Electrical engineering

At my school the only difference is bachelor of arts requires 2 years of foreign language and probably other things

>The only thing I know that differs is possibly the CS majors taking the linear algebra/etc that non-engineers (math majors, physics, etc) take that will be very proofy, compared to the more applied linear algebra for engineers that engineers would take.

No, they take Linear Algebra for CS majors that ends before eigenvalues because they don't need it.

All I can say is think very hard about WHY electrical engineering is your choice. If you have no drive at all, you'll be studying a bunch of topics (electronic circuits, communication systems, power systems, embedded systems) which all relate to eachother but you probably don't care for. You want to actually have a drive to enter the field of EE. Your reason shouldn't be

>I can find a job easier and I like physics II and I like programming but I don't wanna do CS and I wanna have an easier time getting a "software job"

You can choose to do plenty of pure programming in EE. Look into embedded systems. It's All C programming, but much different than your CS introductory C course.

That EE program has me rock hard. Don't tell me what unĂ­ it is, because it will make me hate mine more. I don't even know how mine is abet accredited it's so shitty.

I was contacted on LinkedIn during my last semester of undergrad EE for a job 5 miles from school trying to pay me 70k year 7k starting full benefits 2 week vacation. This is in the Midwest mind you where a brand new nice 3 bed home in middle class neighborhoods is 250k max. I can't tell you how many unsolicited offers i received since graduating since I stopped looking once I enrolled in masters

One of my friends did aerospace and he's been trying to find a job in his field for over a year and a half.

Meanwhile my other friend that graduated from the same school in the same year with a degree in mechanical engineering is a design engineer at boeing.

Are you at a really big school that a dedicated class for LA specifically for CS? We definitely covered eigenshit/diagonalization/etc in my class. We only had 2 intro linear algbera courses though. The only for engineers, then the one for math/phys/cs/etc. Then beyond that additional LA that required abstract algbera/etc to take meant for math majors only (as well as obviously requiring the intro course).

Eigenvectors are useful in Page Rank and other stuff though, no?

I mean maybe compared to the rest of the course it might not be as relevant, I'll give you that, but since when do you use everything in every math course you take throughout your entire degree?

move to the midwest xDDDDDDDDD???