albertlee Posted October 25, 2004 Posted October 25, 2004 Question as stated in the topic Secondly, what do we learn in general in computer science and in computer engineering? Albert
5614 Posted October 25, 2004 Posted October 25, 2004 engineering: the creative application of engineering methods to the design and development of hardware and software. science: the systematic study of algorithmic processes that describe and transform information: their theory, analysis, design, efficiency, implementation, and application - basically the science behind computers they are both studies of computer hardware and software similar, but slightly different.
MolecularMan14 Posted October 25, 2004 Posted October 25, 2004 Science- The branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structures Engineering- The application of science into commerce and industry through technology (ie-software and hardware) Both useful in the technological world, and essential in business around thw world
Dave Posted October 25, 2004 Posted October 25, 2004 From my experience, Computer Science is purely using electronics to accomplish certain goals. Computer Engineering is more geared towards actually understanding how all of the electronics works, and how to create different electronic circuit boards and whatnot.
indignity Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 in computer engineering, you're more likely to develop hardware/software development tools than anything else (to the best of my knowledge) with computer science, you're more likely to create software... complex, math heavy software, assuming you use the skills you learn in college I don't know about computer engineering studies... but CS studies are very, very math based... math is the language of science... a CS major is the guy that goes between the scientist and the computer
albertlee Posted October 26, 2004 Author Posted October 26, 2004 So, computer scientists only create software? since all they know is about mathematics on computer? Albert
5614 Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 computer science is mainly software and algorithms etc... although it can be used i hardware... surely quantum computers and other advance computers made in labs would classify as computer science even though it is actual engineering?
indignity Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 I'm pretty sure that quantum computers would primarily be the work of engineers ... as a computer science student you are trained to know tons of logic behind comuter programs... but very little about how computers actually work...
5614 Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 I'm pretty sure that quantum computers would primarily be the work of engineers but the entire way it works (all the hardware) everything would be designed by the scientists. maybe it is an apporixmated definition to say the scientists design the stuff and the engineers build it?...
albertlee Posted October 26, 2004 Author Posted October 26, 2004 well, in general case, scientists are mostly dealing with experiments.... And they design the apparatus and build/carry it out themselves.... but, engineers are less dealing with experiments.... They probably only learn the knowledge the scientists have discovered and use it for practical aspects? Albert
indignity Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 that'd be a good way of putting it... for some things, anyway really, both fields are so broad that you can't classify them, except in a very broad sense also, they each train one for such a broad group of tasks that almost any job in the field will require some additional, more specialized training (even if that training takes the form of "just doing the job"... most programmers are more of a burden than a help to their company during their first few months of working, until they get the hang of things)
Ophiolite Posted October 26, 2004 Posted October 26, 2004 Scientists learn things. Engineers apply them. Scientists are obssessed with knowledge, engineers with function. They are opposite sides of the same coin, but it is the same coin.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now