Xander’s College Life: Year 3 Chapter 11

Xander’s CollegeLife: Year 3
Chapter 11 – More life

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I shall be around here over the summer

So, the third year of college is ending already… and I wish I had more to say. I’m finding myself more and more lazy, less willing to put in the short time of day it takes to make a decent blog entry. There was a time when I’d go through the day, observing my own life and my own thoughts (oh the joys of metacognition) as much as I did living it, and at night, I’d sit down, crank out a blog entry, reassuring myself that indeed, this one day that will never come again had been a meaningful contribution to my life. Chained all together, the days became months and years, and my blog (be it on Angelex, or here on Xanga) served testimony to the joys and struggles of my life. At least, it did for most of the past four years. It seems that Xanga as a whole is going through a slump, whether it’s a condition of my community or a dying fad, I can’t be sure. I *hope* blogging isn’t not just a dying fad; it may be a guilty voyeuristic joy in keeping up with the details of friends far away, long after I stop talking to them on a weekly, monthly, or yearly basis, but as blogging (or journaling at all) reassures me of the significance of my own life, reading others’ daily livelihoods reminds me that I am, in fact, connected to those far beyond the scope of my influence.

That aside, blogging also lets me keep track of my own life, as busy hectic weeks of homework, projects, finals blanket every productive waking hour. School has been busy–here’re some quick updates:

Finally finished the computer graphics final project:
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Looks cool enough, right? Visually, not that stunning, just your basic phong shaded thingy with rudimentary bump-mapping, but to render the physics accurately, especially when you’re working at the code level, and have it appear realistic visually,that was a challenge. It’s hard enough dealing with regular codingerrors, trying to take reality and create an abstract representation of it in code, and then have that representation drawn 100 FPS, now that’s tricky. I’m glad I liked Wilverding’s class in high school…

And! I’m sad to say, but I won’t be around for the summer. I’ll be a little bit away from the flat plains of Illinois this time around, out in Redmond, Washington interning for some software company. . Which I’ll get into for a short brief:

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These people were very nice about accommodations… my very first, first class flight! I’ll have to say, first class is a bit over-rated… on my own, I’d probably never ride first-class. Felt a bit out of place there too; most people were older, 40+ business people…

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Shameless internal advertising everywhere

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The City (Seattle) at Night.

Okay so yeah, unless this whole thing is some kind of scam (like I had paranoidly suspected for a bit), I’ll be working at Microsoft this summer–during my interview trip, I had a chance to explore the neighborhood a bit! Having never been to Seattle before, I didn’t really know what it had, besides the Seahawks and the Space Needle. There’s so much that I’m sure I’ll talk about it it later… but here’s a list:

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(1) Most amazing oysters on a half-shell! Looking at this picture, I’m craving them already!
(2) The Music Experience Project / Science Fiction Museum-Hall of Fame – I saw the REAL Terminator

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(3) Piroshky Piroshky! Amazing food, lines were huge!

 IMG_7254(4) The World’s First Starbucks Store

So, I’m looking to have a good time this summer! People! Come visit me! I promise, at the very least, a night out to Elliot’s, on me! This in particular, goes for Flam, you East St. Louis junkie 

In the midst of this, I’m still trying to figure out what the heck to do with my life (like almost every other person I know). I’ve always told myself that I do want to go into private industry work. Why? Because it’s aproductivity-driven world, where your work is purposeful in itself, and you truly do have the (more) direct power to contribute to the daily lives of many. Then again, academic life isn’t so bad either. After my first year experience working in the Language and Brain Lab (now the Cognition and Brain Lab), I struggled with the discrepancies between the neuroscience that I was pursing(pretty much the practical, world saving, hippie blah blah), and the academic environment where it was developing. I didn’t like the work there; there was too much emphasis in getting grants, so that you can get research to be published, so that you can get more grants… the never ending cycle of struggling for funds wasn’t very attractive, and really, it seemed to far removed from the applications-based way of thinking that I held. So I steered far away from there, and came into engineering. Then, the whole research climate changed. The new startup lab that I’m working in has a vision, this time, we’re working with brain-computer interfaces (something I’d been wanting to do from before high school), and have several solid sources of funding (NSF, Darpa, the ECE Department, NINDS etc…), and finally, I’m actually making a slow, but significant contribution. So, really, not so bad after all.

What’s the point to all this?

“I’m out to save the world…”

15-Apr-2007

Real post coming up… in the mean time… more Ars!

Geek Squad playing Peep Squad

According to a lawsuit filed against Best Buy this week, at least one
Geek Squad technician has been doing more than just fixing computers.
On March 4th, technician Hao Kuo Chi reported to the home of Natalie
Fornaciari and Sarah Vasquez. While there, he allegedly placed his cell
phone in the bathroom, where it caught 22 year-old Sarah Vasquez
showering. Upon exiting the shower, she discovered his cell phone
placed behind the sink, with the “Record” function enabled…

Read more about this idiot…


China: Internet porn has “perverted China’s Young Minds”

After announcing a crackdown on online gaming by minors and introducing a plan to clean up television shows like Happy Boys Voice , the Chinese government has now embarked on a broader plan to scour porn from the Internet .
And this is more than a “block a few web sites” scouring—it’s the
full-blown, put-your-whole-body-into-it abrasive scrubdown. Just ask
Chen Hui, one-time operator of the largest porn site in China. After
his arrest late last year, Chen was sentenced to life in prison.

Go Guofeng!

 

Going Faster, Sideways

I <3 Ars…

Now, however, we’ve entered a period of system integration for integration’s sake, because the clockspeed increases have slowed down and integration is what we have left. This new era of “integration first, then clockspeed” is one for which the industry is relatively unprepared. In particular, it’s now much harder to sort out what should happen next.

One artifact of the previous decade’s focus on steady processor clockspeed increases is that everyone got used to knowing what the future of computing would look like. Things would be much as they are, we figured, except processors would run faster, and programs would run faster as well. And for the most part, this view of the future held true right up to the moment where the semiconductor industry hit the power wall and the clockspeed party ended relatively abruptly.

Now the future of computing is substantially murkier, and both industry and academia are still in the midst of a collective “now
what?” moment. Everyone is clear on one fact: the future is less about clockspeed and more about die-level integration. But beyond that, every aspect of the way that computer systems are built and programmed is up for grabs.

Beyond the Teraflops: Why Intel really put 80 cores on a single chip, Ars Technica

I’ll write something later…