriculture service , a lot of aspects
I know we're not talking about degrees here per se, but the Industrial Engineering and Operations Research degree at Berkeley ties together a lot of knowledge and skills that one might need to succeed in a tech-driven, 'building' economy. It's worth taking a look, just to get a sense of the depth and breadth of knowledge needed to make complex things efficiently.
Believe or not. Hardware industries is not good paying well and not many jobs. These podcast more about how to secure future young employees for cooperate. All hardware industries are performing not well and investors are not intrested becoz it is hard and value of return minimal
You manufacture any physical product, requires bunch of robots to do it. These robots have to be made with a combination of hardware, software etc. After NVIDIA rose to top the list of Trillion dollar companies, everyone wants to design ICs to speed up AI performance. As AI tech processes advance, everyone wants to have a super computer on their desktop. Every industrial robot has to be serviced from time to time. Every physical system is a combination
Nice Ideas and future trends but I am not sure US can definitely be self reliant on all aspects of sourcing so there still needs a co-operation with all countries rather than trying to isolate, the world is decentralized more and more see the rise of Bitcoin against USD! Nonetheless great Ideas on the Full stack H/W engineers Idea but these are probably going to be Automated with 3D Printing (Alloy based) and Advanced Robotics(Optimus from Tesla).Its actually not very clear how the things play out in near future. Amazing fu times ahead!!
I guess I puck the right career. I've noticed that Software has taken over the attention of mpst investors and they fail to realize that neglecting Hardware development will most definitely come to haunt them soon.😅
Most of the electronics jobs are in China and other parts of Asia. There are very few jobs for hardware engineers in the USA, which has de-industrialized so much and whose operational costs are very expensive, add to that the conditions for production are backward.
We're repeating history again I feel. We did this in the 90s with "AI" back then and they released engineers. Now, we're trying to combine which we did in the later 90s. AI is just smaller computers doing things (which we aren't really validating the output, we just trust it). I feel we need to focus on taking things OFF the network, less information, less convenience, and less would be better....back to the 70s and 80s to an extent. Take data OFF the network that shouldn't be there; reduce breaches and data exfil.
I am a full stack hardware and software engineer, i am searching for a team with a really challenging project, i work us a freelance, but i can also be employed by a company if is enough interested in me
Jack of all trades, master of none-this is the reality for many third-country jobs. This is what is it when a job in a third country moves back to the U.S.
She is loud and wrong 😂, I don't see this explosion in demand for hardware and software in the data? software jobs are still way more in demand then fullstack hardware and it will always be the case since software is ubiquitous
@@zinjanthropus322 okay mate, keep sensing. I think people got a little too excited watching 1 company wasting billions on rockets. In the real world knowing "how to play with breadboards" doesn't get you that far
@@keslauche1779 You mean the same one company space program with more launches than the rest of the world combined and just surpassed Lockheed and RTX combined in market cap while still being private? Keep living in 2015 dude, I'm sure it'll work out for you when Devin puts you out of a job. Former software devs are shipping cutting edge software defined hardware across industries while you're still hangup on breadboards.
The volume of hardware upgrades and improvements is staggering. I think many pure software people who have only been working in or following the traditional tech companies don't yet understand that from manufacturing steel to harvesting crops to brewing beer 🍻 is still incredibly manual, non-optimised and often generating wastes or uncertainty that we all pay for. Modernisation of traditional industry and products via hardware and software combinations is a massive opportunity that few people even talk about because many software people have no concept of true hardware challenges
@@zinjanthropus322 The breadboard comment came from quoting the video 🤣. Also I was just highlighting that the video is misleading, there is actually no market for these H/S full-stack engineers, there are only a few very niche companies and SpaceX is losing money in a spectacular fashion without any concrete evidence that they will ever be profitable (you should look into it). They are able to try more things than NASA has because they are a private company. The reality is that developing, maintaining and fixing these systems is extremely difficult, the complexity is really high and often requires PhDs or years of specialisation in industry. On the other hand, if you have never developed a commercial software product you will never understand how far Devin and all those LLMs are from being able to replace software engineers. They are a nice demo but after a few prompts, good luck improving or fixing the spaghetti code they generate.
🌟What is the future of non-engineers as the population of engineering professionals have increased in proportion to job openings? So, what seems happening is that the technology industries are only preferring engineers even in their non-technical jobs because such individuals have technical know-how that a non-engineering student or professional who wants to involve himself in the technology sector, considering its universality today, cannot grow, perform or excel in his or her career for a better future. Many feel hopeless on how to survive and flourish in business or technology as non-engineers and feel left out today. They find their voices jipped and abused in corporations as non-engineers 🤐📛 Please help. 🙏
Then you should earn some money, learn the technology you select it by doing the course, then just do tech jobs and switch companies for better growth and better projects.
Kinda empty talk. Since electricity was found, human civilization was never able to produce enough engineers - people that build. Everywhere you go construction and engineering are "most in demand". It will always stay like that. We can always build more.
as soon as robots are sold and know EVERYTHING about electrical engineering, then those jobs are dead. Optimus is getting very close to that. the rest is whether we want less-than-perfect humans to do it. maybe 5-10 years max for human until ai stops making dumb mistakes and can solve issues by themselves
Disagree, I think if anything that idea is +20 years down the line. But I think it will be much cheaper to create and innovate an idea. I've used AI to give help me with some great ideas that were already 80% completed. We as humans still have a lot to add.
I found it disgusting that corporations wanted certain workers so they manipulate young people to study certain fields to be used by corporations. As soon as they don't need the workers, they just discard them on the curb & forget about them. Look at all the fresh swe graduates still trying to find jobs .
I think this video would have been even better if she mentioned exactly this. AI will provide HW engineers a new level of agency to integrate SW that they've never had before.
Ok. Jobs that don’t require a degree in hardware software don’t pay well. I mean you are asking for expertise in multiple domains without going to college? There’s college grads who have to go back to school to even keep up with
new role unlocked : "Full stack hardware software engineer" full stack dev is not enough guys😬😅 OMG where are the getting all these ideas from ..? Learn accounting and excel that's better it seems
You are talking about the Technical high schools that were shut down in 1975 so everyone could be a doctor, lawyer, engineer. That is the answer. Wake up, kids are playing video games more challenging that what you are talking about. By the time you get to university your ability to integrate psychomotor skills is way behind.
This is ridiculous, so you want super humans that know everything and are good at everything and you want to pay them peanuts. I wonder if the two ladies talking about these superhumans could do 5% of what they are talking about. No wonder you disabled the likes/dislikes.
I completely agree. I spent over 7 years at SAP and AWS, and left AWS to develop end-to-end hardware and software solutions. Many companies face significant challenges with the hardware aspect, which is becoming an increasingly critical need. I founded a startup (Cosito sensors) to help companies implement sensor applications in minutes, not years.
my compliments. very few people have the forsight to work more with the hardware and less to make it a possible business.
Congrats and good luck
You're right! - I'm a hardware engineer and embedded systems developer for years!
I am also a Dev at SAP.
I work in marketing for such companies. Sensors are really cool and hugely needed everywhere.
SW + HW Full Stack Engineer?
Is this an idea to squeeze engineers dry while expecting them to do everything?
Tasks that need specialization should be divided appropriately.
Do you expect a full-stack baker who grows their own wheat while simultaneously baking baguettes?
Well Said. Engineers are just the slaves of our century, which people from other sectors chant and applaud while doing their mundane, stable, unchanging jobs while paying engineers peanuts.
Only to automate more 😅
yeah xD
while engineer is doing everything, ceo will be buying bitcoin
At entry level I’d expect every engineer to dabble into multiple fields before they specialise as they progress into the field they want wether that’s a specific field in software or hardware. That’s how it is, that’s how degrees prepare their graduates. Personally I expected universities to split disciplines. Instead of having just computer science and electrical engineering, have mobile dev, system integrations and for the other one control &/ automation engineer
Translation: companies want a wizard who can replace several employees. Who would have guessed
Yes companies want to hire people now that can do 2 to 5 previous positions for only a few thousands dollars more than the lowest paid previous 5 positions
They think the factories will have employees instead of robots
This is all foolish and will end badly
I'm an electrical engineer as described in this video, and let me just say that to get to the level of "full stack" competency is A LOTTT of work and learning and hands-on experience to grasp. Like she says about HVAC technicians, the future will be them training as Robot technicians, but there are a lot more elements in these systems than an HVAC system. This is no small feat, but I do hope some smart and motivated people out there do decide to gain knowledge in these area.
We could start by bolstering grade school education in this country and have math, writing, and science classes that aren't a joke, it should've got rolling years ago but needs to happen now if we want to meet the demand of the future.
Engineering has always been 70% Hardware and 30% software. Software runs on hardware, However over the years software has made. significant progress, hence the need for hardware to catch up, which translates to the increasing demand for hardware Engineers. A full stack Engineer has an Edge because they have vast knowledge of both parts, which makes them more relevant.
Timestamps (Powered by SitrakAI)
00:04 - Job opportunities are expanding in hardware-focused roles, reducing the necessity for degrees.
01:36 - Demand surges for skills blending software and hardware engineering.
03:02 - New engineers bridging hardware and software are essential for future job markets.
04:28 - Robotic teleoperation creates new job opportunities without requiring a four-year degree.
05:46 - Heavy industries face labor shortages as automation rises and experienced workers retire.
07:12 - Demand is rising for full stack hardware engineers across various industries.
08:43 - The market drives innovation for hardware-software integration careers.
10:24 - Building a US-centric supply chain for robotics and manufacturing is crucial.
Used to be a robotic simulation engineer years back. Yes work was interesting etc. But I moved to data analytics after looking at how these companies never paid employees well unless you move to management roles.
I think apprenticeships are another valuable avenue. We need to give as many young minds the tools to go out and change the world for the better
LOL, I did electrical engineering back in the 2000s, and worked for a few years. Eventually, switched to software for more rewarding jobs. Now, they want the hardware back! America is always about the next quarter thinking rather than decades and long-term thinking.
Same here
Good insight.
In my experience pretty well everything comes back in time. I studied Engineering back in the 1970s & was sure then that the short back & sides haircuts of my father's youth were never going to be fashionable again.
Same as well.
Same here in india. I didn't even found more jobs related to electronics in mid 2014's . I think right now there might be some openings in electronics .
It can take years to acquire all of these skills, and you gain experience through many successes and failures. Unfortunately people who have this kind of experience tend to be older, and when you walk in the door with a few grey hairs you immediately get rejected. Most companies want good good cheap cheap.
@@w6by They don't get rejected, I'll say they're hard to find and are very expensive
@@TechCrack01 exactly. People don't want to pay the premium for an experienced engineer
Yes but that’s the point. A younger engineer in his 20s or 30s who has these skills might be worth gold in the very near future.
That's me!! a full-stack engineer! I started my career designing integrated circuits and pcbs for 5 years.. then moved to high paying software engineering role and doing ai engineering and enterprise architecture design 😅😅😅
That's amazing ! I just graduated from electronics engineering and I do not see much job offers, and less in my country, I do find software/embedded and AI more intriguing, is it totally worth the change?
@@alvaropineda5168 I would go for, its the future. Learn low level coding and get a board to play with (preferably AI).
My son is graduating from Electrical and Electronic degree this year. With the knowledge and experience you have , can you advise or suggest what he should in terms of career please ? He is not sure.
I appreciate the guidance but I’m skeptical about anything that is supposedly going to be in demand. It seems like the only thing someone can get hired to do is what they did in their most recent position.
Erin is 100 percent bang on. SAIT in Calgary has one of the most advanced Materials and Robotics labs in North America, and has openings for students in its Advanced Manufacturing & Construction Program.
Sad it's in a fascist leftist country. #FreeCanada!! I would be more than happy to accept 90% of Canada as our 51st state. That last 10% is terrifyingly hostile towards free thought.
I've spent my career moving electrons and photons around. I've never moved any atoms, I want to move atoms.
Destroy it. 😂
Chicka chicka boom boom 💥 🤪
Oh weird, that's called Embedded Systems Engineering, not full stack engineering. And thankfully I am already over 10 years in this niche.
By full stack engineering, she meant: (Software + Hardware) engineering
@TechCrack01 I think that's called Embedded Systems in the technical world.
Not exactly! Embedded software engineering is a little bit different in a sense where it doesn't cover that much of hardware engineering, it's still in the realm of software engineering: just some low-level, firmware programming using the hardware interface.
@@TechCrack01bro, it's called Embedded Systems Engineer, not only Embedded Software Engineer. These are 2 different things.
Embedded Systems involves Software + Hardware.
I heard first time it's called full stack engineer. Full stack usually means from pure software side of view where developer can code multitude of languages or frameworks, I never heard any company or anyone says it's full stack where hardware involves. Its called pure Embedded Systems and lots of embedded engineers like me are so much experts in hardware + software + firmware + app development + cloud + linux. So it's quite common in the industry to call such an Engineer, Embedded Systems Engineer. Hope you understand. Thanks.
Yes Embedded Control Engineering is hardware and software.
I’m a software dev just learned embedded and worked for the only company designing, manufacturing and assembling here in the USA. 3DR drone autopilots. So…. I love this chat but point me to these jobs please haha
I have the urge to start up a niche hardware manufacturing company in my country, but I don’t know what kind of skills to look for if I need to hire people
please can you share a learning path
Did you learn c & c++
@ yes I did
This is close to heart. I have let go of a career switch into a high-paying software jobs, instead still keeping one feet on hardware and other on firmware/software!
*one foot.
I think what some people are missing is that she is calling for hardware / software generalists. People with enough skill to cobble together a prototype to get something to work. Specialist can then refine it. We have a system for producing specialists, but the hardware /software /robotics generalist is the missing piece we need now.
Amazing talk enjoyed listening to this from South Africa
Nami futhi 👍
Are you in a Engineering major? I am in South Africa 🇿🇦 as well
Elon musk endorse this msg😂
The industry’s about to get a huge makeover, and the gap between software and hardware experts will only get bigger. How long before universities realize this and adjust their programs?
This was the best vid I've watched all month. Thank you
Hardware once installed, it is expected to work for at least 5 years. But within that period, it undergoes about 15 software iterations (major and minor), hence software engineers becomes in demand. And that will still happen because of the way things are.🎉
Now AI could handle most of the updates and companies could use very little human resources
Im an engineer, with hardware technical experience right now im working in Software to have experience.
So they want a cheap young engineer who has 100 yeras experience. Basically reduce cost. Hardware is os such a vague term. What do you mean exactly?
The difference between hardware and software (from the theoretical perspective of a programmer / developer) is a logical one.
Sounds like we need me Mechatronics Engineers.
ok
so --- robotics! LOL
yay I am one already, though unofficially :)
We need ... we need ...They need nobody.
😂😂😂
Smart woman. We need the robots to build the factories and we need the factories to build the robots.
I wonder what happened to her hand
This would be a great time to start a company that builds training solutions to cross-train web developers.
Yes it will come back to USA, manufacturing has in a large extent bring back to this country otherwise the foundation of USA will be shaken , we can not only depended on virtual enocomy, but how to overcome the major obstacle of cost, one of new technology is robots application penetrating into industry agriculture service , a lot of aspects
i am interested in blue coular job but how to find it
whts ur skills?
It's always been the inventor skills
Such a great episode
Where are these jobs?
I know we're not talking about degrees here per se, but the Industrial Engineering and Operations Research degree at Berkeley ties together a lot of knowledge and skills that one might need to succeed in a tech-driven, 'building' economy. It's worth taking a look, just to get a sense of the depth and breadth of knowledge needed to make complex things efficiently.
All they do is optimization algorithms( discrete and dynamic programming), which CS majors already implement in algorithm classes.
Believe or not. Hardware industries is not good paying well and not many jobs. These podcast more about how to secure future young employees for cooperate. All hardware industries are performing not well and investors are not intrested becoz it is hard and value of return minimal
You manufacture any physical product, requires bunch of robots to do it. These robots have to be made with a combination of hardware, software etc. After NVIDIA rose to top the list of Trillion dollar companies, everyone wants to design ICs to speed up AI performance. As AI tech processes advance, everyone wants to have a super computer on their desktop. Every industrial robot has to be serviced from time to time. Every physical system is a combination
of hardware, software and AI.
Software salaries are inflated. When they come back to normal, a simple material science engg will also be getting equal salary as a software engg.
ever heard about chips?
Nice Ideas and future trends but I am not sure US can definitely be self reliant on all aspects of sourcing so there still needs a co-operation with all countries rather than trying to isolate, the world is decentralized more and more see the rise of Bitcoin against USD! Nonetheless great Ideas on the Full stack H/W engineers Idea but these are probably going to be Automated with 3D Printing (Alloy based) and Advanced Robotics(Optimus from Tesla).Its actually not very clear how the things play out in near future. Amazing fu times ahead!!
I am an 2022 graduate electrical engineer and currently working as a full stack developer with one years of experience, any suggestions for me?
2022 EEE graduate working in industrial automation field trying to switch career to software field😂 here..
So they are looking for a jack of all trades who they can exploit?
Where do I send a resume?
Could you do a podcast talking about SAP.
She actually used the term "Full stack engineers"😊😊😊
And here I thought i coined the term.
I guess I puck the right career.
I've noticed that Software has taken over the attention of mpst investors and they fail to realize that neglecting Hardware development will most definitely come to haunt them soon.😅
Past tense for pick isn't puck, mate
Great Podcast! Learned a lot!
Isn't a "full-stack" Engineer just a Systems Integration and Test Engineer?
Most of the electronics jobs are in China and other parts of Asia. There are very few jobs for hardware engineers in the USA, which has de-industrialized so much and whose operational costs are very expensive, add to that the conditions for production are backward.
I am a software engineer with ee degree. I do software to big pay checks. I will retire soon, and will make robots for fun.
Firmware is hard. Harder than LLM webpages!
Such engineers should be called cross-ware engineers
We're repeating history again I feel. We did this in the 90s with "AI" back then and they released engineers. Now, we're trying to combine which we did in the later 90s. AI is just smaller computers doing things (which we aren't really validating the output, we just trust it). I feel we need to focus on taking things OFF the network, less information, less convenience, and less would be better....back to the 70s and 80s to an extent. Take data OFF the network that shouldn't be there; reduce breaches and data exfil.
technological evolution is just an iteration of trial and errors
So, we called it the firmware engineering where software meets hardware.
I am a full stack hardware and software engineer, i am searching for a team with a really challenging project, i work us a freelance, but i can also be employed by a company if is enough interested in me
for having both sides I think computer engineering is better, you'll learn software, hardware and math concepts.
This will be me !
good video
Sounds like hackers and that’s incredibly niche of a culture to hire or attract in academia
Jack of all trades, master of none-this is the reality for many third-country jobs. This is what is it when a job in a third country moves back to the U.S.
She is loud and wrong 😂, I don't see this explosion in demand for hardware and software in the data? software jobs are still way more in demand then fullstack hardware and it will always be the case since software is ubiquitous
You're going to find yourself left behind reading charts and waiting for someone to tell you what everyone else can sense.
@@zinjanthropus322 okay mate, keep sensing. I think people got a little too excited watching 1 company wasting billions on rockets. In the real world knowing "how to play with breadboards" doesn't get you that far
@@keslauche1779 You mean the same one company space program with more launches than the rest of the world combined and just surpassed Lockheed and RTX combined in market cap while still being private? Keep living in 2015 dude, I'm sure it'll work out for you when Devin puts you out of a job. Former software devs are shipping cutting edge software defined hardware across industries while you're still hangup on breadboards.
The volume of hardware upgrades and improvements is staggering. I think many pure software people who have only been working in or following the traditional tech companies don't yet understand that from manufacturing steel to harvesting crops to brewing beer 🍻 is still incredibly manual, non-optimised and often generating wastes or uncertainty that we all pay for. Modernisation of traditional industry and products via hardware and software combinations is a massive opportunity that few people even talk about because many software people have no concept of true hardware challenges
@@zinjanthropus322 The breadboard comment came from quoting the video 🤣. Also I was just highlighting that the video is misleading, there is actually no market for these H/S full-stack engineers, there are only a few very niche companies and SpaceX is losing money in a spectacular fashion without any concrete evidence that they will ever be profitable (you should look into it). They are able to try more things than NASA has because they are a private company. The reality is that developing, maintaining and fixing these systems is extremely difficult, the complexity is really high and often requires PhDs or years of specialisation in industry. On the other hand, if you have never developed a commercial software product you will never understand how far Devin and all those LLMs are from being able to replace software engineers. They are a nice demo but after a few prompts, good luck improving or fixing the spaghetti code they generate.
First 10 seconds when I heard the vocal fry, I immediately stop the video.
Nevermind the bullshit she says.
VC's typically hate investing in hardware. The saying goes, you get what you pay for... comes to mind.
In the AI era it is a quite natural shift
🌟What is the future of non-engineers as the population of engineering professionals have increased in proportion to job openings? So, what seems happening is that the technology industries are only preferring engineers even in their non-technical jobs because such individuals have technical know-how that a non-engineering student or professional who wants to involve himself in the technology sector, considering its universality today, cannot grow, perform or excel in his or her career for a better future. Many feel hopeless on how to survive and flourish in business or technology as non-engineers and feel left out today. They find their voices jipped and abused in corporations as non-engineers 🤐📛 Please help. 🙏
Then you should earn some money, learn the technology you select it by doing the course, then just do tech jobs and switch companies for better growth and better projects.
Rubbish no one wants hardware engineers low pay do not listen to this lady
True regretting as an hardware engineer
Electrical engineers are the best placed
Most underrated and low paid😢..regretting as a EE graduate
Which country?@@kv5539
Kinda empty talk.
Since electricity was found, human civilization was never able to produce enough engineers - people that build. Everywhere you go construction and engineering are "most in demand". It will always stay like that. We can always build more.
as soon as robots are sold and know EVERYTHING about electrical engineering, then those jobs are dead. Optimus is getting very close to that. the rest is whether we want less-than-perfect humans to do it. maybe 5-10 years max for human until ai stops making dumb mistakes and can solve issues by themselves
Disagree, I think if anything that idea is +20 years down the line. But I think it will be much cheaper to create and innovate an idea. I've used AI to give help me with some great ideas that were already 80% completed. We as humans still have a lot to add.
Hardly, let Optimus first make an omelette before thinking about designing niche hardware.
Just use quantum computer access login so all the people be easy to predict the future
I found it disgusting that corporations wanted certain workers so they manipulate young people to study certain fields to be used by corporations. As soon as they don't need the workers, they just discard them on the curb & forget about them. Look at all the fresh swe graduates still trying to find jobs .
So what's your solution ?
It is known as embedded engineer
AI Agents are comming soon to lift up the hardware engineers
I think this video would have been even better if she mentioned exactly this. AI will provide HW engineers a new level of agency to integrate SW that they've never had before.
@@MrMountainHawkfacts. As a microelectronics Engineer, I learned python in less than 3 weeks from scratch with the help of copilot and TH-cam.
Ok. Jobs that don’t require a degree in hardware software don’t pay well. I mean you are asking for expertise in multiple domains without going to college? There’s college grads who have to go back to school to even keep up with
You want someone with 10 years experience out of college
Agreed 👍
Software eating the World, I Like this 😂😂😂😂 and Hardware Digesting it.
isn't that Computer Engineering?
Exactly. I don't why the presenters overlook this.
I like coding software because I can manipulate the bots. Now the bots are figuring out how to manipulate me.
Do you realize this is really talking about the need for systems engineering?
Really?
maybe engineers should also clean toilets after shifts while CEO buys bitcoin
Please keep the Desktop cowboys away from embedded control at all costs.
so --- robotics. (saved you 12 minutes!)
Pretty lady.
Is it convenient? Or are you being soupy sales'd.
👏👏👏👏👏👏🪻
mechanical engineering? no... low pay in US and still way too hgih to compete with China dji or byd
new role unlocked : "Full stack hardware software engineer"
full stack dev is not enough guys😬😅 OMG where are the getting all these ideas from ..?
Learn accounting and excel that's better it seems
Linux
You are talking about the Technical high schools that were shut down in 1975 so everyone could be a doctor, lawyer, engineer. That is the answer. Wake up, kids are playing video games more challenging that what you are talking about. By the time you get to university your ability to integrate psychomotor skills is way behind.
American jobs for American born citizens 🇺🇸
This is ridiculous, so you want super humans that know everything and are good at everything and you want to pay them peanuts. I wonder if the two ladies talking about these superhumans could do 5% of what they are talking about. No wonder you disabled the likes/dislikes.
LOL! Millenials discover the Embedded Systems Engineering. 🤦
That would be better if the hostess put some make up on the interview.
Mass production will kill the concept of full stack engineers.