I already have a bachelors and masters engineering degree, but little direct work in CS/EE/Embedded.
I’d like to learn about DSP, computer vision, control algorithms, etc. for eventual application in the robotics field.
Maybe I wouldn’t be smart enough to be a design engineer, but I might get to be a hardware test engineer or a validation engineer.
My MS degree is in EE, so that would help get my foot in the door. I just need actual knowledge and experience to back it up. (I got the EE degree somehow but never used it or really studied it to the extent I wanted.)
A few of the embedded engineers I work with don’t really do complicated things; I’m pretty sure I could do those things as well with a few months training. I’m sure...
I already have a bachelors and masters engineering degree, but little direct work in CS/EE/Embedded.
I’d like to learn about DSP, computer vision, control algorithms, etc. for eventual application in the robotics field.
Maybe I wouldn’t be smart enough to be a design engineer, but I might get to be a hardware test engineer or a validation engineer.
My MS degree is in EE, so that would help get my foot in the door. I just need actual knowledge and experience to back it up. (I got the EE degree somehow but never used it or really studied it to the extent I wanted.)
A few of the embedded engineers I work with don’t really do complicated things; I’m pretty sure I could do those things as well with a few months training. I’m sure their knowledge is much deeper than what their work requires of them.
What are some structured courses I should take? I was thinking I could also just review a syllabus from a credited university, then pick up that book and read the main concepts. Then pick my own capstone project, just mashing as many concepts together as I can. Then as I build the capstone and run into issues, go back and deep dive in more detail.
Or maybe take these 3 courses and deep dive where needed.