A PhD in electrical/electronic engineering is one h**l of a lot of work.Jude wrote:It is - actually I rather like the idea of being a Dr!! Perhaps I can put IT and health together?? and then do Chemistry A level, do the shortened Medical course go on and do a Phd - and then be Dr Dr Comber???? LOL!soc wrote:That sounds like one hell of a lot of studying to me!
As if my brain could !
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OK so there is no learning per se - it is you who goes out and carries out the discoveries and then writes them up to a standard acceptable for publication (and to the Uni). Just to give you an idea, Rob had (that I know of) three projects leading to his thesis.
The first involved breaking US military camoflage; the project needed the precise (to the odd centimetre) locations of two items which could be located at opposite ends of the/any country. The only way was by GPS but the military deliberately sent out false signals so that civilian devices were up to 10 metres wrong; he had to factor that error out. From there he had to design and (himself) build cards which were fitted into PCs to carry out a specific function and write the software. Then he had to be able to link all this into cables carrying up to 330K volts! (and that was just one project!)
Took about 3 years of hard work and a lot of travel.
(BTW in case the US secret service / military are monitoring this, he is not available for questioning and the results are owned by US interests.)