C
cusebassman
Freakin' sweet
I believe that you get as much as you put in.
By "how little you get out of it" I mean to say that it is (from what I've heard) very difficult finding employment as an audio engineer - I'd imagine you would learn quite a bit in a rather short period of time going to school for audio engineering specifically.
You probably learn in a matter of days or weeks what it has taken me 1 1/2 years on this and other forums to learn, on novice equipment. As I said in some post in this thread, its all about whether you are willing to take the risk - spend the 100k+ to get a degree in something that may never make you money, or go a safer route.
I went the safe route and got a degree in computer science, and am now the standard day-employee night-engineer in my home. I have very little time for it, but I am also financially secure at the moment. As a matter of priorities, I feel better having money in the bank than doing what I love and having creditors pounding at the door of my apartment that a pile of dead rats are holding shut - does that make me a "sell-out" in life - sure, but I'm happy, so
