Engineering What is a typical day like for a systems engineer?

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SUMMARY

A typical day for a systems engineer involves managing projects through defined release cycles, where they identify primary requirements, plan solutions, and implement them collaboratively with other engineers. Key responsibilities include coordinating with a dedicated systems test team to conduct unit, functional, and system-level tests, while adhering to established defect management criteria. The role requires continuous communication with various disciplines and necessitates a comprehensive understanding of both hardware and software components. Ultimately, the process culminates in a postmortem review to enhance future project cycles.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of systems engineering principles
  • Familiarity with project management methodologies
  • Knowledge of software testing techniques
  • Experience in cross-disciplinary collaboration
NEXT STEPS
  • Research project management tools like Jira or Trello for systems engineering
  • Learn about software testing frameworks such as JUnit or Selenium
  • Explore systems engineering lifecycle models, including V-Model and Agile
  • Investigate defect management strategies in software development
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for aspiring systems engineers, project managers, and software developers seeking to understand the intricacies of systems engineering and project execution within a collaborative environment.

MartinJH
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Hopefully this is in the correct section. I'm studying systems engineering and I'd like to know a typical day in the life of such. I've done some research but I can't quit assume what a working day would involve and perhaps, generally, what I can focus on.
* What sort of projects are worked on
* amount of liaising with other disciplines
* amount of knowledge of other disciplines

Many thanks
 
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Wikipedia has an article on it:

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systems_engineering

From reading the article, systems engineering is very similar to the tasks handled in a software engineering project:
- you'd be assigned to a project until completion
- the project may have release cycles
- during each release cycle you'd identify the primary requirements, plan a solution, review it with others and then proceed to implement it
- other engineers would do the same
- a lead engineer would've developed a planning schedule showing when each component would be dropped in place
- each component would be dependent on other components being put in place
- the plan would allow for slippage in case some component was late
- other times the plan may have to be reworked due to some problem like hardware or software not in place or still back ordered
- a dedicated systems test team would be continuously testing system as it's put together via unit test, functional tests and finally system level tests
- the tests to run would've been designed while other components were being built to be ready when they are
- criteria would be established to manage defects uncovered by the test team
- the criteria would say something like no severity 1 defects allowed, limited number of severity 2 defects with workarounds listed in a readme file...
- as things are almost completed a lockdown of changes is put in effect where the lead engineer under advisement of his team what to fix and what not fix in order to maintain the stability of the product as we enter the final stage
- once all components are in place, system tests have been completed and the shipping criteria met then the team could announce a release
- finally a postmortem review of what worked and what didn't in preparation for the next cycle of release
- and the tasks repeat...
 
For some background, I'm currently a 3rd year physics major with an astro specialization studying in Canada, and as undergraduates are want to do I'm regularly evaluating my career prospects down the road. I also plan on pursuing grad school when I've completed my degree. It might just be my anxiety acting up a little, but with a lot of the government funding drying up for public science research broadly in the US, the 'industry' everyone keeps talking about when questions like this are...

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