<p>After a few years of (Electrical Engineering) hard work, its finally starting to pay off. This summer, I have (at least) 3 offers to decide from. What looks better for graduate school?</p>
<p>IBM Internship (Circuit Design)
nVidia Internship (Board Verification)
Intel Internship (Module Design)
Cornell Research Internship (Electroactive Nanowell Sensors)</p>
<p>I have an interest in all but I want to weigh all the differences before I make my decision. I also have an interest in business which could be backed up with an internship in industry (if i decide on that route).</p>
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<li>phpguru</li>
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<p>It depends if you want to stay in the industry (Intel, nVidia, IBM) or you want to get a PhD (Cornell Research)</p>
<p>Among the companies, I would prefer Intel.</p>
<p>I'd prefer Intel as well.. it's on the list of best co. to work for:</p>
<p><a href="http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/bestcompanies/%5B/url%5D">http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/bestcompanies/</a></p>
<p>Although, it'd be cool if you developed some sort of Quad-SLI duo graphics card or something like that @ NVDA..</p>
<p>IBM internships.. I saw them at the career fair--it looked like a well managed Internship. MUCH better than Dell's..</p>
<p>I'd saw Intel would look the best.</p>
<p>Are you a Cornell E/ECE major? You could just do some independent study with your professor in the school year.</p>