Q. Me and my best friend are looking into making dubstep.. as a career.. But we don't want to buy a Dj desk until we know we can handle it. We have been looking into making dubstep for a few years now and have already written songs to which we just need to make the music.. Please just give me a straight answer and if you can.. recommend software which you have used or heard of which is good.. Thankyou :)
A. Hey check out this website http://www.thebestmusicsoftware.com/beat-making-software.html
You will find some useful information there about online beat makers, dj software, home studio. I would say that Dub Turbo is probably going to do it for you. Read the music software reviews on the site and I am sure you will find what you are looking for.
You will find some useful information there about online beat makers, dj software, home studio. I would say that Dub Turbo is probably going to do it for you. Read the music software reviews on the site and I am sure you will find what you are looking for.
How will you avoid mistakes in your work ?
Q. How will make sure that final outcome from you is worth, be it a project or writing anything
like it?
How do you avoid mistakes in your daily work at office ?
What will you do if you are given some tables and some data, how do you do data checking?What methodology will you use ?
like it?
How do you avoid mistakes in your daily work at office ?
What will you do if you are given some tables and some data, how do you do data checking?What methodology will you use ?
A. In any case that I use written language I always set my software to automatically use spell check. Frequently when the job or project is complete I have a coworker read my work for accuracy, grammar & spelling.
I try to avoid mistakes by reviewing my work constantly, asking others to review it and by clearly organizing my desk and plans for each day.
When checking data I calculate the results in several ways to see if I get the same results. I also may graph the data to identify any gross errors or typos.
I try to avoid mistakes by reviewing my work constantly, asking others to review it and by clearly organizing my desk and plans for each day.
When checking data I calculate the results in several ways to see if I get the same results. I also may graph the data to identify any gross errors or typos.
What is it exactly that your average electrical engineer does on a daily basis at work?
Q. Does he/she sit at a computer in a cubicle all day, does he/she research a certain topic and discusses it or what? I know it's a broad field and there are many things that one does as an EE, but I just wish I knew what it is that they do EXACTLY.
A. The first thing as an EE is stop being politically correct by using he/she. Sounds like a transvestite. How about "they".
My job as an EE covers analog (low noise amplifiers, high power pulse amplifiers, system design, analog & digital layout) stuff mostly. Yes, digital layout is a analog activity due to transmission line properties. Engineering positions vary widely. For me, it entails some of the following:
Things I do at my desk:
Circuit and system design
PCB layout
Simulations, either using Spice or writing my own program
Mechanical design and drawings
Making parts lists
Making assembly drawings
Order parts
Designing test fixtures for my designs
Dealing with production issues
Dealing with support issues from our field people and customers
Read trade publications
Things I do at a bench:
Test out circuit ideas by building breadboards
Build and test first articles. These can be fun, especially
when they blow up.
Fix test equipment
Fix production booboos
Test the first production run
Build equipment to aid in the production of our products
Other misc things:
Interface with other people to test out functional interfaces of
the products (hardware & software)
Do field tests of the equipment
Customer support
Trade shows
Play janitor and do facility maintenance
Take care of networking and servers, install & manage
internet presence (web, ftp, mail servers)
Teach production personnel how to build things
Sit in meetings which can be financial, design review, blue skying,
problem solving, new product development
Walk around chatting to fellow employees. A friendly chat can
help you design things better when you get ideas & feedback from
the production folk. Learning thru social visits is very important.
Chatting with other outside technical folk to see what they are up to.
Personal networking is extremely important.
Lending a hand to some folks within my personal networking group.
Receiving help from some of the folks within my personal networking
group.
My job as an EE covers analog (low noise amplifiers, high power pulse amplifiers, system design, analog & digital layout) stuff mostly. Yes, digital layout is a analog activity due to transmission line properties. Engineering positions vary widely. For me, it entails some of the following:
Things I do at my desk:
Circuit and system design
PCB layout
Simulations, either using Spice or writing my own program
Mechanical design and drawings
Making parts lists
Making assembly drawings
Order parts
Designing test fixtures for my designs
Dealing with production issues
Dealing with support issues from our field people and customers
Read trade publications
Things I do at a bench:
Test out circuit ideas by building breadboards
Build and test first articles. These can be fun, especially
when they blow up.
Fix test equipment
Fix production booboos
Test the first production run
Build equipment to aid in the production of our products
Other misc things:
Interface with other people to test out functional interfaces of
the products (hardware & software)
Do field tests of the equipment
Customer support
Trade shows
Play janitor and do facility maintenance
Take care of networking and servers, install & manage
internet presence (web, ftp, mail servers)
Teach production personnel how to build things
Sit in meetings which can be financial, design review, blue skying,
problem solving, new product development
Walk around chatting to fellow employees. A friendly chat can
help you design things better when you get ideas & feedback from
the production folk. Learning thru social visits is very important.
Chatting with other outside technical folk to see what they are up to.
Personal networking is extremely important.
Lending a hand to some folks within my personal networking group.
Receiving help from some of the folks within my personal networking
group.
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