Maybe that is the answer - I started out as an EE and switched to CS after 3 semesters. George Carl Parrish wrote: > > On Sun, 2002-02-10 at 21:03, Kevin Brown wrote: > > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > Interestingly appropriate signature :) > > > > I just got through ASU with a BSEE and they do teach (at least to CSE and EE > > majors) bit arithmetic. The class is CSE/EEE120 and goes through binary, octal > > and hex math. The final project for my class was to design part of a soda > > machine. Had to count coins and make change. > > > > Fun stuff, don't know what the Business students go through, but judging by my > > friend who switched into it, they only have to deal with base 10 algebra. > > ________________________________________________ > > Good to know they still have the soda machine project. I got a > internship just from showing that project at a conference. From the > excitment it generated I assumed that most schools don't teach it. And > this was about 9 years ago. > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss