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This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
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NICE ARTICLE BUT NOT ACADEMIC
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Non IIT Institutes -> it branch -> Go to message
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2 replies   

Both are different but related to computers


Information Technology (IT), as defined by the Information Technology Association of America (ITAA), is "the study, design, development, implementation, support or management of computer-based information systems, particularly software applications and computer hardware." IT deals with the use of electronic computers and computer software to convert, store, protect, process, transmit, and securely retrieve information.


Today, the term information technology has ballooned to encompass many aspects of computing and technology, and the term is more recognizable than ever before. The information technology umbrella can be quite large, covering many fields. IT professionals perform a variety of duties that range from installing applications to designing complex computer networks and information databases. A few of the duties that IT professionals perform may include data management, networking, engineering computer hardware, database and software design, as well as the management and administration of entire systems. When computer and communications technologies are combined, the result is information technology, or "infotech". Information Technology (IT) is a general term that describes any technology that helps to produce, manipulate, store, communicate, and/or disseminate information. Presumably, when speaking of Information Technology (IT) as a whole, it is noted that the use of computers and information are associated


Computer science (or computing science) is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation and their implementation and application in computer systems.[1][2][3] Computer science has many sub-fields; some emphasize the computation of specific results (such as computer graphics), while others relate to properties of computational problems (such as computational complexity theory). Still others focus on the challenges in implementing computations. For example, programming language theory studies approaches to describing computations, while computer programming applies specific programming languages to solve specific computational problems. A further subfield, human-computer interaction, focuses on the challenges in making computers and computations useful, usable and universally accessible to people.

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tnanks
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Counselling Zone -> Electronics and communication or Computer Science in Manipal ?? -> Go to message
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i don't like semiconductors etc. much , but then i have never been too strong in theory part of computers either ..


And i have got to know that ec is getting better placements .

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they are very good http://www.goiit.com/iit_jee_aieee_forums/iit_jee_aieee_forum_list/catalogs.htm

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the above


and http://www.chemtutor.com/struct.htm

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thanks
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evryone's having the same problem
Community shelf Community shelf -> Does Civil Engineering have a bright future ?? -> Go to message
This Post 5 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 1 votes )   [?]
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Yes there are a huge opportunity in Civil Engineering  recently in NHAI and PWD there are 70,000  Vacancies  are short (you can see the indian express of 06/06/08 ) even you can join mechanical as well as software sector after doing your graduation .







The article


As new India builds, desperately wanted: civil engineers, thousands of them


Anubhuti Vishnoi


Posted online Friday June 6 2008


As the country builds or upgrades over 68,000 km of national highways, more than 35 airports, two dozen of the biggest railway stations, countrywide freight corridors, a whole new hospitality and housing industry, it’s faced with a critical roadblock: an alarming dearth of civil engineers, the skilled professionals who are needed to put each building block in its precise place.


Industry experts estimate that India faces a shortage of over 70,000 civil engineers each year. Not surprising, when you have just one in ten IIT students opting for the civil engineering discipline and only 200 of the 1700 engineering colleges approved by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) offer the course.


All IITs taken together graduate barely 500-600 civil engineering students and estimates are that not more than a total of 10,000 civil engineers are created in India per year. In fact, between a third and a half of all civil engineering undergraduates either drop off that stream soon after college and take up the more lucrative IT sector. That explains why private engineering colleges have either been reducing civil engineering seats or just shutting down this department over the last few years.


How civil engineering lost the battle over the last two decades is a story of how bricks and mortar lost their glamour to clicks — the IT boom, fuelled by a growing army of footsoldiers in computer science and electronics reduced civil engineering to an “old economy” discipline.


With heftier pay packets and global opportunities offered by the IT industry, an entire generation of engineering students/aspirants switched over from traditional engineering disciplines to the newer ones. In this churning, civil engineering finally ended at the bottom of the student’s wishlist while computer science, biotechnology and electronics engineering raced up. Even those who would get civil engineering in an IIT, for example — based on their rank in the joint entrance examination — were dropping out if they got computers at a lesser-reputed college.


“So the demand steadily dropped and colleges started to shut down the civil engineering departments. Most of them replaced it with IT/electronics or communication courses that offer higher salaries. Of the total 1700 engineering colleges, just some 200 would probably be offering civil engineering as a discipline,” says Prof Harish C Rai , Advisor, Engineering & Technology Bureau, AICTE.


K A N Prasad, Director General, National Construction Academy points out how in Hyderabad itself, of a total 50 colleges barely seven offer Civil Engineering. “Students are attracted to the IT industry instead as the salaries they pay is so much higher than one can expect in civil engineering. While this has been the scenario for a really long time, it changed only recently after the national highway development programme and JNUURM schemes came in along with a huge demand for civil engineers in the Middle East. So now while there are hiked pay packets, it will be some time before there are new civil engineers to take these up”, says Prasad.


The effect of the shortage is being felt across the infrastructure sector and is affecting both the progress and quality of construction. Consultants and contractors alike are complaining about the lack of engineers and more importantly, the lack of “good engineers.”


“Skills imparted to a civil engineer are unique and critical. Basically the skills related to structure and design are common between civil, mechanical and aerospace engineers. However, construction on land involves a good understanding of concrete, building material, reinforcement rods and so on and only civil engineers are equipped with this skill,” says Ravi Sinha, professor at IIT Mumbai’s Civil Engineering department. “Various construction technologies are also something only a civil engineer knows...While a civil engineer can easily move into the mechanical and other engineering disciplines, the latter cannot walk in so easily into his professional domain.”


Result: a windfall for retired civil engineers, especially those from the government, including defence services and PWDs. In fact, several top construction firms have re-employed ex-servicemen to head important projects or supervise construction. A private firm recently filled up its entire board with ex-CPWD/PWD engineers paying them six times more than their last pay package. The result was a turnover that rose 15 times over in a year.


“The value of experienced civil engineers is high at present. While there are few newcomers, the ex-CPWD/PWD or army engineering corps officials are quickly being absorbed by the construction industry. With their volume of work experience, ability to understand and function with the government bidding process and an enabling private sector environment in place, these officials perform spectacularly well and can easily head and handle big projects”, says Sanjeev Ralhan, Co-ordinator, Builders Association of India (BAI).


Many government sector civil engineers have also taken voluntary retirement to move over to the private sector of late. So it falls in place when Indian Roads Congress (IRC) officials say that 30-40% of civil engineering posts across the government sector are lying vacant including at the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) that is at the forefront of the massive highway upgradation exercise.


For the 35 civil engineering vacancies at the Army’s Chennai-based Officers Training Academy (OTA) in Chennai this year, not a single candidate was found good enough to make it to the merit list.


Few students means few faculty and few resources — the vicious circle, experts say, shows up in the quality of the civil engineering course too. Industry experts say that there is also a wide gap between what is being taught at most private engineering colleges in the country and what contractor/employers are looking for.


With all new infrastructure projects now follow the Public Private partnership (PPP) models on Build Operate Transfer (BOT) basis and many with international funding, civil engineers today need to come equipped with a new set of skills.


Says R P Arora, General Secretary, Builders Association of India: “We do not find soundly trained people, especially newly trained people. At engineering colleges, the syllabus is yet to reflect the new trends and technology being used. Colleges are not equipped with faculty good enough to teach these.”


Jagpal Singh, Consultant, Punj Llyod Ltd, and a board member of the Construction Industry Development Company (CIDC) agrees with Arora. “We are facing a shortage of good engineers. Those being churned out are either not up-to-date or not committed.”


Engineering teachers say this has a lot to do with AICTE-approved engineering colleges. “Most of the private colleges are governed by the very rigid AICTE curriculum in which updating is a very tedious process. So while it is difficult to get changes through in the first place, the faculty in these colleges is also opposed to changes in curriculum because many are not suited to teaching upgraded versions,” says an IIT civil engineering professor.


Experts say that the only way to break the vicious circle is when campuses realise the shortage and industry brings in higher salaries comparable to other engineering disciplines. This is already happening, say engineering professors. “Given that civil engineering today is so dependent on new technology of materials and computer-aided design,” says an IIT civil engineering professor, “students don’t feel that they are somehow cut off from what’s the latest in engineering. The current shortage has to be addressed through a variety of ways but the most positive news is that today, there is a market and we know there will be one tomorrow as well.”

 


link : http://www.indianexpress.com/story/319319._.html

Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Non IIT Institutes -> what are the top three branches at manipal?? -> Go to message
This Post 5 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 1 votes )   [?]
6 replies   

for BE


1)Electronics and Communication Engineering


2)Computer Science Engineering


3)Information Science

Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Non IIT Institutes -> barch rank!!! -> Go to message
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this is an older version


http://aieee.nic.in/AIEEE2007/ccb07/OrCr06/eng/orcr.htm


but you can at least get an idea

Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Non IIT Institutes -> aieee???was it really dificult thn last year???? -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
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they are just experience based estimates by the person

Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Non IIT Institutes -> aieee???was it really dificult thn last year???? -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
33 replies   

rank you can expect on the marks you are expecting in AIEEE 2008.



Actual AIEEE 2007 ranks according to marks obtained in AIEEE 2007:




  • Take a look at this link to find out which institute you can get at your rank by searching for your state code and the category you belong to.

  • Below you can find the cutoffs to some of the private institutes that take admission separately :


Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology : Around 8,000-9,000 AIR.


Jaypee Institute Of Information Technology, Noida :


CSE - About 16-17,000 , ECE- About 28,000, IT - About 30,000


Thapar University :


Punjab Quota : CSE - 9,000 , ECE - 7,500 , Mechanical - 13,000, ICE - 15000 , EEE - 17,500 , Civil - 23,000 , Chemical - 24,000 , BioTech - 21,000


Outside Punjab Quota : CSE - 6,500 , ECE - 6,200 , Mechanical - 8,700, ICE - 7,800 , EEE - 8,500 , Civil - 13,000 , Chemical - 11,000 , BioTech - 13,000


Punjab Engineering College :


Chandigarh Quota : About 15,000


Outside Chandigarh Quota : About 10,000


I am not quite sure about the PEC cutoffs.


LNM Institute of Information Technology - About 9-10,000


IIIT Hyderabad : About 2-2,500


IIIT Allahabad : About 4-5,000


Vellore Institute of Technology : Around 10-11,000 overall cutoff. For ECE branch : Around 6-7,000


Manipal University : CSE : 3,000 ,  ECE : 2,500 , IT: 4,000 , EEE : 3,500 ,  Mechanical : 4,500 ,  ICE : 6,000 , Chemical : 11,500 ,  BioTech : 8,000 ,  Printing Technology : 15,000


Check out AIEEE 2006 opening and closing ranks for various institutes by clicking here. Such data for AIEEE 2007 has not been officially released by CBSE


source : http://www.ankur-gupta.com/blog/aieee/aieee-2008-cutoff

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:D , gud one
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> About IITs and JEE -> which books should i refer for iit? -> Go to message
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visit these two links


http://www.goiit.com/iit_jee_aieee_forums/iit_jee_aieee_forum_list/catalogs.htm


http://www.goiit.com/posts/list/about-iits-book-recomendation-to-crack-iit-in-one-year-62379.htm

 
 
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