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Electrical Engineering
Agricultural Engineering
Marine Engineering

What about water-based agricultural engineering?
Oh no wait, that only happens in 2070 and if you have to work in 2070 I pity you.
 
Because our class went on a field trip in Manila bay last year and we had to take a boat and i threw up for nearly the entire boat trip and i'm still seasick up this day. :lol:

If Marine Engineering involves staying at boats out at sea, of course...:hmm:



That's what i'm planning to take.
Aw, I am sorry you're predisposed to sea sickness. I love sailing man. I can't wait to buy a 26 footer in the next couple of years. :thumbup:
 
Aw, I am sorry you're predisposed to sea sickness. I love sailing man. I can't wait to buy a 26 footer in the next couple of years. :thumbup:

Sounds like a good plan :)

I love being on the water, but I am too far from the coast to do that often. In a month, you will find me paddling down the river here, we have a really nice route organized by the local canoe tour bureau.
 
My fascination with sailing actually came from a rafting trip we did. :thumbup:
I don't know. It is something about the seas that I just am captivated by.
 
Aw, I am sorry you're predisposed to sea sickness. I love sailing man. I can't wait to buy a 26 footer in the next couple of years. :thumbup:
Sweet! You should come visit. :lol:
 
I'd think that Electrical Engineering is the one that has the most applications. And one day, if you buy a house and have to renovate the electrical system, you know how to do it safely. Huge fiscal savings.

I've been a working EE for 10 years. Funnily, there's no way I'd do electrical work on my own house; there are civil building code requirements up the wazoo, plus you need a licensing and permitting to even touch your home electrical system. It's ironic because at work, I do wiring for multi-kilovolt systems and work around high voltage all the time.
 
That will be a very long voyage! Ahaha. But I definitely was to do Trans-Atlantic eventually. It would be one for the books. :hmm:
 
What I've learned today: Passing a on variable you got as a reference to another function as a reference wreaks EPIC MEMORY MAYHEM!!!!! :lol:
 
Aw, I am sorry you're predisposed to sea sickness. I love sailing man. I can't wait to buy a 26 footer in the next couple of years. :thumbup:

Wow, you must have some money saved up. I could go for a pair of water wings ;)
 
I'm halfway through Stephen Baxter's "Voyage", and (spoiler)

Yup. That really gives NTRs a bad rap, but if you were doing it with 70's tech, it's sadly true. Even today, if you threw the contract to ATK, it'd be that bad. Aerojet-Rocketdyne has the know-how to pull it off, though.
 
I hear the UK has returned to its rainy self, after what the UK think of as a heat wave.
 
Interesting find, after watching an documentary about the mission and fate of AE2, the only RAN vessel lost in WW1 and a early submarine travelling 60,000 kilometers during its service:

http://ae2.ivec.org/AE2_Commander_3-D/
 
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