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> Engineers will learn, and they won´t need a Ph.D. to know about Magnetics or EMI.

Here I disagree. We will get nowhere with the present state of affairs, with only a handful of people having a solid grasp of the basics, and the majority going by the seat of their pants or by questionable rules of thumb found on Youtube. There is an abyss between the experts that know all about the theory without being able to do a single experiment, and the practioners who can get to work anything, because they don't know it is theoretically impossible.

> Conferences will show actionable and verified work

Agreed, and not only for magnetics.

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I think we are more agree than you think. I think, the only way engineers get expertise in Magnetics or EMI is doing a Ph.D. or working 10 years in the same room than a Ph.D. in Magnetics. Nevertheless, in the future, there will be much better ways of learning about very specific topics. The closer thing you ca do today is attend a consultant Workshop, like Biricha or Ridley. In my vision, that will change and of course, Lab testing will be an important part of the process. Actually, there will be a more specialized people and less general electrical engineers.

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