KittenKoder
Senior Member
There is a distinct difference between IT support and microprocessor engineering. You cannot learn microprocessor engineering in your garage.KK, you were one of the lucky ones who entered an industry before it matured...there are now far more high-school dropouts than there are IT positions in this country.
Your questions are naive as well. Many people in the tech industry are high school dropouts.
You have no idea of the pains medical students endure to get that "piece of paper."
Incorrect. Madam Currie obtained degrees in both Mathematics and Physics from EPSCI in 1893, and then her Doctorate in 1903. She was a full professor in Paris by 1906.Also, vaccines come from many third world countries, Madam Currie was not "educated" at all by your standards.
Our most durable buildings (talking thousands of years old) were not built by people with your "education" standards. Seriously, do you think the world was always like this? All of our advances we owe to people who were not educated by your standard actually.![]()
Indeed.![]()
"You cannot learn microprocessor engineering in your garage."

I know how to make them using cathode ray tubes, that's how I learned how the machines worked ... transistors (don't need any ICs but it's huge) ... or even using magnets and coils (would never actually build one like that because well ... I'd need a warehouse to do it) ... and all from reading books in the public library and learning from an old Navy tech (he taught me about the cathode ray tubes). You underestimate humanity as a whole. The first processor was built in a garage, the micro part needs a sterile environment but if I bought all the equipment I could easily craft one.
Want to know what my school science project was in Junior high? A computer built entirely of transistors ... the only classes I ever got anything higher than a "D" was science, got perfect scores in all my science classes, but failed all my math classes with big fat "F"s because I was using advanced mathematics that other students (even the teachers) had no idea existed, it's why I dropped out ultimately.
Want to know why I was able to learn? Wasn't because of money, wasn't to "prove" myself, it wasn't because I wanted some lame piece of paper. I learned because I wanted to. Want to know why most people get "higher" education? Because they are too lazy to earn a living without it.