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Anyone with Industrial engineering background?


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Posted
7 minutes ago, MRI said:

looks tho raavu bro.. dabbu vundaley.. scratch chestey avanni tappinchukovachu :P 

Go with the flow with positive approach and accept destiny is my present mantra :) 

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  • MRI

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  • ICANWIN

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  • tennisluvr

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Posted
27 minutes ago, ICANWIN said:

Go with the flow with positive approach and accept destiny is my present mantra :) 

good luck bro :) 

Posted
1 hour ago, Obliger1 said:

Its been a year and half since I graduated and was in a couple of IT projects on and off in this time. I guess I need to redo my resume then!

One and half year is nothing you can give it a good shot, I think you will be fine. 

Just re-do your resume and grow your network with recruiters. Good luck. 

Posted
1 hour ago, dakumangalsingh said:

So you never ever worked in such a company, trend ippudu marindemo kaani H1, GC lanti concepts ki non IT companies say big no 👎🏻 

No man you are wrong. Recent grads chaala mandi who I know joined manufacturing firms that took them and sponsored their H1Bs. 

Some I know joined as interns and took up FT positions there as well. 

Posted
1 hour ago, ICANWIN said:

He will earn man but IT loki move ayyi silent_I1

Oka 2nd cousin power systems lo masters chesi electrical lo job kottadu. Ippudu director level lo unnadu. Super smart may be that worked out but except him most of them i know core courses lo MS chesina vallu sooner or later came to IT. Few friends unnaru MS friends who are working in mech and electrical field lone but valladi inka pathetic ga undi...vallu consulting in core jobs. They regret not moving to IT after masters and find it hard to move to IT also now.

Nenu Master's ki ochindi Power systems lo MS ki, although I changed track once I came here. 

But tons of people I know work in Aviva, GE and APS(Arizona). They are all doing well in that field, no one I know of so far has regretted going into that field. But then again, the university I went to had the #2 ranked power systems curriculum in the US. So I guess that might have helped. 

Oh btw the ones in Aviva and GE are all mostly on H1Bs but the ones that joined Salt Lake project, APS etc are mostly GC holders or citizens. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Obliger1 said:

Tesla pays a bit low, but gives an option for stocks. But I think working for Tesla would be interesting.

Yes Tesla isn't even among the top 30 when it comes to payscales. 

Posted
18 minutes ago, tennisluvr said:

Nenu Master's ki ochindi Power systems lo MS ki, although I changed track once I came here. 

But tons of people I know work in Aviva, GE and APS(Arizona). They are all doing well in that field, no one I know of so far has regretted going into that field. But then again, the university I went to had the #2 ranked power systems curriculum in the US. So I guess that might have helped. 

Oh btw the ones in Aviva and GE are all mostly on H1Bs but the ones that joined Salt Lake project, APS etc are mostly GC holders or citizens. 

Yeah many logistics. Professors with whom they do thesis can also help them to land on a good job. College ranking and right opportunities in right time. Good for them. 

Posted
1 hour ago, ICANWIN said:

Detailed ga kanukkomante kanukkunta bro. I don't know much about Mech or Electrical jobs here in US. Manufacturing side aey mari. Few friends work in CAT,DEERE and some companies in Iowa. Electrical friends work in Motorola. Chip Design side anukunta. Akkade pathukopoyi 9 yrs nunchi unnaru. Andaru consultants.

Chip design for Motorala doesn't mean manufacturing. Plus most of the actual design positions with chipsets are mostly full timers, I have a lot of my friends who are Mixed Signal Circuit designers and none of them are contractors. 

Most of the contracting positions in the Hardware/Semiconductor industry(which motorola is part of not manufacturing) are usually in validation using Verilog/VHDL, or RF testing. I worked as an RF testing intern myself so am familiar with this. 

Chip design team includes testers, validation people, product engineers(that gather the specs), yield Engineers and of course material science engineers along with designers, designers might include Analog designers or FPGA(digital) designers. So well it's a vast field, but I can assure you that most of the design positions aren't contractors and they are mostly ones that won't be outsourced. 

Validation engineers and testing engineer positions are already heavily outsourced to China in the semiconductor industry, atleast 10 people I know who used to work in the US have left to India now due to that reason. They have all got good jobs with 20 lakh plus packages in India though. 

Posted
Just now, tennisluvr said:

Chip design for Motorala doesn't mean manufacturing. Plus most of the actual design positions with chipsets are mostly full timers, I have a lot of my friends who are Mixed Signal Circuit designers and none of them are contractors. 

Most of the contracting positions in the Hardware/Semiconductor industry(which motorola is part of not manufacturing) are usually in validation using Verilog/VHDL, or RF testing. I worked as an RF testing intern myself so am familiar with this. 

Chip design team includes testers, validation people, product engineers(that gather the specs), yield Engineers and of course material science engineers along with designers, designers might include Analog designers or FPGA(digital) designers. So well it's a vast field, but I can assure you that most of the design positions aren't contractors and they are mostly ones that won't be outsourced. 

Validation engineers and testing engineer positions are already heavily outsourced to China in the semiconductor industry, atleast 10 people I know who used to work in the US have left to India now due to that reason. They have all got good jobs with 20 lakh plus packages in India though. 

Good to know. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, ICANWIN said:

Yeah many logistics. Professors with whom they do thesis can also help them to land on a good job. College ranking and right opportunities in right time. Good for them. 

Most positions in power systems that involve working for state govt or federal contracts don't hire H1Bs. You mentioned your cousin who became a director, did he have a GC/Citizen or was he on H1B. I haven't heard of many H1Bs in power related companies who even manage to get in barring some like Alstom, ABB, Aviva, GE. 

Posted
Just now, ICANWIN said:

Good to know. 

Yep I studied Mixed Signal Circuit Design myself but had no interest in working in that field. 

Posted
Just now, tennisluvr said:

Most positions in power systems that involve working for state govt or federal contracts don't hire H1Bs. You mentioned your cousin who became a director, did he have a GC/Citizen or was he on H1B. I haven't heard of many H1Bs in power related companies who even manage to get in barring some like Alstom, ABB, Aviva, GE. 

He joined as intern and then became FT .valle  h1b chesaru ala akkade oka 13-14 years work chesaka he became director. Became citizen also now.  GC vachi kuda easily 12 years ayyi untundi . 

Posted
2 minutes ago, ICANWIN said:

He joined as intern and then became FT .valle  h1b chesaru ala akkade oka 13-14 years work chesaka he became director. Became citizen also now.  GC vachi kuda easily 12 years ayyi untundi . 

Acha okay senior person aa okay. 

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