@nctnico I fear my deterrence from PLCs could very well be a single (bad?) sample in college in which we used ladder to program our stuff, with crap OPC libraries written for Visual Basic, proprietary hardware & software, on very old equipment. I can believe there is much better software out there, but it sure did leave a sour taste behind.
Of course you can become an expert in a given field and do very well, but I think such thing will only come when you like what you're doing and are in the right setting. Otherwise work is a mentally declining process. For me personally I got into electronics because of the computing & PCB design aspect, not really the control engineering (ignoring my 100% grade on the course in college; that was because the test was more about algebra than control engineering
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Money is not a primary decider for me right now, I have never been too impressed by the hedonic treadmill.
@Kjelt Yup, for projects requiring processing grunt microcontrollers are out and microprocessors are in. You can get very decent CPU power within a couple of Watts and $, running Linux with sophisticated protocol stacks, libraries and all other Linux OSS goodness. More and more projects require emphasis or TTM on said software, so it makes sense the shift is going on.
My previous company was actually automotive too, but in the north we have agriculture companies in particular. I liked automotive in that sense, can't say the same about agriculture.
My pickiness for this area is likely not long term, but for this moment in time it is due to revalidation unfortunately. It doesn't make any sense to change clinic amid treatment, while desperately seeking for a job that will hire me now at <=50% part time. Yet more reason to use this time to make my mind up what to do
Another option I have been contemplating is a master degree towards software or embedded systems. That seems fit for additional reasons not expressed here, but are not primary in scheme of things.