Posts tagged engineers

This Is Engineering (with President Mitch Daniels)

A Purdue Engineering parody of ‘Thrift Shop’ by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.

Directed and Produced by Brendan Michaelsen x Erik Swan x Schuyler Putt
Content written, created, and produced by OfficialENGR*

The definition of Spring Break according to an engineering student…

The definition of Spring Break according to an engineering student…

I was playing with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, again today and came up with this.  An engineer and a project manager get one wish in “The Office Genie.”

I was playing with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, again today and came up with this.  An engineer and a project manager get one wish in “The Office Genie.”

IEEE Women in Engineering Magazine wins APEX Award of Excellence
Preview the premiere issue (PDF, 2.52 MB)Learn more about the magazine

IEEE Women in Engineering Magazine wins APEX Award of Excellence

Preview the premiere issue (PDF, 2.52 MB)
Learn more about the magazine

Produced by the IEEE, copyright 2006, this video celebrates the contributions of engineers to technology and society.

ONE PLUS ONE? AN ENGINEERING CARTOON
I was playing around with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, again today and made this cartoon.   A mathematician, a physicist and an engineer answer the question:  1 + 1 = ?

ONE PLUS ONE? AN ENGINEERING CARTOON

I was playing around with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, again today and made this cartoon.   A mathematician, a physicist and an engineer answer the question:  1 + 1 = ?

Nikola Tesla’s Wireless Transmission Theory

Nikola Tesla’s Wireless Transmission Theory

I had way too much fun today playing at cartoon-making and avoiding writing. Back to the writing tomorrow, but I thought I’d share a cartoon I made, inspired by the following engineer joke: How to Determine the Height of a BuildingA mathematician, a physicist and an engineer are each given $50 to measure the height of a building. The mathematician buys a ruler and a sextant, and by determining the angle subtended by the building a certain distance away from the base, he establishes the height of the building. The physicist buys a heavy ball and a stopwatch, climbs to the top of the building and drops the ball. By measuring the time it takes to hit the bottom, he establishes the height of the building. The engineer puts $40 into his pocket. By slipping the doorman the other ten and asking the building’s height, he establishes the height of the building. 

I had way too much fun today playing at cartoon-making and avoiding writing. Back to the writing tomorrow, but I thought I’d share a cartoon I made, inspired by the following engineer joke: 

How to Determine the Height of a Building

A mathematician, a physicist and an engineer are each given $50 to measure the height of a building. 

The mathematician buys a ruler and a sextant, and by determining the angle subtended by the building a certain distance away from the base, he establishes the height of the building. 

The physicist buys a heavy ball and a stopwatch, climbs to the top of the building and drops the ball. By measuring the time it takes to hit the bottom, he establishes the height of the building. 

The engineer puts $40 into his pocket. By slipping the doorman the other ten and asking the building’s height, he establishes the height of the building. 

I love engineer jokes and cartoons, so I was playing around with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, and made this cartoon. I love the many ways engineers can answer, “Is the glass half empty or half full?”

I love engineer jokes and cartoons, so I was playing around with the cartoon creator, ToonDoo, and made this cartoon. I love the many ways engineers can answer, “Is the glass half empty or half full?”