>EE's are more focussed, but everyone uses computers these days, so I'm not >sure who'd be in more demand. I suspect that there are more companies >willing to hire a BSEE with no additional experience than BSCE or BSCS in >the same boat... I suspect that you can still get an EE degree without >learning anything but the barest minimum of computer science and/or >programming skills... I've got a BSCS with almost perfect (2 B's) grades and am 5 hours short of a BS in Math (got senioritis and graduated after 3.5 years). I also tested out of most of my 100- and 200-level CS classes and _all_ my hardware classes. Have programmed everything from raw hardware to PICs to clustered VAX's running databases. All for (good) pay. It doesn't matter too much what your degree says. If you have one, and I can talk intelligently with you and you don't drop bovine dung on the me, I'd hire you. Especially if you tell me what you DON'T know rather than all you DO know. That's how it's worked for me, and it's how I would work for others. Andy