Letter to Young Engineers – Build Real Things
When I joined B.Tech in Electronics and Communications nearly two
decades ago, I was told that whatever I learn in the college will be of
little use to me in my life because we will not be using any of the
stuff taught in the program. I took that advice quite seriously.
Instantly I convinced myself that it didn’t really matter if I did not
pay any attention to the classes. I just had to pass and somehow make
it through the 4 years. The campus itself had enough reputation that it
will carry me through in my life, so why waste time in studying
something which is of no use to me in the long run?
The graduating seniors who had passed out came back a year later to
visit us and reaffirmed the same opinion, that not much of what I learn
in my B.Tech will be of any use in ‘real’ life. Because the ‘real’ life
is so different that I would end up doing something quite different.
It was true. Most of my seniors who graduated from the college ended up
in MS programs in USA but had already switched to Computer Science,
while few others got into IIMs thereby leaving nearly 95% of our
subjects behind, and some others got into jobs at Hindustan Lever,
Infosys, HCL, etc, securing jobs in marketing or software for health,
insurance, banking, never having to bother with B. Tech subjects ever
again.
I guess I was always a ‘big’ picture person even as a student. My
‘big’ thinking suggested that the scores and marks in the B.Tech
subjects will not affect my life at all. I decided not to study more
than what was required to pass the exams. Why unnecessarily waste time
on something that is irrelevant in ‘real’ life? Instead, I spent time
on other things which seemed to make sense- like painting, art,
debating, and of course, making friends and falling in love. Since I
believed these other things will remain with me for the rest of my life,
it made sense to invest in them.
An engineer uncle told his graduating engineer nephew that he will
not use more than 5% of what he studied. That’s what we have been told
and that’s what we believed. After nearly 16 years since my
graduation, I have a completely different story to tell. I hope this
reaches out to some of the passionate engineers in the colleges of
India. I am a part of a technology product company in wireless space
and this is our story.
During my first year in engineering, we had a course in English. I
skipped most of the classes, and for the exams I spent only 2 hours of
studying, enough to pass. We all reasoned, ‘we are engineers, so why do
we need to learn this language?’ Today, I write many articles, prepare
brochures, and write letters and reports to customers and investors. I
write business plans and analysis on various topics in the industry.
And I need to be correct, concise and lucid. I speak in public on a
regular basis. There is so much importance to language in my daily work
that nearly 50% of my job is communication. If I had known this I would have paid more attention to those English classes 20 years ago.
Then we had Chemistry. Since I wasn’t a chemical engineer I told
myself this is another subject of waste. Today, we paint our wireless
units with the right kind of paint taking into account the temperatures
it has to withstand. We deal with various kinds of materials and choose
the best ones that withstand rains and overcome the problems of rust.
We experiment with materials that have right amount of conductivity,
electrical resistance and other chemical properties.
Then we had a course in Physics. I was passionate about physics so I
learnt a lot. But I always bemoaned that an engineer may not actually
use it ever. Fortunately for me, now we deal with convection,
conduction, radiation, and other shock and vibration characteristics
while designing our wireless units which work in extreme weathers as
outdoor units. We spent nearly 24 months on engineering a product that
could cool itself and during this exercise we went back again and again
to our basics in physics.
Then we had Mathematics. Today we use Fourier Transforms, Arithmetic
and Geometric Series, and many other mathematical tools in our
development of algorithms. Few days ago we used techniques to convert
Cartesian to Polar Coordinates to use them in our algorithms. To do
this we had to open the Engineering Mathematics text book taught in our
first and second year.
One of the most neglected subjects was Accounting, called Economics.
We hated it, ridiculed it, and completely dismissed it. ‘We are
engineers, not accountants’, we told ourselves. I wish I paid little
more attention – because now I continuously fail to grapple with balance
sheets and profit & loss accounts though it is my mandate to
understand them to take decisions. We also had Engineering Drawing.
Thankfully I liked it, and now it comes again and again to aid us in
making designs of our products, making CAD/CAM drawings for
manufacturing them, and making 3D drawings for visualizing the product
before fabricating them.
Then we had Workshop
in our first/second year. There we worked with lathe machines, cutting
mechanical tools, and also casting and molding where we actually
dirtied our hands. For most of us, it didn’t make sense back then. We
complained, ‘why should electronics engineers go through workshop?’
Today, we spend time and money in making casts for our enclosures and
have to take a decision on sand cast, gravity cast or pressure die cast,
and conduct great deal of research to mill, grind, and cut the exact
design for our heat sinks that dissipate heat for many days and nights.
Hopefully in a year we will have our own workshop. I look forward to that day with excitement.
We program our software using linked lists that we learnt in the courses on programming language and data structures.
Our embedded software uses microprocessor programs in Assembly and C.
We design electronic circuits, both Analog and Digital. We have a
soldering iron and oscilloscopes that we use daily. Our baseband
software uses Digital Signal Processing,
and we continuously work on the internals of Data Networks. We use
all topics of Digital Communications. We use antennas and its
technologies to decide on the antenna propagation techniques and antenna
patterns.
I realize that I am currently using more than 90% of what I learnt in
my B. Tech, on a regular basis. I didn’t know this would happen. If I
had known, I would have treated by B. Tech little differently. There
is beauty in building things and seeing them work. There is
satisfaction in engineering products and solutions that find a place in
this ‘real’ world. There is no other joy for an engineer than being
able to use the length and breadth of entire gamut of engineering. while
trying to build a working product I wouldn’t trade this job for any
other. May be we are not as rich, maybe we are not as successful, but
we are all proud engineers. While most other engineers may say that
they don’t use 90% of what they learnt, we can actually claim that we
use more than 90% of what we learnt.
I want the young engineers in India to know that what they learn can
be used in their lives. Instead of looking for the highest paying
non-engineering job, they have a choice to look for a real engineering
job. Hope we have more technology companies in India, and hope we
create a generation of engineers who can actually claim they make use of
what they learnt in their B.Tech. Hope they build airplanes and design
ships. Hope they make cell phones and electronic gadgets. Hope they
make computer games and robots. Hope they go through fun of what it
means to be an engineer. Hope they will not be satisfied with just the
title, but become real engineers building things.
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