10-26-2009 12:55 PM
10-26-2009 02:04 PM
Two suggestions:
1. Get certification. One thing I'm still lacking. I jumped into a career that uses LabVIEW, right off the deepend. I thought that having a good programming background would be sufficient, but I've been programming in LabVIEW for 5 years and still struggle with making mistakes that turn my code into a big flying speghetti monster.
2. Other than LabVIEW, what else interests you? What are you getting your degree in. You can work as a LabVIEW contractor and only do coding 99% of your time. I think that would get rather dull and boring, personally. Or, find a career where your LabVIEW skills are utilized. I work at a test facility and I probably program in LabVIEW 20% of the time.
10-26-2009 02:28 PM
For your second part. I will be graduating in few months in final semester doing Industrial electronics engineering. Main courses are control, automation and instrumentation.Interested in doing Masters also in Renewable energy systems. For my different project during studies it interest me alot thats why I asked and I will try to do CLAD and then CLD but at the moment I think there is sooooo much to learn.
10-26-2009 02:34 PM
11-17-2015 09:40 AM
Thanks for this advice...
11-17-2015 11:28 AM
Don't forget to grab the LabVIEW Home bundle! Full dev LabVIEW for $50! You can't use it for commercial development, but it's a great way to keep on top of your LabVIEW skills.