How does engineer think




















With all the numbers, you become overwhelmed with managing everything yourself. Thinking like an engineer: you want to save money by not hiring out. Instead, you decide to write your own app. Generally, if a problem seems impossible, you just need a different perspective on it. Some problems just have more thorns.

Almost every engineer realizes this. So, you remain persistent pushing through obstacle after obstacle. Not ironically, engineers gravitate towards difficult problems. Because you know light exists at the end of every tunnel. Then, the victory at the end will be even sweeter. Everyday activity: a certain landscaping design in your backyard seems impossible.

Also, without the cost ballooning up. So, you give up on the project. You decide to leave your backyard as is. A patch of dirt. Thinking like an engineer: you brainstorm many options. You want to find different ways on how to install a fountain. To do this, you create a plan for yourself:. Finally, you come up with a solution after many weeks of work. In the end, you get your dream backyard. All it cares about are the laws of physics in flight. For this reason, engineers think very rationally over things.

They quickly block out noise and only look at facts. While making math their religion in their design work. This way of thinking is how engineers launch rockets into space. Then design fighter jets to take off on aircraft carriers in the middle of oceans. Everyday activity: you throw away a new computer. You read on the internet your computer type can go bad in only 2 years.

Because it has a faulty component that makes the computer unusable. Thinking like an engineer: you kn ow you can fix every computer. Computers are manmade and all machines are repairable. While they are discussing the superficial details, I will have about different visions in my head about what type of power supply is running the headlights, what type of cameras are being used for the backup feature, or where the motors controlling the seats originated.

I will be figuring out how much wire is used from bumper to bumper or what Bluetooth chipset is being used in the built-in GPS. Is the screen on the dash capacitive touch or resistive? Are the controls typical tactile push buttons or capacitive touch? Are digitally controlled pots part of the control system?

Are LEDs back-lighting the gauges, or does the car use an electroluminescent panel? Am I the only one who thinks this way, or is it the same for engineers in general? I think we have a different way of envisioning things, and I wonder if other engineers do, too. Does it bother you when others can't see things the way you do? Engineers have this intelligent ability to jump out of the box, go through a special mind process, and come up with solutions and improvements for everything.

We see things totally differently from everyone else, and to us, it's just basic common sense. Take this situation: You're sitting with a group of people at your favorite watering hole. Someone sets down a glass of water. Everyone is asked if the glass is half full or half empty. Most normal people would come up with an answer and the supporting reasoning. Obviously, it's just bad engineering. The glass was just designed too large. Is it just me, or do all engineers share this thinking process?

Where did we get our ability to think this way? Let me know your thoughts and experiences in the comment section below. All people are born with an inate desire to want to do good Romans , For the engineer, this isn't beaten out of us as we grow up and mature, unlike so many others.

We cling to it and in doing so enter a profession where we solve technical problems and attempt to make the world a better place. So its not so much a matter of being born that way as it is a matter of not letting the world destroy what was given to us at birth.

No man is born of anything — tabula raza. We are trained in ways we act. There is nothing being born. Interesting blog. Thanks for reading out my mind through a blog. I would go a little further. If we engineers can think about the internal architecture more than the externals, think about the plight of a surgeon. What is interesting about self-analysis is that it leads nowhere — it is an art form in itself. I'm an EE and I was born that way. Otherwise why would I begin tinkering with electrical things at the age of 4?

In case you wonder, I'm not related to dr. If you apply enough thought and enough creativity to any problem, you can almost always find a good solution. You will also find that the engineer has an innate desire to tinker and to take things apart. One of the big reasons that we become engineers in the first place is down to a simple need to know how things work — and so engineers will constantly be analysing things and working out how they tick.

No one would be able to build the incredible inventions of the future, and no one would be able to maintain the things we have now. Again this kind of fascination for the way things work can be applied to any area of life. Relationships, finances, motivation… all of it can be broken down into working parts and put back together again. The greatest engineers solve problems that no one else even notices yet…. He is very passionate about cars and bikes.

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