I feel kind of bad, like when you tell your kid that Santa Claus isn't real.
I said I'd update a month ago and I haven't even been on in all this time. I'm going to have to say to wait for me since these next few weeks are dreadful. This week I am in a mad scramble to finish my Operating Systems project, study for an Intermediate Electricity and Magnetism test (for today), write a paper for my "The Good Life" class, and finish my poster for SC|08.
Then next week I'm in Austin, Texas for the conference. Tuesday I present my poster.
Wish me luck, and I hope to see you winter break! Or maybe the week of/after Thanksgiving.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Retroactive Posting
Hi to all, still alive mostly.
Quick post today, since there are just a few things to cover.
For first, I will be trying to update regularly-ish once more. Perhaps weekly, perhaps monthly, perhaps once every Mercury day. I'll decide eventually.
For second, there are a couple of posts which will be completed. The ones that I never got around to but really wanted to finish up. Gonna keep a small list here, so check back when you can: Research!, The Month in Review
For third, I am totally skipping a week of school to go to SC|08. Best part is, it's for free :P
More on it all later.
Quick post today, since there are just a few things to cover.
For first, I will be trying to update regularly-ish once more. Perhaps weekly, perhaps monthly, perhaps once every Mercury day. I'll decide eventually.
For second, there are a couple of posts which will be completed. The ones that I never got around to but really wanted to finish up. Gonna keep a small list here, so check back when you can: Research!, The Month in Review
For third, I am totally skipping a week of school to go to SC|08. Best part is, it's for free :P
More on it all later.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Tiny Carl Jung
It's the little things that always make my day. Things like this (yes, that is a little dog). And also:
On my phone I have taken a lot of pictures.* In fact, I got a microSD card solely for the purpose of being able to get them off of my phone (fo' free!). Two such pictures I took about twenty feet from each other. One is of a large column with a security camera spray-painted on it. The other of a parking spot with a fire extinguisher spray-painted.
Yet more:
My first year at Tech I found a good number of entertaining pictures on people's whiteboards. This one won it for me though. I also read desks.
Not pictured:
In my dorm here at Tech for the summer, the instructions in case of a fire and "... IF DOOR IS HOT" are as follows.
I found this one in "viejo" San Juan, whilst walking around with Alina. Well, technically she saw it first, but I got the picture. Took me a while to see it, can you?
Bonus: Alex broin' out.
*Actually, all of these pictures were from my phone.
On my phone I have taken a lot of pictures.* In fact, I got a microSD card solely for the purpose of being able to get them off of my phone (fo' free!). Two such pictures I took about twenty feet from each other. One is of a large column with a security camera spray-painted on it. The other of a parking spot with a fire extinguisher spray-painted.
Yet more:
My first year at Tech I found a good number of entertaining pictures on people's whiteboards. This one won it for me though. I also read desks.
Not pictured:
In my dorm here at Tech for the summer, the instructions in case of a fire and "... IF DOOR IS HOT" are as follows.
- Do not open door
- Phone emergency 888
- Seal cracks around door with towels or blankets
- Hang a sheet, blanket, or bedspread out the window as a signal--then shut the window
- Wrap a damp cloth around your face
- Stay low to breathe
- Break out marshmallows
I found this one in "viejo" San Juan, whilst walking around with Alina. Well, technically she saw it first, but I got the picture. Took me a while to see it, can you?
Bonus: Alex broin' out.
*Actually, all of these pictures were from my phone.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
The Month In Review
My month of May can be summed up week by week:
Week 0: Exams
There were six of them. Public Speaking was online and easy, Statistics was my last and also easy, like Calculus of Several Variables. Computer Organization, Data Structures, and Intermediate Mechanics were all the same day and, respectively, not too bad, easy, and difficult--as expected.
Week 1: Home
With a B-tree project, the six exams, and the epic endeavor that is packing for the summer all behind me, I was finally able to head home. A nice lazy week followed, with the only interruption being the doctor's visit.
Week 2: Puerto Rico to visit Alina
This was awesome, to say the least.
Week 3: Recovering from surgery
I had never had surgery before this point. No wisdom teeth or appendix removed. Not sure if this is a good thing or not.
Anyways, the first couple of days I couldn't walk on my own. And after that walking was pained and only with contorted posture. Unfortunately for me, this was the week that my friends decided to have events requiring physical strain--at least more than I could put up with. As a result, I've yet to have gone to King's Dominion. Grrr.
It's fine, though. I focused on recovering and preparing for the next week to come...
June, Week 0: Back at Tech, working
On Monday, the 2nd, just a week and a half after my surgery, I had to go to work. This involved walking from the dorm that I was staying at to the bus stop, quite a struggle for me--remember, Tech is hilly. More importantly, though, before I could begin work I had to move into the aforementioned dorm. This was a gargantuan task, even with my dad's help, and unfortunately for me, Sahil was mostly busy and Alex was angry at me for a reason I did not know.
Somehow I managed to live through all this, mainly by limping my way around, and in a short month I was back to running and being silly in general (after the surgery, any laughter hurt immensely).
Week 0: Exams
There were six of them. Public Speaking was online and easy, Statistics was my last and also easy, like Calculus of Several Variables. Computer Organization, Data Structures, and Intermediate Mechanics were all the same day and, respectively, not too bad, easy, and difficult--as expected.
Week 1: Home
With a B-tree project, the six exams, and the epic endeavor that is packing for the summer all behind me, I was finally able to head home. A nice lazy week followed, with the only interruption being the doctor's visit.
Week 2: Puerto Rico to visit Alina
This was awesome, to say the least.
Week 3: Recovering from surgery
I had never had surgery before this point. No wisdom teeth or appendix removed. Not sure if this is a good thing or not.
Anyways, the first couple of days I couldn't walk on my own. And after that walking was pained and only with contorted posture. Unfortunately for me, this was the week that my friends decided to have events requiring physical strain--at least more than I could put up with. As a result, I've yet to have gone to King's Dominion. Grrr.
It's fine, though. I focused on recovering and preparing for the next week to come...
June, Week 0: Back at Tech, working
On Monday, the 2nd, just a week and a half after my surgery, I had to go to work. This involved walking from the dorm that I was staying at to the bus stop, quite a struggle for me--remember, Tech is hilly. More importantly, though, before I could begin work I had to move into the aforementioned dorm. This was a gargantuan task, even with my dad's help, and unfortunately for me, Sahil was mostly busy and Alex was angry at me for a reason I did not know.
Somehow I managed to live through all this, mainly by limping my way around, and in a short month I was back to running and being silly in general (after the surgery, any laughter hurt immensely).
Monday, May 12, 2008
This Sort of Thing Never Happens!
Not in Northern Virginia at least. Places with monsoon seasons, totally reasonable. But not here.
It's been raining for the last 20+ hours. Not just a sheepish drizzle like what happens over in Blacksburg (think gray and miserable and depressing and you're on the right track), but real steady rain. At times like a downpour. Weather.com is screaming about flood warnings, but let's hope nothing too bad comes.*
Good thing it seems to be settling down. Hmm, now onto random subjects.
So, I harbor some sort of pure absolute disliking for cell phone companies--that is, more so than usual. Apparently, someone sat down to do the math and found that it costs less money per megabyte (MB) for beautiful pictures such as this and this from the Hubble Space Telescope to be sent to Earth than it does for you to say "sup?" to your friend in a text message. How much is the difference? Easily than four times as much and up to forty times as much. Ridiculous? Very yes. Doesn't it make you want to yell at your provider?
In other news, it seems something on the AOL front has gone wrong (um, again >.>). For those of you who just recently tuned in, last summer I interned over at AOL, my first real full-time job. It was actually a blast and I learned much more than expected. Anyway, they had me working the entire summer on a gadget for iGoogle (kinda like Netvibes), one which I'm now embarrassed to be associated with. Somehow in the last year it has gained a few thousand users, along with a poor rating from several of them. The system for retrieving mail is slow, and the code which I wrote--code that initially worked--is broken. Hmmm...
A sternly-written letter is in order!
Ever the procrastinator, I found something else to distract me from my work.** Installing another operating system! I hadn't booted into OpenSolaris in forever, so I basically had an open partition on my hard drive. That and the fact that I've never given Gentoo the true attention it deserves and thus I jumped on for a third attempt. The difference this time was that I tried to configure the kernel (the core of any modern linux distribution) to the best of my abilities. And two and a half hours later I was done and compiling--yum! But, an experience much like my first encounter with linux and later Arch, I soon found myself unable to get past having a base system installed. This morning, from nine to noon, was spent in a futile stab at getting my wireless to work. *grumble grumble* Ohs wells, probably time to get to work anyways..
After that letter, p'raps.
*Dad says some people who work with him lost power at their homes.
**A four page paper for a program that I'm applying for. More later(?)
PS: As predicted, the rain has stopped, huzzah!
It's been raining for the last 20+ hours. Not just a sheepish drizzle like what happens over in Blacksburg (think gray and miserable and depressing and you're on the right track), but real steady rain. At times like a downpour. Weather.com is screaming about flood warnings, but let's hope nothing too bad comes.*
So, I harbor some sort of pure absolute disliking for cell phone companies--that is, more so than usual. Apparently, someone sat down to do the
In other news, it seems something on the AOL front has gone wrong (um, again >.>). For those of you who just recently tuned in, last summer I interned over at AOL, my first real full-time job. It was actually a blast and I learned much more than expected. Anyway, they had me working the entire summer on a gadget for iGoogle (kinda like Netvibes), one which I'm now embarrassed to be associated with. Somehow in the last year it has gained a few thousand users, along with a poor rating from several of them. The system for retrieving mail is slow, and the code which I wrote--code that initially worked--is broken. Hmmm...
A sternly-written letter is in order!
Ever the procrastinator, I found something else to distract me from my work.** Installing another operating system! I hadn't booted into OpenSolaris in forever, so I basically had an open partition on my hard drive. That and the fact that I've never given Gentoo the true attention it deserves and thus I jumped on for a third attempt. The difference this time was that I tried to configure the kernel (the core of any modern linux distribution) to the best of my abilities. And two and a half hours later I was done and compiling--yum! But, an experience much like my first encounter with linux and later Arch, I soon found myself unable to get past having a base system installed. This morning, from nine to noon, was spent in a futile stab at getting my wireless to work. *grumble grumble* Ohs wells, probably time to get to work anyways..
After that letter, p'raps.
*Dad says some people who work with him lost power at their homes.
**A four page paper for a program that I'm applying for. More later(?)
PS: As predicted, the rain has stopped, huzzah!
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
The Rants, They Just Keep Coming
I feel like blogging about nothing and everything. I do have, and have had, four unfinished posts in the works, but those are not time-dependent and can be finished at my leisure.
Now, starting with complaints.
It seems I'm doomed to have lotsa complications to deal with (and none of them the fun kind). Two days ago was my last final exam--statistics, yum!--which meant that that afternoon I would be leaving for home. Problem was the amount of packing I had to accomplish in a three hour period. But, a frustratingly undisclosed amount of time later I was finished and ready to leave! My parents and I hopped into my mom's RAV4* and, following a quick stop at the BP on South Main, proceeded on back to NOVA.
Once home, I began the tedious process of unpacking, which somehow takes multiple days no matter how much or how little I had to unpack. Stopped after getting the basic necessities and slept. Next day--yesterday--I had to get up bright and early to go to the doctor, who happily made money for seven and a quarter minutes with me and for providing a referral. Afterwards a bevy** of phone calls had to be made to surgeons, American Airlines, my dentist, and a few other odd places. Hmm, you know, after interacting with so many receptionists/secretaries I've realized that it would be pretty kickass to have one. *adds to list of things to do* I don't care if my occupation doesn't require one, I will make sure to keep one around. Anyone looking for a job?
Mmm, got off topic again. Sorry. So, lesee.. this Friday I have a four page paper due for this program I'm applying for, still unpacking, and meeting with the general surgeon tomorrow to see when I can get surgery. Oh, and I gotta figure out if--though most likely yes--and when to I will be moving my trip to Puerto Rico. Originally the plan was to leave the fourteenth and return the twenty-ninth, but all that looks like it'll be changing. Yeah..
So, summer just started and it seems as if it might be as busy (and definitely crazier) than the last. Good and bad, just hoping things turn out all right. Oooh, and in mid-August I'll get to start moving into the house we're renting next year. Many fun things in store, just gotta live through these next couple weeks.
Oh, and for those of you wondering, I have a hernia. No, I didn't do anything to get it--that I know of--they can apparently just happen sometimes. But yeah, this has been the undoing of my summer. The wrench in the machine.
I have no clue if that last sentence is even a phrase. *shrug* Ohs wells.
*The one that just so happens to drive like a dream.
**YES! Finally got to use it.
Now, starting with complaints.
It seems I'm doomed to have lotsa complications to deal with (and none of them the fun kind). Two days ago was my last final exam--statistics, yum!--which meant that that afternoon I would be leaving for home. Problem was the amount of packing I had to accomplish in a three hour period. But, a frustratingly undisclosed amount of time later I was finished and ready to leave! My parents and I hopped into my mom's RAV4* and, following a quick stop at the BP on South Main, proceeded on back to NOVA.
Once home, I began the tedious process of unpacking, which somehow takes multiple days no matter how much or how little I had to unpack. Stopped after getting the basic necessities and slept. Next day--yesterday--I had to get up bright and early to go to the doctor, who happily made money for seven and a quarter minutes with me and for providing a referral. Afterwards a bevy** of phone calls had to be made to surgeons, American Airlines, my dentist, and a few other odd places. Hmm, you know, after interacting with so many receptionists/secretaries I've realized that it would be pretty kickass to have one. *adds to list of things to do* I don't care if my occupation doesn't require one, I will make sure to keep one around. Anyone looking for a job?
Mmm, got off topic again. Sorry. So, lesee.. this Friday I have a four page paper due for this program I'm applying for, still unpacking, and meeting with the general surgeon tomorrow to see when I can get surgery. Oh, and I gotta figure out if--though most likely yes--and when to I will be moving my trip to Puerto Rico. Originally the plan was to leave the fourteenth and return the twenty-ninth, but all that looks like it'll be changing. Yeah..
So, summer just started and it seems as if it might be as busy (and definitely crazier) than the last. Good and bad, just hoping things turn out all right. Oooh, and in mid-August I'll get to start moving into the house we're renting next year. Many fun things in store, just gotta live through these next couple weeks.
Oh, and for those of you wondering, I have a hernia. No, I didn't do anything to get it--that I know of--they can apparently just happen sometimes. But yeah, this has been the undoing of my summer. The wrench in the machine.
I have no clue if that last sentence is even a phrase. *shrug* Ohs wells.
*The one that just so happens to drive like a dream.
**YES! Finally got to use it.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
As Things Wind Down
The end of the semester is in sight. A short sprint to the finish line. The evening before Christmas. Readying to touch down after that long flight. One last all-nighter...
Speaking of all-nighters.
So last Sunday John and I had a CS project due at midnight (soon extended to 9 am the following day). Let me get one thing straight right now: I had not been putting it off. I actually did everything except for one small--well, I didn't think at the time that it would take too long--part of the program. Hence you can't blame this one on procrastination.
It was somewhere around 3 am when I realized that I would not be sleeping. By this point I had been working nearly six hours straight (after having worked three earlier Sunday afternoon) and was still getting odd errors the likes of which I had never seen. Now, I could rant about the inadequacies of C++ as a programming language. I could also rant about B-trees, though their implementation is not too bad. But I'd much rather make it known that, after many trials and tribulations, I received a perfect score.
Following a day of falling asleep in my classes, I then finally went to bed at 11 and woke up at 7 the next morning, with my cell phone in my hand*. Yes I was confused. Yes I felt slightly better.
I was still fighting sleep in my Mechanics class today. Probably need to sleep more.
What remains is one day of class and six exams. Three on Saturday starting at 7:45 am. Do wish me luck, I'm pretty sure I'll need it.
Oh, and research will most definitely be interesting.
*I have no recollection of getting a phone call, much less picking up the phone and conversing. Felt like I slept through everything.
Speaking of all-nighters.
So last Sunday John and I had a CS project due at midnight (soon extended to 9 am the following day). Let me get one thing straight right now: I had not been putting it off. I actually did everything except for one small--well, I didn't think at the time that it would take too long--part of the program. Hence you can't blame this one on procrastination.
It was somewhere around 3 am when I realized that I would not be sleeping. By this point I had been working nearly six hours straight (after having worked three earlier Sunday afternoon) and was still getting odd errors the likes of which I had never seen. Now, I could rant about the inadequacies of C++ as a programming language. I could also rant about B-trees, though their implementation is not too bad. But I'd much rather make it known that, after many trials and tribulations, I received a perfect score.
Following a day of falling asleep in my classes, I then finally went to bed at 11 and woke up at 7 the next morning, with my cell phone in my hand*. Yes I was confused. Yes I felt slightly better.
I was still fighting sleep in my Mechanics class today. Probably need to sleep more.
What remains is one day of class and six exams. Three on Saturday starting at 7:45 am. Do wish me luck, I'm pretty sure I'll need it.
Oh, and research will most definitely be interesting.
*I have no recollection of getting a phone call, much less picking up the phone and conversing. Felt like I slept through everything.
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