Taiwan would never do such a thing...They rely too much on the American economy (import/export) and the blanket of American defense to even begin to feel like pissing them off.
CE = 2 years of fundamental engineering background + 2 years of more specialized stuff
CS = liberal arts education + CS classes in between
at least in my school...
If you really want to know what the difference between the majors are,read IEEE journals vs. ACM journals. You'll see the difference. As far as getting a real job, that's a different story (don't CE people get paid more (on average, of course)?)
At least where I went to school, the CS program had a horrible attrition rate for the faculty. We all major'ed in computer engineering instead (more emphasis on broad engineering topics, less on real application).
I had to learn everything practical on my own...
Taiwan would never do such a thing...They rely too much on the American economy (import/export) and the blanket of American defense to even begin to feel like pissing them off.
CE = 2 years of fundamental engineering background + 2 years of more specialized stuff
CS = liberal arts education + CS classes in between
at least in my school...
If you really want to know what the difference between the majors are,read IEEE journals vs. ACM journals. You'll see the difference. As far as getting a real job, that's a different story (don't CE people get paid more (on average, of course)?)
opening up a branch office overseas? Foreign telecommuters?
.. but a shortage of competent IT workers.
especially when it doesn't make sense to train anyone...they just up and leave.
At least where I went to school, the CS program had a horrible attrition rate for the faculty. We all major'ed in computer engineering instead (more emphasis on broad engineering topics, less on real application). I had to learn everything practical on my own...