I remember the first time in elementary during career day when I first saw the astonishing robotics engineering come to my school and show us all about their little robots,making me want to one day become a robotics engineer...and now here I am about to graduate high school, still wanting to become a robotics engineering as my dream to become one has still never changed😊
Ah same! But trying to choose a major for it is so hard. There’s some people saying mechanical, some saying electrical, and some saying computer. I don’t know which one to choose to get into robotics. 🥲
@@Bumblebee31892 I was also in a similar situation a few year ago. I would say just follow what you feel comfortable with and think would be best for you for now. At the end of the day you will need knowledge from all 3 so it doesnt really matter what your start with. If you are more interested in programming then do computer science, if you like physics and mechanics more then start with mechanical engineering and if you like circuits and electronics or simply don't know what to do then start with electrical engineering (which is what I am currently doing). In my opinion electrical engineering is the broadest and goes into a lot of other fields you might find interesting.Hope this helps
Drop the background music to about 10%. It doesn't enhance the presentation it overwhelms it. Please, for those of us that struggle to separate the narration from the noise. Thank you.
Hello. Where would you recommend a 11 years old to start from to eventually end up in designing Robots. He has a lot of interest but am not sure where to start him. Thanks
Definitely get him into a school with a robotics club and sign him up for BETA club! Beta club has robotic group conventions and it’s very impressive to colleges in the future. I recommend finding a programming app that teaches him programming but in a fun way. There’s one I used as a kid that taught me how to program while making a game at the same time. Also get him into context thinking, teach him how to use his common knowledge and not to overthink things. That is key to engineering!
@@TheRightWay11 mechanical engineering is easy when it comes to simple machines but when things like timers get into the mixed programming can save you some hours of mental pain so I say programming can make life easier but it depends on what you're making that will define how hard programming or mechanical engineering will be example making a pulley system will be extremely simple because nothing is timed or automated but let's say making a factory will require programming because of things like Timers, sensors, Gyroscope, and accelerometer, etc so yes mechanical engineering is easier but is limited when it comes to what can be made with minimal issue.
@@Sinner-x1b Ok I'll try. I really want to get into cars and start experimenting with mechanical systems in general.but it's really difficult compared to programming to get your hands on something to work with. I don't think I can just start modding my parents car lmao. Maybe I'll just learn theory for now.
@@Sinner-x1b You've just described four different fields of engineering. Anyone thinking mechanical engineering is "easy" just hasn't been challenged in that field. There are plenty of unsolved problems, as well as problems that need solutions optimized for quality, reliability, etc. Building a plant is industrial engineering, not mechanical. Building a timer can involve mechanical, but would mostly be electrical engineering. We're talking about engineering, which is applying theory to real-world problems in order to provide a business with a sellable product or service. Experimentation will get you the basics, but you won't be a safe engineer without understanding the theory and being able to model how the real world will work before you lay out a physical experiment.
I posted the same thing. 724 Subscribers clearly points that out. The content was ruined by the bad sound mixing. They should continue, and drop that to, well, background.
I remember the first time in elementary during career day when I first saw the astonishing robotics engineering come to my school and show us all about their little robots,making me want to one day become a robotics engineer...and now here I am about to graduate high school, still wanting to become a robotics engineering as my dream to become one has still never changed😊
Ah same! But trying to choose a major for it is so hard. There’s some people saying mechanical, some saying electrical, and some saying computer. I don’t know which one to choose to get into robotics. 🥲
@@Bumblebee31892 I was also in a similar situation a few year ago. I would say just follow what you feel comfortable with and think would be best for you for now. At the end of the day you will need knowledge from all 3 so it doesnt really matter what your start with. If you are more interested in programming then do computer science, if you like physics and mechanics more then start with mechanical engineering and if you like circuits and electronics or simply don't know what to do then start with electrical engineering (which is what I am currently doing). In my opinion electrical engineering is the broadest and goes into a lot of other fields you might find interesting.Hope this helps
This video has such wonderful quality. Praise the editor.
I always wanted to be a NASA engineer because i love space and maybe ill become a military engineer
Drop the background music to about 10%. It doesn't enhance the presentation it overwhelms it. Please, for those of us that struggle to separate the narration from the noise. Thank you.
Hello. Where would you recommend a 11 years old to start from to eventually end up in designing Robots. He has a lot of interest but am not sure where to start him. Thanks
Have him join the Robotics team in middle schools.
Definitely get him into a school with a robotics club and sign him up for BETA club! Beta club has robotic group conventions and it’s very impressive to colleges in the future. I recommend finding a programming app that teaches him programming but in a fun way. There’s one I used as a kid that taught me how to program while making a game at the same time. Also get him into context thinking, teach him how to use his common knowledge and not to overthink things. That is key to engineering!
Beautiful content.
I want to become a military robotics engineer what filed I should take to become after tenth standard
Get your self an arduino or rasberry pi and start making, u will gain more knowledge in hands down experiment then learning theories
Similar to Mechatronics
How can you learn mechanical engineering from home?
Experiment with objects with mechanical value
@@Sinner-x1b Is it easier or harder than programming in your opinion?
@@TheRightWay11 mechanical engineering is easy when it comes to simple machines but when things like timers get into the mixed programming can save you some hours of mental pain so I say programming can make life easier but it depends on what you're making that will define how hard programming or mechanical engineering will be example making a pulley system will be extremely simple because nothing is timed or automated but let's say making a factory will require programming because of things like Timers, sensors, Gyroscope, and accelerometer, etc so yes mechanical engineering is easier but is limited when it comes to what can be made with minimal issue.
@@Sinner-x1b Ok I'll try. I really want to get into cars and start experimenting with mechanical systems in general.but it's really difficult compared to programming to get your hands on something to work with. I don't think I can just start modding my parents car lmao. Maybe I'll just learn theory for now.
@@Sinner-x1b You've just described four different fields of engineering. Anyone thinking mechanical engineering is "easy" just hasn't been challenged in that field. There are plenty of unsolved problems, as well as problems that need solutions optimized for quality, reliability, etc.
Building a plant is industrial engineering, not mechanical. Building a timer can involve mechanical, but would mostly be electrical engineering.
We're talking about engineering, which is applying theory to real-world problems in order to provide a business with a sellable product or service. Experimentation will get you the basics, but you won't be a safe engineer without understanding the theory and being able to model how the real world will work before you lay out a physical experiment.
*Im here because of you michael reeves...*
Due to Background music i
Ur voice isnt audicle
I posted the same thing. 724 Subscribers clearly points that out. The content was ruined by the bad sound mixing. They should continue, and drop that to, well, background.