Aerospace senior here; I could NEVER do a systems engineering role, it would literally kill my soul, but they are necessary to make a good product. All of these degrees are super important for a large scale project of any kind, but honestly once you're an engineer you're an engineer. Everyone I've talked to in industry has had such a weird and different path to their current specialty. In terms of degree complexity I don't totally disagree with his ranking.
I did chemical. Yeah it was very difficult but I think I would have learned better engineering practice with mechanical. So many concepts are just compartmentalized into auxillary example problems, and I rarely had time specialize in fully understanding topics down to the core mathematic derivation
Mech here. Systems and CS are soul-crushing to me and extremely boring. The only time I enjoy programming is in the robotics/mechatronics fields. Otherwise, I'm glad people are getting paid to do what I don't want to do
yeah,if you work as an engineer long enough,you are eventually promoted to system supervisor,literally system engineer.At that point,you dont design stuff anymore,you work with your clients and other departments and translate it to the engineers
Guys he's just talking casually with a guy on a bench about which disciplines schooling/average work is more complex. Don't get your panties in a twist and act like he's actually attempting to assault the validity of entire disciplines of engineering. If you looked at pass rates, major switching/dropout rates, or average study time per week surveys you could probably back it up with real data. Its a part of the comradery of the profession to poke fun at each other. Stop being tightwads. Calling industrial engineers glorified mechanics is wild though, he actually must not now what they do lol.
After spending 5 years in computer science and only getting 2.94 GPA with a mobile testing internship experience, at this point I'm happy to just diddle with Excel and Unity until the day I die, man
As someone who switched from Civil specializing in structures to Mechanical specializing in controls halfway through the degree. Civil really is one of the easier engineering majors (for how it’s taught now)
As a 10 year mechanical engineer lecturer. This student has no clue what he is talking about, and misses the nuances in each engineering field that sets them apart from each other in terms of the difficulty/challange.
@@0siiris I think he has a general lack of respect but overall his little tier list is ok if not misguided. As said below civil engineering is a large encompassing degree but I don’t think it is technically as advanced as EE or ChemE. Industrial I honestly haven’t the closest clue what they do but I assume manufacturing which can come with its own complexities. But imo I am going electrical because it’s covering circuits, coding, embedded systems and can work practically anywhere.
I trained in Avionics at Queen Mary, University of London. The most challenging subject were the Stability of the Aircraft System, Aircraft Vibration and Fluid Dynamic.
@@red_mastermind Yes he will evolve. Though his arrogance makes him seem like thinks he knows so much about engineering even through he's still just doing his undergraduate degree. Contrast him to experienced professional engineers who are way more humble but know so much more than he does.
I am a Licensed Industrial Engineer, Its half true that we study in management, but we further study in statistic analysis. We improve production process more efficiency, make an analysis and reduce the cost of production, so you can afford to buy modern product. We control and ensure that, you will have the best quality of product not a defect one. We are in your everyday life, so please do not underestimate Industrial Engineering. Thank you.
As an engineering student this dude is saying pretty much what every engineering student would say, I don’t know why yall so pressed abt bro just speaking 😂
I’m an electrical engineering student, this guy has a very narrowminded approach. He claims “civil engineering is the least easiest” when this could be anything from designing a light pole to designing a network of storm drainage networks or entire buildings. He didn’t challenge about any sub disciplines, which says exactly what I need to know
The easiest ones that gets difficult as it goes, and the difficult ones that gets easier as it goes. At least that's what I noticed. And the fact that they're all different, which sorta means they don't need a tier list...
@@charles_teak None of that is true. Every field gets increasingly complex depending on what you're working on. The tiers are for how demanding the undergrad degrees are not their respective fields. And that's determined by regulations and certificates and market skills demand etc etc. Industrial engineers fresh out of undergrad school have learnt less and will offer less to the market unlike electrical that can immediately start working on advanced projects like complex machine circuitry. Clearly not the electrical who made this comment because everyone is so fucking stupid to not get the idea that fields/degrees are 2 different things. Holy fucking shit no wonder most people despise engineers. "I studied calculus I'm very smart." y'all insufferable lmao.
i think what he ment is the math a civil engeneering is mostly static. meaning. F = sum of MA = 0. you dont have to analyze dynamic systems as much in civil compared to mech, chem or electrical.
The company you work for makes what they make. Its that simple. Most companies are not on the bleeding edge of technological advancement. You could study the hardest form of engineering lime mechatronic design but, you work for a printer or CNC machine company and all you do is pick stuff out of catalogs. Yeah, you might design wiring harnesses to connect the components together but, that's about it.
Seems like some folks in this thread are either very hit dogs, or are taking a tier list in a youtube video entirely too seriously. Lighten up, seriously.
@@imbologna I had no idea engineers are so self-important, humorless and emotional. Is it because their identity is so strongly wrapped up in being an engineer, or because they sacrifice so much for their studies that any lighthearted banter is seen as mockery? I would've stereotyped engineers as cold and rational and not so overly emotional. But I guess we're all human!
@@pixellipsengineering undergrad courses aren't even that difficult or work intensive lol, if you're good at maths you're chilling. Same as any male dominated course that provides good career opportunities - absolutely full of unchecked egos, and it persists into the workplace 😂
Take something like a Moscow Metro for example. A systems engineers planned the Metro. A mechanical engineer built the hydraulic machines that dug it out. A civil engineer made it structurally safe by building fortifications. An electrical engineer built the sensors and controllers that make the whole thing run without train crashes. Now tell me what would you have without either one of those mentioned? Each one of those on their own can toot their horn all they like, but without the others, all they have is plans on paper, circuit boards, an engine or tunnels underground. Today's engineers tend to have horse blinders on to their particular field. It's the tragedy of splitting engineering into disciplines and not considering engineering a discipline on it's own.
this is dangerous to your career lol. Gotta have respect for every branch of engineering. Each is extremely complex and can be taken to the limit of our understanding of physics and natural phenomena.
He's talking about undergrad degrees not the whole fields and he's right. holy fucking shit people here are so stupid. Get a job instead of getting offended online. I'm doing nuclear engineering and tired of everyone else complaining when I'm not
Ok, except for industrial. Ya know, they used to be specialized mechanical engineers, now they are just some guys who don't even know advanced calculus and are more trained in management than engineering... Administrators with a helmet... industrial.
Its how hard to get the degree any proffesion is crazy at high level a degree is just a base start nothing else - electrical has micro stuff,programming and many other stuff that make even a bachelor go crazy i had learn 13 hours a day just to pass
God, I remember Vibrations Vibrations... that stuff was IT I just noticed for each course I did we had a reference book however we did like 5 or 6 chapters from the book and forgot the rest. was that same for you
As a Belgian Engineering student this completely blew my mind, and not in a good way. Here in Belgium the way things are set apart is just so different it makes him sound like he has no idea what he's talking about, which in my opinion is the case. No matter what specific engineering degree you did here in Belgium, if you can provide a diploma, that's a very clear sign that you are a very capable person that knows a lot about engineering and an extreme amount of the specific degree you chose because engineering degree's are notoriously difficult here.
Yeah man my engineering degree was rock hard man. Kansas State University was about street optics, so you could say I was an electrical engineering street minor.
My (Nigerian) brother grossly oversimplified Industrial and Systems Engineering (which are different fields, actually). However, he ranked ChemEng first, so all is forgiven. 😂 I strongly suggest that the student union at your group get alumni with at least 2 years of experience in industry (any industry) to come talk about how to effectively study in preparation for work. There are certifications you can do that will give you a geeater idea of what to expect in industry.
actually jumping from the chair would help just like a jetpack would, difference is jetpack releases a lot of weight slowly not to break ur body while ur jump wont have enough energy and even if it did it would break your body, but assuming you are made out of something strong enough you could slow down in a single jump but at this point you might as well let the floor slow you down.
I got into aerospace engineering thinking it was like any other engineering. Boy was I wrong. This is the most competitive and cut throat industry I have ever been in. Mess up once and youre gone. I love it.
I’m planning on going into aerospace engineering and now you’ve made me completely rethink what I want to do 😭 How difficult is it and what happens if you do mess up?
The worst thing about aerospace engineering is there basically isn't a way to work for a company that doesn't heavily rely on the government ans thus has the influence and regulation of unnecessary bureaucracies
0:03 systems engineering has a lot of "engineering" to it and actually is important. Because it is very broad. With current trends, anything broad and generalist is important. I'm into comp sci myself
Where is petroleum engineering in this video? Odd to miss it, when it intersects basically every other engineering other than electrical as much, but you are briefed in physics as well
Let's say you need to get to space. Which engineer has the largest share of the workload? MECHANICAL/ELECTRICAL/STRUCTURAL/CHEMICAL/SYSTEMS/CIVIL/INDUSTRIAL. Listed in both the order of workload, branches, and importance.
Yeah, and that says something because optimization is one of the hardest math subjects in general. It's also one of the hardest I've had to do (and I've studied set theory and category theory, 😆).
This guys opinions are just absurd. Did he really just lump systems engineers and mechanics together? Glorified mechanics? Are you kidding me? There are aerospace engineers who are systems engineers. What am I even watching right now?
This guy has no idea or experience in the field, hands down lol. Every engineering discipline is incredibly important. Most systems engineers have a niche/specialty they came from beforehand such as aerospace or electrical. If anything systems engineering requires all the soft skills and management skills that other engineering specialists don’t have - which is why it is only offered as a masters’ degree and beyond or jobs require a minimum of a masters degree AND experience. Systems engineers are in every phase of an engineering project/plan and brings a concept all the way to reality (let’s say in aerospace, from concept to space launch). A lot of other fields aren’t cut out for the level of communication and oversight it requires up and down the chain.
@ Respectfully, for someone that adds no value or contribution to any of their engagements in life (you had a choice), you aren’t anyone in society to be judging anybody else. Please go back to hiding with your skeletons in the closet. Would be more productive
This guy reminds me of the old adage of the buy who graduates with a B.S. thinks he knows everything and the guy with the PhD admits to knowing nothing Barely any life experience and already thinks he has the answers to everything. Gotta love youthful naivete
@@bhuuthesecond Imagine not being confident at all while being young. You couldn't even bring yourself to start a PhD or whatever because of the lack of confidence. It will go away with age. But any mentally healthy young adult should be that way to some extent. You can laugh at it if you have more experience. But you were probably also like that at that age. You just didn't record it at a video. People grow over time.
This ranking is obviously a very subjective opinion. I don't know how his engineering degree was structured. But in mine, all students took the same subjects for the first couple of years and when we split up to our specialties, it wasn't by performance in those first two years. In fact some of the best students went to civil, which required a lot of real-world judgement, while some of the dumber ones went to mechanical and electrical. It's just what floats your boat!
This guy us chatting shit. My undergrad Civil engineering degree; 1. Fluid mechanics up to very advanced level 2. Hydraulics and hydrology and computational fluid mechanics 3.statics Mechanics, advanced mechanics, structural mechanics, RC concreted, steel, Advanced structures Over 21 units of Engineering maths
Bro says civil is easiest and then says mech is harder cause they touch fluid mechanics… who do you think designs dams and bridges😂 fluid mechanics is just as applicable in civil Eng
Watching students argue which engineering is hardest/best is really cringe inducing Just focus on yourselves. Industry is nothing like you imagine it is.
"Applied math student ranks applied math majors" yes truly great ranking engineers should be considered half mathematician them complaining about mathematic in their major is funny and pathetic.
That testimony sounds like the part in the Bible where the men were blinded lusting after Lot.. that's scary 😨 Thank you Jesus you got away. Thank you Jesus you said no.
guy was right when he said industrial is easy. then he said.................................................... you're just glorified mechanics....................... what?
Then I realized... his way of thinking... doesn't make decisions with probability..... or should I say certainty in mind when he decided to put civil as 5 without considering the statistical odds of industrial existing. Calc, lin.alg, fluid.dyn, etc couldn't allow him to make a quality decision in his real life.
Not being open-minded/making assumptions about other engineering disciplines/other fields is an easy trap to fall into and is only really detrimental to you in the long run. That being said, it’s easy to mouth off about these things and it can be fun too 😂. Ultimately though, the first step to being great is recognizing that in the grand scheme of everything, you know nothing, and given numerous lifetimes you will still be far away from knowing everything you need to know, but that’s what makes something like Aerospace Engineering so perplexing (I’m an Aero guy). I wish the best for the guy, he def does come off as a bit arrogant, but he doesn’t seem like a bad guy. Hopefully he’ll grow out of it. Another point to point out is each degree might not to so in-depth on certain things. For ex, even though ChemE certainly requires the broadest scope (calculus I-III, chem, physics), they certainly don’t use as much calculus as EE or Aero (at least in school), so it really just depends on your strengths. I would still rank these 3 as the top 3 most difficult tho, just fluctuating depending on what you’re good at (maybe including biomedical/nuclear is a good idea too if you’re really good/struggle with biology/chem but my school has neither of these majors).
That is a subfield of chemistry/physics and not an independent degree though. I am in Biochem and had to take that shit. Definitely not my favourite subject.
Our guest is just speaking casually on engineering in an informal context, having some fun. Nothing said is intented to be taken seriously
Aerospace senior here; I could NEVER do a systems engineering role, it would literally kill my soul, but they are necessary to make a good product. All of these degrees are super important for a large scale project of any kind, but honestly once you're an engineer you're an engineer. Everyone I've talked to in industry has had such a weird and different path to their current specialty. In terms of degree complexity I don't totally disagree with his ranking.
I did chemical. Yeah it was very difficult but I think I would have learned better engineering practice with mechanical. So many concepts are just compartmentalized into auxillary example problems, and I rarely had time specialize in fully understanding topics down to the core mathematic derivation
Mech here. Systems and CS are soul-crushing to me and extremely boring. The only time I enjoy programming is in the robotics/mechatronics fields. Otherwise, I'm glad people are getting paid to do what I don't want to do
@ mechatronics programming is so much fun tbh. The ‘aha’ moments are amazing.
@@arcturus4762the only time i enjoyed programming was doing gamedev with unity haha
yeah,if you work as an engineer long enough,you are eventually promoted to system supervisor,literally system engineer.At that point,you dont design stuff anymore,you work with your clients and other departments and translate it to the engineers
Guys he's just talking casually with a guy on a bench about which disciplines schooling/average work is more complex. Don't get your panties in a twist and act like he's actually attempting to assault the validity of entire disciplines of engineering. If you looked at pass rates, major switching/dropout rates, or average study time per week surveys you could probably back it up with real data. Its a part of the comradery of the profession to poke fun at each other. Stop being tightwads. Calling industrial engineers glorified mechanics is wild though, he actually must not now what they do lol.
thank you
Sir this is the internet, we have to be angry and irritated at every minor thing
He's an ass in my opinion and just like assholes, we all have one.
W self control if you went in that room you would’ve left burning 😭
After spending 5 years in computer science and only getting 2.94 GPA with a mobile testing internship experience, at this point I'm happy to just diddle with Excel and Unity until the day I die, man
LMAO!!! Long Live Excel!! 🤣🤣
This guy is a great storyteller. He really captures you into a trance 😂 . Does he have a channel?
frfr
Like I was so drawn in😊
he should start one fr
da, he's so interesting
"He beckons me to come in like 'Come hither..'" lmao bro
this should be a podcast bro
why?
isnt this enough?
this is legit a kind of podcast.. just one episode bruh
This is a really really unique channel and I'm so happy the algorithm send it to me.
Here's my subscription bro!
my pfp is cooler ;)
As someone who switched from Civil specializing in structures to Mechanical specializing in controls halfway through the degree. Civil really is one of the easier engineering majors (for how it’s taught now)
As a 10 year mechanical engineer lecturer. This student has no clue what he is talking about, and misses the nuances in each engineering field that sets them apart from each other in terms of the difficulty/challange.
Lecturing for 10 years without tenure 😂
ok
Well the point is that he is a single person who hasnt majored in all those things... most peoples assessment would be equally bad if put on the spot.
@@0siiris I think he has a general lack of respect but overall his little tier list is ok if not misguided. As said below civil engineering is a large encompassing degree but I don’t think it is technically as advanced as EE or ChemE. Industrial I honestly haven’t the closest clue what they do but I assume manufacturing which can come with its own complexities. But imo I am going electrical because it’s covering circuits, coding, embedded systems and can work practically anywhere.
I agree with him on everything and you're the one that is clueless mate
This guy needs to make a channel asap his vibe is insane
I trained in Avionics at Queen Mary, University of London. The most challenging subject were the Stability of the Aircraft System, Aircraft Vibration and Fluid Dynamic.
This guy literally does rocket science
I highly doubt he has the experience and skills to be a propulsion specialist. He's a graduate engineer intern at best.
@@bhuuthesecond he will evolve bro, hes young
@@red_mastermind Yes he will evolve.
Though his arrogance makes him seem like thinks he knows so much about engineering even through he's still just doing his undergraduate degree.
Contrast him to experienced professional engineers who are way more humble but know so much more than he does.
@@bhuuthesecondthere’s literally no arrogance from this dude? You offended he put your field on the lower end?
@@bhuuthesecond People can spot you out as an idiot very quickly. Just saying.
I am a Licensed Industrial Engineer, Its half true that we study in management, but we further study in statistic analysis.
We improve production process more efficiency, make an analysis and reduce the cost of production, so you can afford to buy modern product. We control and ensure that, you will have the best quality of product not a defect one.
We are in your everyday life, so please do not underestimate Industrial Engineering. Thank you.
As an engineering student this dude is saying pretty much what every engineering student would say, I don’t know why yall so pressed abt bro just speaking 😂
‘Took everything in me to say no’ 😂
This is the most deranged interview
10/10 I appreciate the throw back troll science memes
Very good point of the circumcision.
I’m an electrical engineering student, this guy has a very narrowminded approach. He claims “civil engineering is the least easiest” when this could be anything from designing a light pole to designing a network of storm drainage networks or entire buildings. He didn’t challenge about any sub disciplines, which says exactly what I need to know
Cry harder lmao civil engineering undergrad is absolute dog
2024 Civil engineers arent the same as 1997 civil engineers lol. These mfs suck now.
The easiest ones that gets difficult as it goes, and the difficult ones that gets easier as it goes.
At least that's what I noticed. And the fact that they're all different, which sorta means they don't need a tier list...
@@charles_teak None of that is true. Every field gets increasingly complex depending on what you're working on.
The tiers are for how demanding the undergrad degrees are not their respective fields. And that's determined by regulations and certificates and market skills demand etc etc.
Industrial engineers fresh out of undergrad school have learnt less and will offer less to the market unlike electrical that can immediately start working on advanced projects like complex machine circuitry.
Clearly not the electrical who made this comment because everyone is so fucking stupid to not get the idea that fields/degrees are 2 different things. Holy fucking shit no wonder most people despise engineers. "I studied calculus I'm very smart."
y'all insufferable lmao.
i think what he ment is the math a civil engeneering is mostly static. meaning. F = sum of MA = 0. you dont have to analyze dynamic systems as much in civil compared to mech, chem or electrical.
I was actually drawn into that story lmao. He's a good storyteller and I could picture myself on that bus
i have no idea why but i really enjoyed this convo and ole dude seems cool!
this guy seems like such a g, need more people like him
The company you work for makes what they make. Its that simple. Most companies are not on the bleeding edge of technological advancement. You could study the hardest form of engineering lime mechatronic design but, you work for a printer or CNC machine company and all you do is pick stuff out of catalogs. Yeah, you might design wiring harnesses to connect the components together but, that's about it.
I’m glad Hobie went back to school after quitting the Spider-Society
Seems like some folks in this thread are either very hit dogs, or are taking a tier list in a youtube video entirely too seriously. Lighten up, seriously.
@@imbologna I had no idea engineers are so self-important, humorless and emotional. Is it because their identity is so strongly wrapped up in being an engineer, or because they sacrifice so much for their studies that any lighthearted banter is seen as mockery? I would've stereotyped engineers as cold and rational and not so overly emotional. But I guess we're all human!
@@pixellipsengineering undergrad courses aren't even that difficult or work intensive lol, if you're good at maths you're chilling.
Same as any male dominated course that provides good career opportunities - absolutely full of unchecked egos, and it persists into the workplace 😂
@BeeChomper Aight appreciate the perspective! I've no idea just yapping the day away
@@pixellips Generalized a group of people by profession is kind of harsh. Are all cops bad?
An Engineer that knows how to have a good time, nice!
Take something like a Moscow Metro for example. A systems engineers planned the Metro. A mechanical engineer built the hydraulic machines that dug it out. A civil engineer made it structurally safe by building fortifications. An electrical engineer built the sensors and controllers that make the whole thing run without train crashes. Now tell me what would you have without either one of those mentioned? Each one of those on their own can toot their horn all they like, but without the others, all they have is plans on paper, circuit boards, an engine or tunnels underground. Today's engineers tend to have horse blinders on to their particular field. It's the tragedy of splitting engineering into disciplines and not considering engineering a discipline on it's own.
found this in my recommended and this is gold
17:51 I'm a Filipino-Canadian, and I'm so happy to already have it off when I was a few months old!
this is dangerous to your career lol. Gotta have respect for every branch of engineering. Each is extremely complex and can be taken to the limit of our understanding of physics and natural phenomena.
He's talking about undergrad degrees not the whole fields and he's right. holy fucking shit people here are so stupid. Get a job instead of getting offended online.
I'm doing nuclear engineering and tired of everyone else complaining when I'm not
Ok, except for industrial.
Ya know, they used to be specialized mechanical engineers, now they are just some guys who don't even know advanced calculus and are more trained in management than engineering...
Administrators with a helmet... industrial.
how is this dangerous to his career ?
Hm.
I hope this guy knows that in Mechnical we touch up on electrical and not to mention the hardest thing mechanical “Vibrations”
Its how hard to get the degree any proffesion is crazy at high level a degree is just a base start nothing else - electrical has micro stuff,programming and many other stuff that make even a bachelor go crazy i had learn 13 hours a day just to pass
God, I remember Vibrations Vibrations... that stuff was IT
I just noticed for each course I did we had a reference book however we did like 5 or 6 chapters from the book and forgot the rest. was that same for you
As a Belgian Engineering student this completely blew my mind, and not in a good way. Here in Belgium the way things are set apart is just so different it makes him sound like he has no idea what he's talking about, which in my opinion is the case. No matter what specific engineering degree you did here in Belgium, if you can provide a diploma, that's a very clear sign that you are a very capable person that knows a lot about engineering and an extreme amount of the specific degree you chose because engineering degree's are notoriously difficult here.
Bro demolished his credibility in 2 seconds with that opening statement
Sure sure bro...😒
No he didn’t. His list is legit. Signed an Industrial and Systems engineer degree holder from a top US engineering school.
Every worse situation you alway have chicken in your hand xD
First situation might not be that bad
he said no to sex what an strong man
he's a good kid (im in school for mathematics)
You guys need more vids together
So after the story about the maniac trying to kill you all the classes must have been easy in comparison 😂
Yeah man my engineering degree was rock hard man. Kansas State University was about street optics, so you could say I was an electrical engineering street minor.
Hey I’m going to Kstate for engineering next year!
great video you should interview a mathematician it would be cool to watch
My (Nigerian) brother grossly oversimplified Industrial and Systems Engineering (which are different fields, actually).
However, he ranked ChemEng first, so all is forgiven. 😂
I strongly suggest that the student union at your group get alumni with at least 2 years of experience in industry (any industry) to come talk about how to effectively study in preparation for work.
There are certifications you can do that will give you a geeater idea of what to expect in industry.
This is two bros talking on a bench, don't take it too serious or personal. (tbh. I'm just lucky I got away clean [EE])
Telecommunications engineer here
Clicked...10 seconds in and went, WTF is he saying? 😂😂😂
actually jumping from the chair would help just like a jetpack would, difference is jetpack releases a lot of weight slowly not to break ur body while ur jump wont have enough energy and even if it did it would break your body, but assuming you are made out of something strong enough you could slow down in a single jump but at this point you might as well let the floor slow you down.
"this is nefarious business"
I love how he shits on systems and industrial, I bet if you put this guy on a manual anything he’d crash it catastrophically
I got into aerospace engineering thinking it was like any other engineering. Boy was I wrong. This is the most competitive and cut throat industry I have ever been in. Mess up once and youre gone. I love it.
I’m planning on going into aerospace engineering and now you’ve made me completely rethink what I want to do 😭
How difficult is it and what happens if you do mess up?
@@HopingHalona fr 😭🙏
The worst thing about aerospace engineering is there basically isn't a way to work for a company that doesn't heavily rely on the government ans thus has the influence and regulation of unnecessary bureaucracies
awesome video!
Yayyy thabk youuu
0:03 systems engineering has a lot of "engineering" to it and actually is important. Because it is very broad. With current trends, anything broad and generalist is important.
I'm into comp sci myself
mech engr here, was spot on about it
Not him hurting all of your feelings, he isnt wrong with these takes
Exactly.
Where is petroleum engineering in this video? Odd to miss it, when it intersects basically every other engineering other than electrical as much, but you are briefed in physics as well
You forgot petroleum, aerospace, computer, and biomedical engineering
He literally studies rocket science
How does he rate them 5 to 1 without hearing all them first?
Hella butthurt civil engineers in the comments rn
Let's say you need to get to space. Which engineer has the largest share of the workload? MECHANICAL/ELECTRICAL/STRUCTURAL/CHEMICAL/SYSTEMS/CIVIL/INDUSTRIAL. Listed in both the order of workload, branches, and importance.
Systems number 1. Don't know about the rest.
When he said city university did he mean "BIRMINGHAM" city or "LONDON" city cause am confused.
london
What language is this?
As an American, officially don't understand the British language and/or British education system
This is not the video I was expecting to watch
Bro, industrial engineers are optimization experts. What are you talking about?
Yeah, and that says something because optimization is one of the hardest math subjects in general. It's also one of the hardest I've had to do (and I've studied set theory and category theory, 😆).
A mech/EE engineer can do the work of an industrial engineer but not vice versa.
@ no they can’t lol. Sure they can find a package and just run the code but don’t understand it to the level of an industrial engineers
This guys opinions are just absurd. Did he really just lump systems engineers and mechanics together? Glorified mechanics? Are you kidding me? There are aerospace engineers who are systems engineers. What am I even watching right now?
He has no clue what Systems Engineering is, clearly.
This guy has no idea or experience in the field, hands down lol. Every engineering discipline is incredibly important. Most systems engineers have a niche/specialty they came from beforehand such as aerospace or electrical. If anything systems engineering requires all the soft skills and management skills that other engineering specialists don’t have - which is why it is only offered as a masters’ degree and beyond or jobs require a minimum of a masters degree AND experience. Systems engineers are in every phase of an engineering project/plan and brings a concept all the way to reality (let’s say in aerospace, from concept to space launch). A lot of other fields aren’t cut out for the level of communication and oversight it requires up and down the chain.
Found the systems engineer
@ lmao I was aerospace then moved into systems engineering. So what?
@@yourlocalcalculusnerd I don’t think you’re anyone in society to be judging anyone else. Go hide with your own skeletons in your closet
@ Respectfully, for someone that adds no value or contribution to any of their engagements in life (you had a choice), you aren’t anyone in society to be judging anybody else. Please go back to hiding with your skeletons in the closet. Would be more productive
@ you are absolutely nobody to be saying a word about anyone else. Do better
Dude sounds Nigerian, sha.
Structural engineering is harder as well.
This guy reminds me of the old adage of the buy who graduates with a B.S. thinks he knows everything and the guy with the PhD admits to knowing nothing
Barely any life experience and already thinks he has the answers to everything. Gotta love youthful naivete
It's always the young people that are so arrogant. But that's fine though because life will give them a good dressing down soon enough.
@@bhuuthesecond Imagine not being confident at all while being young. You couldn't even bring yourself to start a PhD or whatever because of the lack of confidence. It will go away with age. But any mentally healthy young adult should be that way to some extent. You can laugh at it if you have more experience. But you were probably also like that at that age. You just didn't record it at a video. People grow over time.
Did we watch the same video? He was never acting like he knows everything he just ranked a few subjects and now you’re butthurt.
@@Mulmgott Quite true.
How about mathematics?
This ranking is obviously a very subjective opinion. I don't know how his engineering degree was structured. But in mine, all students took the same subjects for the first couple of years and when we split up to our specialties, it wasn't by performance in those first two years. In fact some of the best students went to civil, which required a lot of real-world judgement, while some of the dumber ones went to mechanical and electrical. It's just what floats your boat!
17:16 how tf did we get here
This guy us chatting shit.
My undergrad Civil engineering degree;
1. Fluid mechanics up to very advanced level
2. Hydraulics and hydrology and computational fluid mechanics
3.statics Mechanics, advanced mechanics, structural mechanics, RC concreted, steel, Advanced structures
Over 21 units of Engineering maths
Bro says civil is easiest and then says mech is harder cause they touch fluid mechanics… who do you think designs dams and bridges😂 fluid mechanics is just as applicable in civil Eng
Not sure if he's an engineer but he's most definitely arrogant.
Story is made up, bro is a waffler
You loose sensibility with out the... to protect. The gland is tuffer. Its barbarus.
fax
"civil engineering you're not really an engineer"
Bro, the only person who can rank difficulty is somebody who has done them all. Which you haven't. Chillout.
I could fix him
He dosen't swing that way lil bru
@@killergaming24 I could fix that
Audio engineering 🙃
Clicked off this guys is waffling hard. Save your time
Watching students argue which engineering is hardest/best is really cringe inducing
Just focus on yourselves. Industry is nothing like you imagine it is.
He's answering a question, why are you pained?
"Applied math student ranks applied math majors" yes truly great ranking engineers should be considered half mathematician them complaining about mathematic in their major is funny and pathetic.
That testimony sounds like the part in the Bible where the men were blinded lusting after Lot.. that's scary 😨 Thank you Jesus you got away. Thank you Jesus you said no.
Does Primero have a Linkedin Or credentials? He sounds smart at least..hmmmm
He has a letterboxd
What is this guy talking about 😅 in later years he will regret this comments
guy was right when he said industrial is easy. then he said.................................................... you're just glorified mechanics....................... what?
Then I realized... his way of thinking... doesn't make decisions with probability..... or should I say certainty in mind when he decided to put civil as 5 without considering the statistical odds of industrial existing. Calc, lin.alg, fluid.dyn, etc couldn't allow him to make a quality decision in his real life.
circumcision rly is a huge L
Not being open-minded/making assumptions about other engineering disciplines/other fields is an easy trap to fall into and is only really detrimental to you in the long run. That being said, it’s easy to mouth off about these things and it can be fun too 😂. Ultimately though, the first step to being great is recognizing that in the grand scheme of everything, you know nothing, and given numerous lifetimes you will still be far away from knowing everything you need to know, but that’s what makes something like Aerospace Engineering so perplexing (I’m an Aero guy). I wish the best for the guy, he def does come off as a bit arrogant, but he doesn’t seem like a bad guy. Hopefully he’ll grow out of it. Another point to point out is each degree might not to so in-depth on certain things. For ex, even though ChemE certainly requires the broadest scope (calculus I-III, chem, physics), they certainly don’t use as much calculus as EE or Aero (at least in school), so it really just depends on your strengths. I would still rank these 3 as the top 3 most difficult tho, just fluctuating depending on what you’re good at (maybe including biomedical/nuclear is a good idea too if you’re really good/struggle with biology/chem but my school has neither of these majors).
Physical chemistry counts for this? 😭
That is a subfield of chemistry/physics and not an independent degree though. I am in Biochem and had to take that shit. Definitely not my favourite subject.
4:28
Civil is harder thsn mechanical trust me
I disagree