IEEE R5 Houston Section & Women In Engineering Speaker Series - From Electrical to Software: Lessons from an Unplanned Switch

#WIE
Share

What does it really take to move from hardware to software engineering—and does it always require a formal plan?
 
In this candid, experience-driven webinar, our speaker shares her unexpected journey from electrical engineering into software—starting in a small-to-mid-sized company where “doing a bit of everything” turned into a full career pivot.
 
Instead of a step-by-step playbook, this session focuses on what actually happens in the real world:
  • How working across hardware and software can naturally open the door to transition
  • The reality of learning to code on the job—and what “good code” really means
  • How formal education (like a master’s program) can reshape your understanding of algorithms, structure, and scalability
  • Why starting before you’re ready—by automating tasks and building tools—can accelerate your transition
  • Real examples of turning manual work into software solutions (long before AI tools existed)
  • How AI is now changing the way engineers write code—and what that means for career switchers
Whether you’re intentionally planning a transition or simply finding yourself doing more software work over time, this session will help you recognize opportunities, build the right skills, and take practical steps toward a software-focused role.
 
👉Join us for a 1-hour session including live Q&A on Thursday May 14th, 2026 at 7PMCST.


  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Add_To_Calendar_icon Add Event to Calendar

Loading virtual attendance info...

  • Contact Event Hosts
  • Starts 30 April 2026 05:00 AM UTC
  • Ends 15 May 2026 01:00 AM UTC
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Somreeta

Biography:

SomreetaRoy

Somreeta Roy is a Senior Electrical and Software Engineer at LivaNova in Houston, Texas, where she designs Class III medical implants and the software systems that communicate with them — work that sits at the intersection of hardware, firmware, and regulated software development.

Somreeta began her career as an electrical engineer, designing analog circuits and DC-DC converters for high-temperature downhole tools at Schlumberger in the oil and gas industry. She then made a significant industry pivot to medical devices at LivaNova, where she applied her analog design background to an entirely different domain — developing PCBA-level circuits for implantable neurostimulators used in Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) therapy, to treat neurological conditions like drug-resistant epilepsy and treatment resistant depression. Over time, she made a further deliberate transition into software engineering — taking on full-stack feature ownership for an Android-based physician programming application for Class III implantable devices, navigating FDA regulatory submissions, and building test infrastructure for safety-critical systems.

Motivated to formalize her software expertise, Somreeta pursued a Master of Science in Computer Science with a specialization in Machine Learning from Georgia Tech, completing the degree online while working full-time. She holds a Master of Engineering in Electrical Engineering from Texas A&M University and a B.Tech in Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering from NIT Durgapur, India.

Tonight, she shares her firsthand experience of bridging two engineering disciplines — and what it really takes to make that kind of career pivot from the inside of a highly regulated industry.





Agenda