Thank you for sharing this advice! This is good advice! I have found learning by doing to be the best method of learning for me. I struggle with remembering what I have read and took notes on. However, the information sticks well if I work on a project and get consistent practice.
Happy new year and thanks a lot for your posts. Even if I'm a quite experienced analog designer, your videos are really helpful to revise and brush up the foundations of analog electronics. Thanks again
Hi Analog Snippets, I'm interested in Analog Design and I want to learn about this exciting field. Can you make a roadmap on how to become a Analog Design Engineer? P.S: I'm currently brushing my fundamentals by watching Analog Circuits by Dr. Nagendra Krishnapura, NPTEL IITM
Hi Steve, it depends on your situation. If you can join a university course specialising in analog design then that would give you a great headstart. If you are preparing for interviews then I would suggest to focus on basics, such as: RLC circuits, MOS fundamentals, analog building blocks (current mirror, diff amp, OTA), control fundamentals (negative feedback, stability) and noise/mismatch basics. If you don't have work experience then people would like to check your basics. Ofcourse anything above that would be a plus. You can start with other simple blocks such as analog buffers, bandgap, LDO. If you are interested in data converter then brush up sampling theory. It will be good if you can get your hands on a simulation tool and design a circuit as a small 1-2 month project. If not then try to do that on paper. In my view you should go deeper in few topics rather than broaden in many topics. All the best 👍
Hi Hari, there should be a lot common between board level and chip level analog design skill sets, so this is good. But at the same time chip level analog design requires expertise in MOS transistors which probably is not that much used in board level designs. But I don't think it is a show stopper. On the contrary I think your board design experience can be quite handy if you move to chip design. So I would say yes, it should be quite possible to move into chip design for you. Brush up your resume and revise your fundamentals, and all the best 👍
Hello! I am still fairly unexperienced in analog design and your lessons are helping me a lot! Thanks for your effort in doing such a great job with your videos, and I hope to watch more of them as they will be released. Have a happy new year!
Thank you for sharing this advice! This is good advice! I have found learning by doing to be the best method of learning for me. I struggle with remembering what I have read and took notes on. However, the information sticks well if I work on a project and get consistent practice.
Happy new year and thanks a lot for your posts. Even if I'm a quite experienced analog designer, your videos are really helpful to revise and brush up the foundations of analog electronics. Thanks again
Glad you are finding videos helpful. Yes, that is the idea. Even I myself find these videos helpful for a quick revision.
Happy new year. Its nice to see your face. You taught me a lot with your videos.
Happy new year Great A Great way to start with
Happy new year
✌️❤
Hi , Happy New year.. kindly make one introduction video of yours.. All your videos are too good and very informative….
Hi sir, im a beginner in analog design, i neeed some help in practical design of ldo and bgr, can u suggest any resources or papers?
Hi Analog Snippets, I'm interested in Analog Design and I want to learn about this exciting field. Can you make a roadmap on how to become a Analog Design Engineer?
P.S: I'm currently brushing my fundamentals by watching Analog Circuits by Dr. Nagendra Krishnapura, NPTEL IITM
Hi Steve, it depends on your situation. If you can join a university course specialising in analog design then that would give you a great headstart. If you are preparing for interviews then I would suggest to focus on basics, such as: RLC circuits, MOS fundamentals, analog building blocks (current mirror, diff amp, OTA), control fundamentals (negative feedback, stability) and noise/mismatch basics. If you don't have work experience then people would like to check your basics. Ofcourse anything above that would be a plus. You can start with other simple blocks such as analog buffers, bandgap, LDO. If you are interested in data converter then brush up sampling theory. It will be good if you can get your hands on a simulation tool and design a circuit as a small 1-2 month project. If not then try to do that on paper. In my view you should go deeper in few topics rather than broaden in many topics. All the best 👍
Thanks for the reply. I will try to follow those steps....
Hi...l am an analog hardware design engineer (board level 10yrs of exp).May l know is it possible for me to move to Analog IC design
Hi Hari, there should be a lot common between board level and chip level analog design skill sets, so this is good. But at the same time chip level analog design requires expertise in MOS transistors which probably is not that much used in board level designs. But I don't think it is a show stopper. On the contrary I think your board design experience can be quite handy if you move to chip design. So I would say yes, it should be quite possible to move into chip design for you. Brush up your resume and revise your fundamentals, and all the best 👍
@@analogsnippets
Thank you. Your reply is greatly motivating.
Hello! I am still fairly unexperienced in analog design and your lessons are helping me a lot! Thanks for your effort in doing such a great job with your videos, and I hope to watch more of them as they will be released. Have a happy new year!
👍👍
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Hi Sir , is there a email id to contact you ?
I am an experienced analog designer and wanted to get in touch with you
Hello I am a beginner analog design engineer, I need some help, can u provide me ur contact?