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leadrig2019-02-13 19:54:09
Microcontrollers
leadrig, 2019-02-13 19:54:09

Is it worth it to go to college if you want to become a microcontroller programmer, or is self-education better?

Is it worth it to go to college if you want to become a microcontroller programmer, or is self-education better? And if the first, then by what keywords to search for a faculty?

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6 answer(s)
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kemanoriel, 2019-02-13
@kemanoriel

If it is a microcontroller programmer, then higher education is necessary because of a number of nuances that you need to know during development and which are difficult to study on your own (electrical engineering, electronics, long lines, shielding, reliability theory, etc.).
And the choice of faculty depends on you. It is worth choosing the best one, where you can enter and which is related to this topic. And throughout the study, to do their own projects and as early as possible to try to get an internship in a large company.

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Vladimir T, 2019-02-13
@32bit_me

Without a diploma, you will not be taken to any serious place.
Except in underground startups.

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poisons, 2019-02-13
@poisons

This is not the first time such questions have been raised on the toaster.
Crust:
1 - helps to start the tractor, and often the tractor will not start without it.
2 - show mom-dad and piggy when applying to a bad office.
3 - possibly gives a reprieve from the army, what rules I don't know now.
4 - kebabs in the grill to inflate.

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vanyamba-electronics, 2019-02-14
@vanyamba-electronics

At the university they give a little more fundamental knowledge bases.
For example, the Laplace transform.
Or how to make your own microcontroller in the garage.
But education does not cancel experience - the son of difficult mistakes, and genius is a friend of paradoxes.
Formally, all that is required is to read the datasheet, which bits to set in the registers. But then the magic begins.
But if you approach the issue from the point of view of "how to know the least and work the most", then you can find a lot of interesting, non-standard solutions.

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Aion Pro, 2019-02-14
@Aionpro

It is better to get a job at the office that supplies or installs them and study everything in practice and study in parallel (if there is enough time). Because until you graduate from higher education (this is 4-5 years), much will no longer be relevant.

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janikc, 2019-06-05
@janikc

Depends on your level. Many mistakenly think that programming MK is reading a datasheet and a couple of YouTube lessons diagonally.
When you come to work, you will be told to implement such and such an algorithm (for example, digital filtering). AND?
Another example. It rarely happens when you only need to program the MK. Often you need good knowledge of circuitry, microwave, design. They will give you tasks, develop, develop a node of something there, so that it passes through electromagnetic compatibility, has high reliability, etc.
Without fundamental knowledge it will be difficult, tolerable, but difficult.
A diploma is needed for employment in serious offices. The head of the department can take you, and the personnel department sends you off on a formal basis (there is no diploma of higher education). Without a diploma, you deprive yourself of a certain percentage of vacancies.
Studying at a university is self-education. There, no one will drive anything into your head.

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