<p>Aeronautical?</p>
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Yeah. I agree.</p>
<p>AE could be Aeronautical, Aerospace, or Astronautical Engineering</p>
<p>^ Yeah, I realized it shortly after I posted…thx :)</p>
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<p>does that mean in general EE students are not as intelligent as ME?</p>
<p>I think he means EE students are more intelligent than ME students which would hurt curve-wise.</p>
<p>Also keep in mind that for some engineers, the hardest tests are the ones that you take after you graduate from school. </p>
<p>For example, civil engineers in California have to pass three PE licensing exams, totaling 13 hours. In [April</a> 2007](<a href=“http://www.dca.ca.gov/pels/e_ap07stats.htm]April”>http://www.dca.ca.gov/pels/e_ap07stats.htm), the flunk rate on each of the three exams was in the 60-65% range. For structural engineers in California, add 16 more hours of testing, with flunk rates approaching 70%.</p>
<p>Most engineers will never take any kind of rigorous post-graduation professional licensing exam (like the Bar exam, CPA exam, medical boards, etc). But most civils do.</p>
<p>EE students are more intelligent than ME students? Please explain how you derived this conclusion.</p>
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<p>its whichever the majority of people like. Most people think raw carrots taste like sh it. :)</p>
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I love baby carrots!</p>
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It’s unsupported, but I believe it to be the case from what I’ve seen thus far.</p>
<p>Of course, stating that they are of equal intelligence is equally unsupported.</p>
<p>I find computer engineering the hardest major - very time consuming, wide breadth, and some difficult concepts. I’m a EE and I don’t think I would get through the major with success (grades wise).</p>
<p>Agreed. CPE is very hard at my school.</p>