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What specialties / technical schools / universities will teach you how to solder and work with machines?
Hello. In general, a subject. A couple of years ago I graduated from high school and entered the medical school, but then ran away from there like a scalded. Now I work full-time and I'm looking at where to run next. Humanitarian specialties evoke universal melancholy or something like that, and technical ones contain a very large scattering of options with half the same names. And if the description of the specialty and job prospects are, in principle, Googled, then the possibilities for the practical application of the knowledge gained there are not very Googled.
At school age, he studied the so-called. radio engineering. Without SMD, without microcontrollers. I didn’t have the Internet then, I didn’t have money either, so I’m at this level.
Now I’m tinkering with engineering CAD systems, wondering where it comes from and trying it all to my abilities, namely: I’m not an expert in physics, I basically digest the school curriculum, but I don’t have much structural knowledge. If there was an opportunity to study a lot or pay a lot, then I would just look at universities of the LETI level and the like. But so all ambitions rest on money or physics.
To summarize: I want to design and produce, but I am not up to the level of an engineer.
What treatment do you recommend?
Z.Y. I plan to do next year. Those. I haven't taken my exams yet.
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