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It's a meaningless title. Might as well be a code monkey, I wouldn't care. As long as the cheque clears.
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If you know how to write and run 'Hello World' in a few programming languages, then you are a Registered Software Engineer.
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No, that makes you an Unregistered Software Executer / Runner, or U.S.E.R.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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IIRC, this was an idea that became popular in the '90s in certain circles, but never really caught on in the regulatory world. For one thing, "grandfathering" all those who claimed to be software engineers would have made the title meaningless.
I believe that it will happen someday. After all, if certain jurisdictions require passing a test in order to become a hairdresser, why shouldn't commercial software developers have similar requirements?
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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registered Professional Engineer qualified as a Petroleum Engineer, but under the rules...
Since the other comments have established there is little to no relevant laws, it sounds like these rules are imposed by an independent organization of which you are a member and which holds your petroleum engineer status, no? In which case I have to ask, what's the penalty for breaking said rule? Is your P.E. status under threat? If not, then just add it and claim ignorance if anyone whines later on. But if so, I would say just stick with "software developer" until you find a company who actually cares about such a registration (such a company is probably the only place you will find a registered S.E.), and then bring up this nonsense in the interview, stressing however much experience you have in the field and that you are only lacking an endorsement, and perhaps after a brief probationary/training period, there you go you're registered. I say "interview" because I assume that the only reason you would care about such registration is to pass such a company's hr requirement.
For the record, the term "engineer" to me means that someone who designs engines, which applies to a specific class of software: a black box with a well-defined interface that performs a specific function and can be added to any software that needs such a function. Database engine, physics engine, game engine, search engine etc. The idea is that the specific implementation is difficult to even break down into component parts, and so, the majority of developers who are creating software that use it will be unable or unwilling to break it open to fix or adapt it, so it must be held to a higher standard of adaptability and functionality. So I see the set "software engineers" as a subset of "software developer" that specialize in making libraries.
Definition is in the eye of the beholder. I wouldn't stress over it. In fact, I specifically avoid the word engineer (among other fluff) on my resume, because I don't really want to work for someone who makes decisions based on keywords.
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Memtha wrote: Since the other comments have established there is little to no relevant laws,
That's the $10k question though. Do the engineering licensure requirements written into state law (in the US, they may be at a different level in other countries) apply to people who work in software and choose to call themselves software engineers?
The answer varies some from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but to my non-lawyerly eye it looks like the answer may well be "Yes" in most or all US States, although lots of developers would probably fall into one of the exceptions written into the various laws and the rest would only be in trouble if someone actually decided to complain to the proper authorities.
You'd have to talk to an actual lawyer to get a really reliable answer, though, preferably one that deals with engineering licensure issues. After all, it doesn't matter what you or I think ought to be the law or what we think the law means. It only matters what the legal system says the law means and will back up with stiff penalties.
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Since "software engineer" isn't a protected term, anyone & their grandma can call themselves one.
I know I do, but not because of any certifications. Rather, because I like engineering software, as well as doing that for a living.
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The law applies to software engineering? I thought it only applied to the types of engineering that could cause physical harm if used improperly - EE, ME, CE, etc. I guess there was a computing option to get the PE but you say that's not offered anymore, so is it still a requirement?
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With a MS/EE focused on control systems and having written CNC machine control software for 30 some years, I believe myself to be an actual Software Engineer. However, I am unregistered, so if I get pulled over I might get impounded.
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A software engineer is one who promotes software engineering standards and uses them within his or her own project development.
This is often done by using such techniques as Function Point Analysis, Risk Assessment Metrics, Deadline Estimation Practices by recalculating such deadlines using various tools and forecasting methods.
True software engineers never agree to hardened deadlines without design and requirement analysis and even then, only best estimates are ever provided.
You don't need a degree or a fancy certificate top call yourself a software engineer because most of what you would learn in a university or the result of obtaining a certificate is often not applicable to the real world...
I have used such practices with excellent success. However, most technical management don't have a clue on how to implement, understand, or use such practices, even highly educated ones, beyond all the ideological buzz-words and paradigms that often are claimed to be engineering practices but have nothing to do with them (ie; Agile).
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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I've been looking at how best to cut a hole in my case to fit a new 120mm fan - including pricing hole punches and doing a layout in Fusion 360 to find out the "Least metal left" solution for the hole sizes, attacking it with an angle grinder, sourcing fan covers to "cat safe" the new fan, blah, blah, blah.
The side I removed has "cat safe" mesh prefitted over predrilled holes sized and ready to fit a pair of 120mm fans ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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OriginalGriff wrote: "cat safe" mesh prefitted over predrilled holes sized and ready to fit a pair of 120mm fans Reminds me of when I started programming in C# and .NET. Time and again I would go back and rip out hundreds of lines of code I'd written, after realizing that .NET already had it.
Software Zen: delete this;
modified 26-Feb-22 17:35pm.
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I once had a project to construct a 6" diameter hole in sheet metal on which to mount a fan to blow out auto exhaust from the garage connected to the exhaust pipe of my garaged car via flexible metal tubing. I drilled a thousand more or less, small holes along the periphery. I don't recall now how I punched out the center disk but it worked out and I kept the disk as a souvenir as I liked how it appeared so I kept it on my desk. - Cheerio
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GTA V was locking the PC sometimes - normally just before the end of a long mission, which is frustrating. Only solution was to turn the power off and back on again.
I noticed that GTA makes it run hotter than normal, which you'd expect - the fan noise increases quite a bit - so I installed software to monitor it, and the processor junction temp was getting to mid / high 80s. High ish, but not outside specs - and it does kinda point at a heat problem somewhere.
Remember, I changed the M/B, Processor, and RAM only, and added a second SSD (which is still empty, I'll move Win 11 to it when I do a fresh install).
So I had a think and came up with possibilities:
1) The processor heatsink / thermal paste.
2) The GPU.
3) PSU
4) Other.
The first one is unlikely, I thought - quit the game and the temperatures dropped very quickly so the thermal management of the processor itself seems to be pretty good. Even high 80s are within Intel specs, so ... not that.
The second. Hmm ... it was working fine in the old configuration, with a lower spec processor - i5 instead of i7 running at a lot lower speed - so it's possible but unlikely to be the direct culprit. A GPU temperature monitor says it got up to low 70's, and dropped to below 50 pretty quickly afterwards. Probably not a problem.
The third. Probably not, it's new(ish) well under the max rating (just over 1/2 with the uprated CPU) and a voltage check says all is stable.
The fourth ... What if it's the case? If the processor is putting out more heat (which it is, loads more) then if that hot air isn't getting out then the heat could be building up and effecting the ram, or MB, or ... anything I can't read a temperature off of.
So, take the case side off and see what happens.
CPU: low 70s, GPU: high 60's, GTA no crashes so far.
Probably the heat management with the i5 was on the marginal side, and the i& has just pushed it over the edge.
Well ... Change the case fan for a higher CFM one, or ... make a big hole in the top (where there are no components) and fit a second case fan to exhaust hot air that way - since hot air rises, that's probably the most efficient way to do it.
Makes sense to me! Where's me big drill ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Gosh, I was just dealing with a similar problem because of my upgrade. In my case it was the PSU. I spent good money finding that out.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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Yeah, sometimes you have to think about the whole system instead of the detailed problem!
Is yours sorted now?
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Yeah it is. It costed me $200 and a day and a half of swearing to sort it though. On the plus side I got a beautiful new case that's glass on 4 sides.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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If it were me, the first thing I'd do is look at your case to see if you can attach more and bigger fans.
If you have furry pets you may want to invest in a new chassis so you don't have to cut holes in it and let dog/cat hair in.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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If you go for the hole solution, don't us a drill. Rush out to your nearest hardware store - they're always deserted on a Saturday afternoon - and get a hole punch. They leave a way nicer hole and are easy to operate - guide hole with the drill, drop in the punch, connect up, a dozen turns of the hex wrench and you have a nice clean round hole.
I have used these things for years, mainly for putting extra cooling holes in Hi-Fi gear - my sitting room can hit 35°C in the summer, and takes a lot longer to cool in the evening than the outside does.
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I had never seen one of those before… I bet every electrician has a set.
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Well, let's hope it does not turn into a horror story (like the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde)
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I had a problem with the
GPU overheating, shutting down the display. Only solution was off, on.
Finally I just opened the window behind my desk a shade. Problem solved, at least until summertime and 100 F heat gets here.
Then, I activated WsL and started using Ubunt. Much easier on the system.
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My Microsoft store game would lock up sometimes. I found out that MS will update the app even "while" you're playing ... starts losing color, slows, but doesn't actually quit. You save and restart when the update is over ... if you notice that's what's happening.
Even VS will get funny after long sessions; wouldn't erase old compiler messages until I reloaded (today).
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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I take it your cpu is cooled by a fixed heatsink that blows the hot air around in the case. In addition to added ventilation, You may want to consider a closed-loop liquid cooler. Put it on the top, blowing up, and point all other case fans inward. The cpu's hot air will no longer heat up anything else, and the positive pressure will help cool everything else - even reducing hot air leaving the gpu through gaps in the shroud. There are some who say it is better to put the radiator on the front blowing inward, which means a cooler cpu but warmer inside compared to top-mount; but in your case especially, since your cpu is not overheating with a fixed heatsink while internal temperature is the problem, that tradeoff would be going the wrong way.
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