Author: skyrien

MMVII

So like it or not, it came. The beginning of the end of the decade–2007 is here. I for one, am very glad–I think it’s about time that something changed. I remember when I used to be a kid and I’d watch new years’ celebrations occuring all over the world, erupting in cheer, kisses, fireworks, and music. Technically, it is just another day but there’s is a beauty to a whole world giving meaning to what otherwise would be “just another day”. That just because we say it’s not just another day, it isn’t. Kind of magical, isn’t it?

I’d like to think so.

Of course… what’s *not* magical is the venue in which we celebrated it yesterday. In what was perhaps the biggest all out war noted in recent memory, new years’ was celebrated with perhaps a bit too much alcohol, and too little common sense. Ultimately, what resulted was a memorable mess of sorts, and a lot to sleep on. Details not pending, they shall never be released. But you can always check the photos on facebook!

There’s so much potential for mess these days… what happened to our relatively drama-free high school years?

Well. I’m not one to usuaully make new year resolutions beyond the “make it the best year yet!” but this time, I think I’ll have to make a few. Not in any particular order:

1. Get my life in order. Priorities, committments, and all.
2. Find a home in faith. And grow…
3. Gain a good 10-15 lbs. That would make me *very* happy.

Simple goals. No abstract “better than the last” kind of junk. All right? Thought so.

So. Here’s to 2007, could be something new, maybe something good, but hopefully, something different.

Year 3 – Chapter 6 – Winter Break III

Animals coming home!

Here’s to the crazy ones.
The misfits.
The rebels.
The troublemakers.
The round pegs in the square holes.
The ones who see things differently.
They’re not fond of rules
And they have no respect for the status quo.
You can praise them, disagree with them, quote them, disbelieve them, glorify or vilify them.
About the only thing that you can’t do is ignore them.
Because they change things.
They invent.
They imagine.
They heal.
They explore.
They create.
They inspire.
They push the human race forward.
Maybe they have to be crazy.
How else can you stare at an empty canvas and see a work of art?
Or sit in silence and hear a song that’s never been written?
Or gaze at a red planet and see a laboratory on wheels?
We make tools for these kinds of people.
While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.
Because the ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do…
– Apple ad from the 80s.

Xander’s College Life: Year 3 Chapter 5 – Ending Semester 5 of 8.

Xander’s College Life: Year 3
Chapter 5 – Ending Semester 5 of 8.

Semester 5 is nearing it’s end, it’s hard to believe that I’ve spent five whole semesters here at this school. In some ways, I feel like it’s just the beginning… but of course at this point, it’s a bit closer to the end. So in early retrospect, what have I gotten from this experience? It’s quite different from what I had expected at the end of senior year in 2004… a bit different from what I was left with at the end of freshman year. There’ve been some truly great times, and of course, some that really could have benefited from better foresight (hindsight gets too much credit these days).

Oh, for sure, things have definitely changed over the past two-and-a-half years… I’m not an English major anymore, having gone back to my technological roots . I’ve made a few more friends. Okay, fine, a lot more. Travelled to China, gone back to Korea again… found God, walked from God, lost self, found self, and other crazy rollercoaster business… learned to make angel-hair pasta with chicken…

…learned that yeah, I was right –I can be pretty damn selfish without knowing…

…learned to love (maybe?)… learned to live (hopefully?)

What am I left with, looking back on this era of my life? I don’t now, I really don’t–I just know that time, indeed, has passed by faster than I could have expected. And just as high school blew by, I know that all-too-soon, we’ll be packing our bags and boxes for the last time on this little hovel in the cornfields.

But really… right now, the best I can say is that… I sense that the best is yet to come. Wistful thinking… yeah, it could always just be that. But then again, I don’t plan to let it. Life is too short, and has been too short to go by without getting much better.

Now, it’s about time for winter break. 2 more finals, 4 more days… can’t wait! Good luck to ALL, dear readership, and may you all find your destinies this week.

That said…

Keyboard Engineering

I’ve put my engineering skills to good use last week. While working on our semester project for ECE 385, bad luck struck us hard. Everything started falling apart, from our FPGA board to Xilinx–to Windows on my computer (which randomly crashed for the first time in an hour). And then, as if it couldn’t get any worse, as I was typing up the report that was due the next day, my keyboard suddenly stops working. Well, part of it. The entire bottom row from Z to M ceased to work. At first I thought it might be the battery, but all the other keys were working.

Normally, it wouldn’t have been so bad, but my backup keyboard was in the 385 lab from a previous project, and given how everyone else uses laptops, there was no replacement. I tried restarting the computer in hopes that something would change… but then, I realized I couldn’t log into my comptuer anymore (password contains an ‘n’)! Of course, then I can’t access my files since Windows is clever and encrypts files by account. I ended up  loading into Safe Mode and logging in as the administrator, moving the files, and finishing the work on my laptop (which was another hassle to move my work onto, lacking a USB drive, or a working memory stick drive on the laptop, OR wireless internet in our apartment…), but they keyboard problem was still an unsolved mystery.

I came back a couple days later (after having finished my presentation for ECE 316–my favorite class of the semester), I decided to tackle it once more. By Friday, something weirder was going on. I turned my computer back on, and at the log in screen, I realized the bottom row started working again! I was happy for a moment… but something was wrong. I kept typing in my password, but it still wouldn’t log in. I did each letter one-by-one and it STILL didn’t work. Something didn’t make sense… I logged into the Guest account, and loaded up Wordpad, and started typing. What I saw baffled me.

The entire bottom row, had been transformed into the top row. As in, Z typed Q, X typed W, C typed E, and so on… it made no sense! I half-suspected that it was some sort of software issue, a prank-virus perhaps, but that wasn’t likely. Jon suggested that I buy a new keyboard, and at this point, I was about ready to do so. This keyboard was dirty, old, and clearly, falling apart from the inside … I decided that I’d make a last ditch attempt to figure out what was going on–by opening up the keyboard and seeing the inside!

There were 15 screws on the back, an ANNOYING hassle to remove, but once I got them out, the cover came off easily… and I was presented with a rubbery layer, and a couple plastic sheets with wires etched onto them. So that’s how keyboards worked. Two sheets of plastic , etched with wires (one with horizontal wires, and the other , vertical wires) are seperated by another clear plastic layer with holes where the keys are. When a key is pressed, the wires form a circuit, and the route is unique for each key. And blah blah… not that anyone else cares, but having worked with keyboard makecodes for a month, this kind of stuff seems like kindergarten.

Anyway, I decided to wash the keyboard while I was at it:


My hair is *way* too long (but thanks anyway, AirConditioner!)


Of course, my keyboard is waterproof

Anyway. I looked closely, and I saw that the row of keys that weren’t working were all on the same line. Looking further, I saw that this ‘line’ was minorly corroded in several places, and in one place, it was even corroding into the next line. This explained a lot, as the next line was the one for the top row. I scrapped off the corroded crap, and now we were back to square 1, with no the letters not working. At least I had narrowed it down to what. Close observation showed that the wires were shorted in 3 places (how this happened simultaneously, is beyond me). I thought if I could connect them back together, it would work. So, I made an attempt. I sliced one of the wires from old ear phones (that no longer worked), and fashioned a short testing wire, to see how far the signal would actually carry. And somehow, each section was cut into it’s own wire. Eh, so I figured that I’d try and tape some wire on (far-fetched, I know…) and see if the signal could carry through.


You can see my make-shift wire on the bottom and top right above my finger

Okay, this story is getting boring, so I’ll end it now. It worked! I was amazed–least of all having expected that such as small fix would work. In the end, I saved myself $50, and had the satisfaction of knowing that I
had done something productive! I was pleased … and felt like quite the engineering dork.

And an update:

It’s the sound of morning rain over here–grayness everywhere, and you know what? There is little that can leave me more satisfied. After 12+ hours of catching up on CS (reading, note taking, listening to Zych on fast-forward) and working, I’m done with the final MP for the semester. Of course, I have many a junmoo to thank–but hey, now I can teach some basics of Visual Studio debugging to anyone interested; FAR superior to that DDD crap we’ve been using.

Of course, now it’s 8:11 AM and my body clock is completely out of sync with the world. And just as I’m about to put myself to sleep, I’m hungry
again.

And check out what I just acquired: