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As a 3rd year Software Engineering student, almost every single one of these classes are so brutal. Discrete Mathematics, Calc 3, Mechanics, E-Mag, DSA, Operating Systems... I really hope this pays off. Thank you for making this video!
Once the economics and physics agree with sustainable energy, I think Petroleum Engineering will slow down, and I project that the hottest engineering majors will convert to Nuclear Engineering for the future of energy, and Electrical Engineering for the future of controlling energy.
Engineer electronic. No se ingles, pero si pudieras traducir este comentario me dirias si es buena carrera y tendra un papel importante en el futuro segun tu opinion?
Shane Hummus I think industral engineering is the third best engineering major. U learn leadership and business skills in industrial engineering. It is a very versatile major as well.
Just a tip. Software engineering is not an engineering degree, it is in the college of computing in most colleges and is more akine to computer science than any engineering degree, and most computer science majors would recommend not majoring in it because it is functionaly just an easier version of cs.
Computer Science is about research and development, versus Software Engineering is just touching the development side of CS, basically to become a tasking programmer. Engineering is about design and development for applying discovered science into efficient and economic products.
I would have to disagree with you, Software Engineering is about applying engineering principles to programming in order to solve problems in the real world. If the program is ABET accredited under the Engineering Commission, then it will indeed be very rigorous, even more so than CS (accredited under the Computing Commission). It will have courses that include but are not limited to, calc 1-3, calc-based physics 1-3, differential equations, discrete mathematics, linear algebra, theory courses, circuits, DSA, etc. Some schools do not have the ABET accreditation, which is why software engineering may not be as rigorous of a program. However, most ABET-accredited software engineering degrees are on par or harder than most of the engineering degrees (computer engineering, civil, industrial, environmental, etc).
it's so broad. my software engineering degree is basically computer science, I could take all the core cs classes with specific electives if I wanted. The only difference I noticed is that I take business classes instead of physics, but the core cirriculum is almost identical.
Some country does not recognized Software Engineering as engineering. In my country SE is under Faculty of Science not Engineering therefore if you want to to apply for professional engineer title the "Ir" better check if Board of Engineer in your country will credit that degree as engineering.
Hello! (A person living in South America here) Shane Hummus, im planning of Studying Computer Science Engineering i checked my universities with my father about Programming Engineerings and he liked this one personally better, i prefer more Software Enginerring BUT i believe its going to be very competitive and replaced by AI and because its one of the engineers most universities have in my country, so i chose a more practical physical engineering that is Computer Science, its this Engineering a good choice? More here in Ecuador (a South American country)? Or is there something i should rethink?
cs is fine. take math, maybe minor in EE if you want to have those jobs also open to you. If you live in ecuador you can make a really good salary freelancing for clients in other countries
I think one thing everyone who is deciding on a major and can’t pick should focus on the city you want to live in, and look at the opportunities you have there. For example, I was split between mechanical or civil engineering for the longest time, but found I wanted to move to the North California area, and realized that the job opportunities for civil engineers compared to mechanical are 10 to 1. I’m graduating next spring and already have a job lined up when I graduate. Not saying not to follow your dream or passion, but I know many who are undecided, and it’s better to look beyond your career and look into where you actually want to live
@@gabrybatmane4438well hold on, what are you trying to do as a career? Don’t ever focus on “what’s the better degree” or the “harder degree”, you’re gonna go mad. Instead, think of what it is you want to do in life. Think why you’re even interested in engineering in the first place. I initially picked mechanical engineering because my old math teacher used to be one. He inspired me to get involved in the field. However, when I looked at the career opportunities; the hours you worked, the work-life balance, I found that mechanical was not what I had envisioned. In terms of difficulty, both are difficult. Be prepared to have to retake a class. I did (calc 2) almost everyone I know did too. What made me go into civil was that I found enjoyment working in the public sector. My field is in water resources and I can’t describe the feeling that the work you’re doing has a direct impact on the city you live in. Also being public sector comes with all the government benefits. Generally have little overtime requirements and I get a lot of paid leave and holidays off. That’s time I can put into my own personal passions. Also mechanical careers tend to all be private sector. My friend who stuck with mechanical makes 20k more than me, but also works 60+ hours a week. It’s a really tough life if you’re not 100% into it. Not to mention the competition. In today’s market, it seems mechanical is vastly oversaturated. At my college, I remember both mechanical and electrical engineering students struggling with landing internships. My internship was basically given to me due to the high demand in the civil sector. Keep that in mind, right now, civil is in hot demand. Especially with the US putting up 2 trillion in the infrastructure bill. Every civil firm is racing to get that money, and staffing shortages are everywhere. Idk if this helps, but do what makes you happy. Engineering is a genuinely hard field in general. Expect to take 5 years for your degree. I did. Again so did most of the people I met.
The sales jobs have a lot of semantics in what they mean by "high paying" (imagine that, sales job using semantics for hiring) They are almost always $100k+ but in "commission" and that skews the numbers. That is NOT a salaried or hourly job, in fact a lot have you as a 1099 contractor.
I'm a freshman and my major is cs and I'm thinking of changing it for software engineering because it was what I wanted first, but I heard that cs degree is way better that swe. Can I have your opinion in that please?
Nah dude go for Computer or Electrical Engineering. It is way more versatile, since you can get any job in the technology space with those two degrees. If you decide to work outside of tech it is beneficial as well. IMO EE is god tier, I’m not being bias.
@@NlouizzyI’m choosing between computer engineering and electrical and electronic. What do you think man I do have a strong passion for computer hardware, but I do care more for money. Let me know brother
@@xelp435 I know this might be a bit late, but I recommend you go into Electrical engineering. You'll be able to get any computer engineering job with the degree since computer engineering is just a subset of Electrical, and you can learn coding within Electrical engineering, languages like Python, MATLAB, C/C++, and you can learn more languages if you want through electives. If you decide you like something other than electronics, you can get a job in something else in electrical, like power, so it's way more versatile.
Go for software broo it has soo much scope and oppertunity , better life quality You can move to many steam like network engineer, cloud engineer , cybersecurity , fullstack. In chemical engineering u will probably end up your life in a factory or pharmaceutical company. Or you can go for electrical engineering I regret taking wrong degreee After all its all about your interest and what you will happy with . Im jst giving my advice , speaking from experience
Keep to chemical engineering. I’m a senior. My professors keep saying software engineering isn’t real engineering lol. If you can do chemical you can do ANY of the engineering disciplines. ChemE is debatable the hardest
please reply.. would love to know what the difference in work side between electrical and electronics engineering technology and electrical and electronics engineering like whats the main difference in jobs or work rank and payments and thanks in advance
I can't discuss in-depth details of this one here in the comment section. I suggest you visit my website and check my electrical and electronics engineering articles. Here's the link to my website: shanehummus.com/
Good videos! However, I have a question, why you never mention Mechatronics Engineer or Robotics Engineer? they both actually pay awesome, and I enjoy building things. But, not sure how many jobs are out there? I've been checking so far. As of right now, I can't decide yet. Please help!
Robotics Engineering or Mechatronics is sometimes offered as a Bachelors, but usually you will find Mechanical or Electrical Engineering as the catalyst for advancing into a Robotics Engineering career. Colleges might offer emphasis programs into your major, graduates specific programs, or "majoring in mechanical, minoring in electrical", vice versa.
What does the meaning stats, demand score, and salary score mean? I know the general like obviously the demand score is how much demand it is in, but Idk necessarily know what is a good demand score or what is low. This is true for the rest of the stats. Also how do I access these statistics?
I would say yeah. it's what I would say it's probably the evolution of a mechanical engineering. It's a good blend of computer science, electrical engineering,mechanical engineering(mechanics).
The amount of gatekeeping here is incredible. Most ABET Engineering Accredited Software Engineering degrees are considered harder than Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, Environmental Engineering, and Civil Engineering degrees. If you don't believe me, look up and compare the courses yourself. Objectively speaking, one doesn't need to make a "physical product" to be considered an engineer (this is an extremely outdated mindset). By definition, "Engineering is the creative application of science, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to the innovation, design, construction, and maintenance of structures." That's exactly what Software Engineering majors do, shocker I know! SE majors are eligible for the PE exam (Professional Engineer, which is actually a protected term, unlike "real engineering degree"). Also, according to friends and family, who are Mechanical and Chemical Engineers, they use maybe 5% of what they learned in uni. Anyways, get over it.
im taking a data engineering course rn in my master's. it's within the data science degree if you're curious but you can enter the field from data science, swe, AI, or math degrees so long as you learn the tools and languages required.
Is industrial engineering suitable for women?? and what’s the most suitable engineering majors for women who want to work at office, with a high salary ?
2021 mechanical graduate here couldn't find a job If anyone who going to do mechanical engineering please dont here me out Pick software engineering or computer science engineering or atleast electrical engineering ,, there ain't enough mechanical engineering jobs out there Most of them are automated by robot Also automobile are Moving to electric so. Mechanical engineering jobs chance are lowering. Don't waste money and time Think twice before you doing it. Most of my friends who took software engineering is having high paying job For those who say software engineering is not necessary is dumbbb. It is necessary it can give a career push No big company will take a bootcamp leaner over cs degree student
I don't think your experience is enough to justify unemployment for mechanical engineering, there is plenty of opportunity for mechanical engineering, depends upon your circumstances. Were always going to need machines and mechanisms to be designed and developed by mechanical engineers, even robots have to be designed by someone and vehicles still have mechanical features like shocks, struts or brakes.
@@muhammed1673That's only the case with India where there is an oversaturation of Mechanical engineers while in the US,Europe and the Middle East there are plenty of job opportunities.
@@muhammed1673 It depends on your specialization. I think of studying Robotics/Mechatronics or Automotive Eng. and mechanical eng. is part of both degrees. We will always need mechanics because what should a software engineer program if there aren't physical mechanics? Or cars, yes they go electric or at least hybrid and they don't require that much mechanics like a combustion engine vehicle, but you still need a suspension, chassis, frame, interior, exterior, transmission or a specific mechanism. If you are a mechanical engineer nowadays, you should go and learn more of computer science and electronics, because these 3 domains go hand in hand in future.
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As a 3rd year Software Engineering student, almost every single one of these classes are so brutal. Discrete Mathematics, Calc 3, Mechanics, E-Mag, DSA, Operating Systems... I really hope this pays off. Thank you for making this video!
Aren't you worried AI will take your job?
Thanks!
Wow! Thank you as well. Glad you like the video. You're welcome!
Dear Shane, I meant meaningful other than health related or law.
Currently studying aeronautical engineering and I find this very useful, thank you!
Additional videos about Aeronautical Engineering
Aerospace Engineer Salary (Aerospace Engineering Job Overview)
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Is an Aerospace Engineering Degree Worth It?
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Your fellow software engineering student, I wanted to say stick to the course guys! I know it extremely tough, but you guys got this!
Thank you, really needed this
Thank you for putting respect on Software Engineering's name.
Once the economics and physics agree with sustainable energy, I think Petroleum Engineering will slow down, and I project that the hottest engineering majors will convert to Nuclear Engineering for the future of energy, and Electrical Engineering for the future of controlling energy.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts! BIG possibility!
Chemical engineering will be better!
@@rostamfarikhnehad6391 Chemical Engineering is still awesome, and will still be highly marketable.
@@JV3Player but medical doctors and physicians make 2 times more than engineers
Engineer electronic. No se ingles, pero si pudieras traducir este comentario me dirias si es buena carrera y tendra un papel importante en el futuro segun tu opinion?
Great information Shane
Civil Engineers need more money. They are underrated.
clutch videos man thank you very much!!!
Great video
Thanks!
Shane Hummus I think industral engineering is the third best engineering major. U learn leadership and business skills in industrial engineering. It is a very versatile major as well.
Civil, electrical/computer, & systems engineering here 👍
Just a tip. Software engineering is not an engineering degree, it is in the college of computing in most colleges and is more akine to computer science than any engineering degree, and most computer science majors would recommend not majoring in it because it is functionaly just an easier version of cs.
Computer Science is about research and development, versus Software Engineering is just touching the development side of CS, basically to become a tasking programmer. Engineering is about design and development for applying discovered science into efficient and economic products.
Gatekeeping
I would have to disagree with you, Software Engineering is about applying engineering principles to programming in order to solve problems in the real world. If the program is ABET accredited under the Engineering Commission, then it will indeed be very rigorous, even more so than CS (accredited under the Computing Commission). It will have courses that include but are not limited to, calc 1-3, calc-based physics 1-3, differential equations, discrete mathematics, linear algebra, theory courses, circuits, DSA, etc. Some schools do not have the ABET accreditation, which is why software engineering may not be as rigorous of a program. However, most ABET-accredited software engineering degrees are on par or harder than most of the engineering degrees (computer engineering, civil, industrial, environmental, etc).
it's so broad. my software engineering degree is basically computer science, I could take all the core cs classes with specific electives if I wanted. The only difference I noticed is that I take business classes instead of physics, but the core cirriculum is almost identical.
Computer Science is one of the Circuital branches of Engineering
Engineering physics major is a good one for being able to work within these various engineering areas
Engineering is top tier ✅
had to like for that chess joke
Thanks for appreciating my humor lol
Could you please throw some light on Geo Engineering and its career scope and prospects ?
Some country does not recognized Software Engineering as engineering. In my country SE is under Faculty of Science not Engineering therefore if you want to to apply for professional engineer title the "Ir" better check if Board of Engineer in your country will credit that degree as engineering.
Hello! (A person living in South America here) Shane Hummus, im planning of Studying Computer Science Engineering i checked my universities with my father about Programming Engineerings and he liked this one personally better, i prefer more Software Enginerring BUT i believe its going to be very competitive and replaced by AI and because its one of the engineers most universities have in my country, so i chose a more practical physical engineering that is Computer Science, its this Engineering a good choice? More here in Ecuador (a South American country)? Or is there something i should rethink?
cs is fine. take math, maybe minor in EE if you want to have those jobs also open to you. If you live in ecuador you can make a really good salary freelancing for clients in other countries
i will be in electrical engineering in future will i have its scope or not will its scope be equal to civil and mechanical
systemmmsssss engineerringgg!! f!! where is my systems engineering!?
Daaaafuqqqq is system engineering lol
Look up system engineering jobs.. they ask for mech E or electrical.E degrees lol you got tricked by university
Right lol
@@DSNCB919Lol
I think one thing everyone who is deciding on a major and can’t pick should focus on the city you want to live in, and look at the opportunities you have there.
For example, I was split between mechanical or civil engineering for the longest time, but found I wanted to move to the North California area, and realized that the job opportunities for civil engineers compared to mechanical are 10 to 1.
I’m graduating next spring and already have a job lined up when I graduate.
Not saying not to follow your dream or passion, but I know many who are undecided, and it’s better to look beyond your career and look into where you actually want to live
Is mechanical engineering hard to get ? Please answer me i really need someone to guide me to the right path
@@gabrybatmane4438well hold on, what are you trying to do as a career?
Don’t ever focus on “what’s the better degree” or the “harder degree”, you’re gonna go mad.
Instead, think of what it is you want to do in life. Think why you’re even interested in engineering in the first place.
I initially picked mechanical engineering because my old math teacher used to be one. He inspired me to get involved in the field.
However, when I looked at the career opportunities; the hours you worked, the work-life balance, I found that mechanical was not what I had envisioned.
In terms of difficulty, both are difficult. Be prepared to have to retake a class. I did (calc 2) almost everyone I know did too.
What made me go into civil was that I found enjoyment working in the public sector. My field is in water resources and I can’t describe the feeling that the work you’re doing has a direct impact on the city you live in. Also being public sector comes with all the government benefits. Generally have little overtime requirements and I get a lot of paid leave and holidays off. That’s time I can put into my own personal passions.
Also mechanical careers tend to all be private sector. My friend who stuck with mechanical makes 20k more than me, but also works 60+ hours a week. It’s a really tough life if you’re not 100% into it. Not to mention the competition.
In today’s market, it seems mechanical is vastly oversaturated. At my college, I remember both mechanical and electrical engineering students struggling with landing internships. My internship was basically given to me due to the high demand in the civil sector. Keep that in mind, right now, civil is in hot demand. Especially with the US putting up 2 trillion in the infrastructure bill. Every civil firm is racing to get that money, and staffing shortages are everywhere.
Idk if this helps, but do what makes you happy. Engineering is a genuinely hard field in general. Expect to take 5 years for your degree. I did. Again so did most of the people I met.
Can you please guide about which is better electrical or electronic engineering?
I was EE major focus on telecom and electronics. At the peak of my career I was making approx US$ 200 K yearly. That was 30 years ago.
The sales jobs have a lot of semantics in what they mean by "high paying" (imagine that, sales job using semantics for hiring)
They are almost always $100k+ but in "commission" and that skews the numbers. That is NOT a salaried or hourly job, in fact a lot have you as a 1099 contractor.
What about architecture engineering
I'm a freshman and my major is cs and I'm thinking of changing it for software engineering because it was what I wanted first, but I heard that cs degree is way better that swe. Can I have your opinion in that please?
Nah dude go for Computer or Electrical Engineering. It is way more versatile, since you can get any job in the technology space with those two degrees. If you decide to work outside of tech it is beneficial as well. IMO EE is god tier, I’m not being bias.
@@NlouizzyI’m choosing between computer engineering and electrical and electronic. What do you think man I do have a strong passion for computer hardware, but I do care more for money. Let me know brother
@@xelp435 I know this might be a bit late, but I recommend you go into Electrical engineering. You'll be able to get any computer engineering job with the degree since computer engineering is just a subset of Electrical, and you can learn coding within Electrical engineering, languages like Python, MATLAB, C/C++, and you can learn more languages if you want through electives. If you decide you like something other than electronics, you can get a job in something else in electrical, like power, so it's way more versatile.
@@JohnSmith-hr7fl Thank you man I will think on this
I will be starting my second year of chemical engineering in 2023, should i keep going or change to software/electrical engineering ?
Go for software broo it has soo much scope and oppertunity , better life quality
You can move to many steam like network engineer, cloud engineer , cybersecurity , fullstack. In chemical engineering u will probably end up your life in a factory or pharmaceutical company. Or you can go for electrical engineering
I regret taking wrong degreee
After all its all about your interest and what you will happy with .
Im jst giving my advice , speaking from experience
If you do chemical engineering, consider materials engineering; this can still lead you into tech.
what did you choose?
*Follow your interest* , don't just jump around following the hype all around you.
Keep to chemical engineering. I’m a senior. My professors keep saying software engineering isn’t real engineering lol. If you can do chemical you can do ANY of the engineering disciplines. ChemE is debatable the hardest
One video are which field with none chemistry in engineering
please reply..
would love to know what the difference in work side between electrical and electronics engineering technology and electrical and electronics engineering like whats the main difference in jobs or work rank and payments and thanks in advance
I can't discuss in-depth details of this one here in the comment section. I suggest you visit my website and check my electrical and electronics engineering articles. Here's the link to my website: shanehummus.com/
@@ShaneHummus thank you
Direction to Industrial Engineers.
Principles of Industrial Engineering -Taylor, Gilbreth, Emerson, Mogensen, Barnes, Maynard. IISE Conference Presentation Video - 9945+ views.
ua-cam.com/video/pU8CdWfZZdU/v-deo.html
Anyone who is thinking of doing chemical engineering out of fun, just don't, it is too hard to be true.
What about biomedical engineering
I'm planning to do chem eng any prons and cons
Good videos! However, I have a question, why you never mention Mechatronics Engineer or Robotics Engineer? they both actually pay awesome, and I enjoy building things. But, not sure how many jobs are out there? I've been checking so far. As of right now, I can't decide yet. Please help!
Robotics Engineering or Mechatronics is sometimes offered as a Bachelors, but usually you will find Mechanical or Electrical Engineering as the catalyst for advancing into a Robotics Engineering career. Colleges might offer emphasis programs into your major, graduates specific programs, or "majoring in mechanical, minoring in electrical", vice versa.
@@JV3Player bro which engineering degrees do u think that will bomb in future
Hey i am planning the same could you tell me if you got any info?
What is the "meaning"?
It's how much your job positively impacts the world.
Where do you think material science and engineering lands there?
What does the meaning stats, demand score, and salary score mean? I know the general like obviously the demand score is how much demand it is in, but Idk necessarily know what is a good demand score or what is low. This is true for the rest of the stats. Also how do I access these statistics?
What is demand score?
That's gauges how in demand the degree is.
@@ShaneHummus thank u
Is mechatronics engineering good
I would say yeah. it's what I would say it's probably the evolution of a mechanical engineering. It's a good blend of computer science, electrical engineering,mechanical engineering(mechanics).
brother, will artificial intelligence and robotics reduce industrial engineer's jobs??
AI and robotics may reduce some traditional industrial engineering jobs, but they will also create new opportunities, enhance efficiency, etc.
@@ShaneHummus thanks brother
whats meaning
number 1
you must be living under a rock, software engineering is dead in the water for most people
chemeng is good
Software engineering isn't a real engineering degree.
Agreed. It's just a computer science degree. It's not engineering
Most software engineers have a computer science degree however, some colleges do have software engineering majors
The amount of gatekeeping here is incredible. Most ABET Engineering Accredited Software Engineering degrees are considered harder than Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, Environmental Engineering, and Civil Engineering degrees. If you don't believe me, look up and compare the courses yourself. Objectively speaking, one doesn't need to make a "physical product" to be considered an engineer (this is an extremely outdated mindset). By definition, "Engineering is the creative application of science, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to the innovation, design, construction, and maintenance of structures." That's exactly what Software Engineering majors do, shocker I know! SE majors are eligible for the PE exam (Professional Engineer, which is actually a protected term, unlike "real engineering degree"). Also, according to friends and family, who are Mechanical and Chemical Engineers, they use maybe 5% of what they learned in uni. Anyways, get over it.
What are really meaningful majors? Thanks,
I mean other than health related or law. At least meaningful
Here! You can watch this.
The Most Meaningful Degrees (2021)
ua-cam.com/video/3IQnLFALQAA/v-deo.html
No Data engineers?
I think that is a scope of engineering within Software Engineering.
im taking a data engineering course rn in my master's. it's within the data science degree if you're curious but you can enter the field from data science, swe, AI, or math degrees so long as you learn the tools and languages required.
I am doing petroleum engineering😅😅
Brother I am speaking from Bangladesh
My name is Abdullah
Age 16 years
I want to go to America in 2025 to do diploma
Give me some advice
Number 9
Me not liking the Magnus comment: dislike video
Also me: Okay yea, that was funny... likes the video
Or at least meaningful
You don't know about eng..
I tried to study some software engi… but did not like
Have you seen this video?
The BEST College Majors (How to choose the Perfect Major for YOU)
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Is industrial engineering suitable for women?? and what’s the most suitable engineering majors for women who want to work at office, with a high salary ?
2021 mechanical graduate here couldn't find a job
If anyone who going to do mechanical engineering please dont here me out
Pick software engineering or computer science engineering or atleast electrical engineering ,, there ain't enough mechanical engineering jobs out there
Most of them are automated by robot
Also automobile are Moving to electric so. Mechanical engineering jobs chance are lowering.
Don't waste money and time
Think twice before you doing it.
Most of my friends who took software engineering is having high paying job
For those who say software engineering is not necessary is dumbbb. It is necessary it can give a career push
No big company will take a bootcamp leaner over cs degree student
I don't think your experience is enough to justify unemployment for mechanical engineering, there is plenty of opportunity for mechanical engineering, depends upon your circumstances. Were always going to need machines and mechanisms to be designed and developed by mechanical engineers, even robots have to be designed by someone and vehicles still have mechanical features like shocks, struts or brakes.
@@JV3Player look how many people pass out every year and compare with how many jobs are there.
While CS has more job snd higher paying
Absolutely right 👍
@@muhammed1673That's only the case with India where there is an oversaturation of Mechanical engineers while in the US,Europe and the Middle East there are plenty of job opportunities.
@@muhammed1673 It depends on your specialization. I think of studying Robotics/Mechatronics or Automotive Eng. and mechanical eng. is part of both degrees. We will always need mechanics because what should a software engineer program if there aren't physical mechanics? Or cars, yes they go electric or at least hybrid and they don't require that much mechanics like a combustion engine vehicle, but you still need a suspension, chassis, frame, interior, exterior, transmission or a specific mechanism.
If you are a mechanical engineer nowadays, you should go and learn more of computer science and electronics, because these 3 domains go hand in hand in future.