Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Google Success!

So I've been trying for the last couple of days to get my ACM high school competition site to be picked up by Google. And today I checked, and it came up!!!

With the keywords "byu acm high school" it comes up as number one.


Even with only "byu acm", it pops up as the 2.5th result, under the ACM home page. I'd still say that is a success.

Here's some stuff I did:

Monday, December 29, 2008

High School Contest Page


Breaking News: I've done something over the holidays: It's a website for the BYU ACM High School contest. It can be found here: http://acm.byu.edu/hs2009.

I'm pretty proud of it because it incorporated a bunch of custom images made in photoshop, with perl and html.

I think the resistors as menu items are pretty creative and recognizable, but I had some problem with the main content panel design. I tried to make it look like a chip, but I ran into two problems:
  1. I wanted to keep at least the BYU blue as a color, and didn't want to sacrifice that for a the normal chip black color. and then I really liked the light blue color for the pins.. perhaps I should have chosen a bright yellow color for the pins to make it more realistic. However, a bright yellow would have to match the green title color as well as the BYU blue. Whatever.

  2. The second problem was that after I had completed the chip graphic on the large-screen multimedia lab computers, it looked the right size. However, when I viewed it on my smaller low-res mac screen, I couldn't see all of the edges, which made it hard to recognize the pins and square shape.


My next task is to find some local tech companies to sponsor us.

Friday, December 26, 2008

VNC Server Installation

This morning I installed VNC with my dad on a Fedora Core 9 machine. This is what we did:

  1. Install VNC with yum:
    yum install vnc.i386

  2. Set an access password:
    vncpasswd

  3. Edit the servers:
    vi /etc/sysconfig/vncservers
    Uncomment last two lines. Set set the username and display number (I think you can find the next available display by running vncserver) and deleting all of the params besides the display resolution on the second line.
    It should look like:
    VNCSERVERS="3:root"
    VNCSERVERARGS[2]="-geometry 800x600"

  4. Change the firewall settings to allow VNC access: (you have to be using iptables) edit iptables:
    vi /etc/sysconfig/iptables, adding new lines for 580x and 590x, where x is the display number. (It should look like:
    -A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 5803 -j ACCEPT )

  5. Start the server:
    service vncserver start

  6. If everything works, you should be able to access the server on a browser running java (like firefox) by browsing to http://servername:580x, where x is the display number.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Genealogy

I just finished my gift for my grandma. She's kindof big into genealogy, and while I was in Germany, I stopped in Regensburg and found that the Lutheran records had all been moved to Nuermberg. So I went to Nuermberg, and arrived at the place like 15 minutes before it closed. In the 15 minutes, I managed to find the names and information for 6 ancestors. Rock on.
I decided that instead of just giving her the photocopies of the slides, I would try to do a little decryption out of German into Legibility. One of the guys I ran across was born exactly 195 years ago. Johann Georg Foerster, related to me through my mother's mother's side. It was pretty incredible to think that he might be watching me excitedly from heaven now...
And for those German buffs, I think that's what it says right? Friday, 24th of December .. um 11 Uhr ??? (abends?)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas Tradition

Well, I'm home for the break with the family, and I came across a family Christmas tradition. Some night before Christmas, we always pull out the old colorized "It's a Wonderful Life" with Mr. Stewart. Of course the little kids have to get their baths first, and then we all huddle around the TV, while mom works on the finishing touches for cookies for the neighbors.

About half-way through the film, mom joins us from the kitchen, and dad starts sniffling. When the party guests come filing in at the end of the movie with money for George, dad is audibly emotional, and when George picks up the book, there is a shot of the text from Clarence - "Dear George, remember no man is a failure who has friends. Thanks for the wings, Love Clarence." And year after year, Dad feels like it is his duty to read it out loud in a sniffly voice, even though the kids who are too young to read don't really understand the rest of the movie anyway.

It's a good tradition. Lately, there has been a tradition for the older kids to take off with their friends during the movie. But this year, I stayed home. And I'm glad I did.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Warning

So I'm studying for this Internet Programming final, and came across a slide that we didn't go over in class. It has this warning on it:
I had to laugh. It was in the network security slides. We really need to work on this. I especially liked the implementation details: "It is already possible for an assassin to send someone an e-mail with an innocent-looking attachment connected to it. When the receiver downloads the attachment, the electrical current and molecular structure of the central processing unit is altered, causing it to blast apart like a large hand grenade."

I'm glad I have been going through these class slides a second time so I am aware of the dangers I need to protect my computer (and my family).

I also liked the ... disk drive on the computer.. is that a 5 1/2 or 5 3/4 inch floppy? (My kids won't even know what a floppy disk is) (Thanks to wikipedia, I just found out it's a 5 1/4 inch drive) Perhaps hackers were exploiting the explosive properties of the floppy drives. As a precautionary measure, computer manufacturers opted for safer, less hazardous optical DVD drives..

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Peace!

Well. Uh. Joy to the World. I got an A on my civ "Pieces of Piece" project. Only one comment on the last page: "EXCELLENT! wonderful work A". Rock on. No other marks throughout the paper about grammar problems or the mercedes/peace symbol.. Just cuz it's Christmas, I'll attribute that to good will.

Tonight we had our final for that class. We were supposed to give a presentation on how to build a Zion community. I was impressed at some of the work of the other groups (although I won't concede that ours wasn't the funniest and most entertaining presentation). One group showed evidence of increasing selfishness in the world, showing debt-to-saving ratios over the past 15 years. I found the graph they showed in class here but I can't find where they are getting their statistics from. And at a second glance, I'm not convinced that this graph tells the whole story.. granted, savings rates may be down from the 80s, and debt rates are up. For example, the blue line seems to imply a connection between the GDP and household debt. In actuality, both of these are variable, so perhaps the GDP just went down from the 80s. Whatev.

Another group wanted to try to make campus a more Zion-like place, so they found an inspirational scripture to motivate students studying for finals and printed it out on slips of paper. They handed the slips of paper out with hershey's kisses to students studying in the library. Ironically, a security guard was not pleased with their distribution of things in the library and kicked them out. He didn't want a kiss either. The group concluded that the library doesn't want to be part of Zion. Seemed valid to me.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Saturday is a Reading Day. It's the Day we get ready for Finals.

We get two days before finals for 'reading days.' This year, one of those days was a Saturday. Yay. No classes on a Saturday! Let those students read!

But I guess today was fairly productive. I met with my civ group this morning. We're doing a project on "The Gingerbread Method" for creating peace. Basically, we've assigned different attributes or conditions necessary for peace to parts of a gingerbread house, and we're going to assemble a gingerbread house in class, explaining the components as we go. This morning we filmed infomercial-like testimonials about how "The Gingerbread Method" had changed our lives. I was "Misterstrata" and had experienced the effects of the Gingerbread Method as my wife and her friend found courage and the drive for unity which stopped the war I was participating in. .. kindof a spinoff of Aristophanes' Lysistrata.

And then I did a shift at the hospital. Two events stuck out to me.. actually three:
  1. A young couple in their twenties came in. Evidently the wife had been throwing up a couple days earlier, then she started having a tingling sensation in her fingertips, and then it started to spread. The symptoms aren't important, but it was very cool to see the interaction between the couple. You could tell that he loved her, even though she looked down in the dumps and was holding a pink bucket thing in case she needed to puke. I thought that was really cool. Even though they aren't wrinkled and gray, they still love each other.

  2. I was asked to escort a lady out of the hospital. The assisting nurse prepped me: "She is a little emotional and might cry, but we've done everything we can do for her and she needs to go home." When I got to her room, I found her sitting on her bed, crying. I rolled the wheelchair into the room, and asked her how she was doing, and if she was ready to go home. She started crying more, and began complaining about the service. She said she had been brought in a hospital, but was now being forced to leave. I helped her into the wheelchair, and rolled her out to a cab that was waiting for her. It became clear to me that this poor woman needed some attention and had probably called 911... well, I don't know why, but she did. I guess it made me realize the value of relationships. I guess I just wanted to go home with this lady and talk to her and mow her lawn (except that it snowed today) and help her feel happy... I guess I could see her as somebody's mom. And a child of God.

  3. And then after my shift I stopped by the cafeteria for a shake and some fries. There, I saw a young couple.. mid 20's. It appeared as if she was going to have a baby. I didn't talk to them, and tried not to stare, but it appeared as if the mother-to-be's mom was there, for moral support. The father-to-be kept texting people, probably letting their friends know that they were still waiting for the baby... I couldn't get over the look in the mother-to-be's eyes. It was a combination of dread, fear, anxiety, and uncertainty. I could see she was trying to tell herself that eerything would be all right, and that a lot of women go through birth and make it alive. The father-to-be was trying to convince himself that he would be able to make it through finals week, even though he had spent both reading days with his nervous wife and mother-in-law in the hospital. It made me smile. Someday, hopefully I'll be there too.


And then I came home and practiced with a girl for a musical number tomorrow, worked on some grad school apps, met with Adam from NC, and pulled the Wii out for the first time since summer. I still kicked everyone's butts at boxing. Even with my back to the screen. And then a my brother and roommate and girlfriend were watching the last Lord of the Rings.. so I went around and hung out with a bunch of people, inviting them to watch it with us. One of Adam's friends looked vaguely familiar. She asked if I had dated one of her friends recently. That was a little awkward for me because I have conjectured that after dating some girl's girlfriend, I cannot exit the relationship at any stage without my reputation remaining entirely unscathed. I believe that this is mostly due to the fact that I am too nice to girls to whom I should probably not go out with or be nice to in the first place. And then they complain to their friends that I don't get hints that they like me, and that I'm a flake and don't return their calls. When in actuality, I am very disinterested, and am ignoring their 'hints' as a courteous alternative to shooting them down point blank. Anyway, enough about me. So this girl was like "I know you through one of my friends. Have you dated anyone on the girls rugby team?" Phew. No. I didn't even know the team existed, and probably avoid such girls due to evolutionarily-evolved instincts of self-preservation. It turned out that we had both spent the summer in Berlin. Tiergarten. But we had only come in contact briefly. It took us about 5 minutes to discover how our paths had crossed. It was a very pleasurable intellectual exercise. We invited them over to see Lord of the Rings also. By the end of the evening, we had quite the crowd in our humble little apartment. Which was incidentally spotlessly clean due to cleaning checks... oh yeah, I did that this morning too..

Anyway, I just wanted to briefly mention another item of interest. For this civ class, we focused on peace and war. I guess our teacher had written a play or a musical about it, and this class was based around the play or something. Anyway, throughout the semester, we were assigned to write four papers. If we scored well on the first two papers, we were given the opportunity to do a project for the third or fourth papers. These projects included writing a song about a topic that we discussed in class that was based in the sources we read, or doing a painting or something. It turns out that one kid brought in a trojan horse made of popsicle sticks.. from the Iliad. I'm not sure how well he scored.
At any rate, for my third paper, I chose to write an essay although I had scored well on my previous two essays. I guess I felt guilty because I knew that I could spend like 10 hours on a paper, or I could spend 2 hours on an artsy project, and both would get the same grade. And because I am not the kind of person who would spend more than 2 hours on an artsy project, I decided to leave the project alternative to those students who would spend 10 hours on an artsy project.
Yeah... I was probably sleep-deprived when I developed this rational.
Anyway, for this fourth project/essay, I was in the thick of doing a ruby on rails project for another class, and was left with 4 hours to complete the project for my civ class. So I decided to ignore my guilt and spend 4 hours on an artsy creative project. I had been thinking about possible projects that would not be time-consuming but yet tickle my the creative fancies of my professor and his granola TA sidekicks.
In another moment of sleep-deprived sub-rationality, I discovered that the word "Peace" sounded like the word "Piece." And then it hit me. I would create a puzzle highlighting different elements of piece, and put them on pieces of a puzzle! Pieces of Peace. It was brilliant. And so, on the last day of classes, I embarked on a creative quest for pieces of peace. Class started at 4:35, so I had to get it done fast. At 3:30, I embarked on an important mission of "point grubbing" to try to get back points on a midterm for a partially correct reduction of Atm to HALTtm with my computational theory teacher. Which was unfortunately unsuccessful. Whatev.
Although I didn't get any points back, the worst part about the failed mission was that I returned to work on my civ project at 4:17. Including walking time, I had only 13 minutes to finish the project. In desperation, I threw together some quotes from throughout the semester (including.. I wonder if I should admit this before grades are out.. several works that I may or may not have completely read) and printed the topic headings out in large type. I cut the topic headings into puzzle-shaped pieces, and stuffed the pieces, as well as a report of the references and discussions of the topics into the only envelope-like thing I had--the plastic mailing cover to an Ensign magazine--and stapled the thing shut. I was a little proud of my clever pun and puzzle-like pieces of peace. I was ready to go.
As I was getting ready to leave, my observant brother remarked that it looked ... hm.. what were the words he used.. well, I can't remember, but it had something to do with "scrappy" or something. Oh well. It was more founded in the class sources than a popsicle-stick trojan horse. So I promptly forgot it on my desk and headed to class, where I realized that I had forgotten it. I went up after class, and noticed that several people were asking to turn it in the next day (the first reading day). I decided I could do it too, and perhaps make it a little less "scrappy" in the meantime.
So my first reading day was spent doing this: http://psoda4.cs.byu.edu/~superman/civ/peace.html. I did everything there... the html, the flash, and the background image.. except for the photo of the dove.. which I stole from someone off of google images (ps. don't search for 'dove' in google images..). I was pretty proud of the project. You can move the little pieces around, and it isn't so scrappy. Yeah. Pretty proud of that. My first flash project.
However, my bubble was bust a little when I came home and showed my roommate, Sterling, who pointed out that the peace symbol-that I had so creatively meshed with the google image picture of a dove-was actually a Mercedes symbol. Whatev. Give me a piece of that too.

Anyway, that's where I'm at. I have a final at 7 on Monday morning, so I better get some rest. So I can avoid my sleep-induced sub-rational state...

Peace/Mercedes.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

The End is Near

Thursday is the last day of the semester. I almost thought it would never come. And now that it's here, I wish I had more time.. I wonder if this is what it feels like to be dying?

Things look pretty bleak. I still have to finish a Ruby on Rails project for CS360: Internet Programming. It's a beast. I feel like I'm using one of those sterile box thingies.. you know the ones with the big rubber gloves and the little glass window (Side note.. after about 10 minutes of research with google, I discovered that this contraption is called a - get this - 'glove box'.. just in case you were wondering). Anyway, I'm using a glove box to build this website, but I can't see in the window. I'm sure there are some pretty powerful tools, and that if I knew what I was doing, it would be easy. However, I can't see what is out there, so I am forced to feel my way around, avoiding sharp things, trying to find the right tools to get this website up. Ruby is really convenient, but I feel so obfuscated from what I want to do, and have only discovered a few tools. It's pretty crazy. I spent about 10 hours on it today, and have probably spent another 10 hours on it since last week. It's due tomorrow.

And then I have a project due tomorrow for my civ class. I have thought about what to do, but I was hoping to get the ruby on rails stuff done faster, so I would have time to work on it. Shoot.

And the term paper for CS476:Data Mining is due tomorrow. I hope that goes quickly.


And tomorrow night the Davenberry family from our ward (an FHE group decided to choose a name for their family.. I decided we should call our family the Dingleport family) asked if I would practice with them as they prepare to sing a musical number at church on Sunday. And then at 10:30, I have band practice with Ricky.

Man. If I can just make it through tomorrow, I'll be set. Except that UCSD and MIT applications are due on Monday... no rest for the weary.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

BYU


Today, I went to civ class. It opened like this:
"Did you all read the reading assignments for today?"
{faint murmuring}
And that was my cue to look the reading assignments up online and glance through them.

The first one was several statements by the first presidency on war. Knowing I could fend myself if I was called on to explain the view of the church on war, I downloaded the second reading assignment first. It is publicly available here: http://unicomm.byu.edu/president/documents/kimball.htm. This speech describes the vision of President Kimball for BYU.

Here are some highlights:

  • On studies: "This time of intellectual testing must also be a time of equivalent testing and flexing in things spiritual too."

  • "The uniqueness of Brigham Young University lies in its special role--education for eternity--which it must carry in addition to the usual tasks of a university. This means concern--curricular and behavioral--not only for the "whole man," but also for the "eternal man." Where all universities seek to preserve the heritage of knowledge that history has washed to their feet, this faculty has a double heritage--the preserving of knowledge of men and the revealed truths sent from heaven.
    While all universities seek to push back the frontiers of knowledge further and further, this faculty must do that and also keep new knowledge in perspective, so that the avalanche of facts does not carry away saving, exalting truths from the value systems of our youth."

  • On Teaching at BYU: "This university is not the place for mercenaries. The Revolutionary War was lost by the British, partly because they employed mercenaries to fight for them. But the winning colonists had a real cause. If your salary, which we hope is adequate, should be incidental and your grand and magnificent obsession would be the youth and their growth, their vision, their development, I would hope that each of you in joy and peace and satisfaction would continue to lift the souls and carry forward the character-building program."

  • "Our Brigham Young insisted, 'Learn everything that the children of men know, and be prepared for the most refined society upon the face of the earth, then improve on this until we are prepared and permitted to enter the society of the blessed--the holy angels that dwell in the presence of God.'"


So basically, I'm pretty humbled to be have been chosen to study here. I hope to be able to contribute to the prestige and success of BYU. Perhaps I should be doing better with my reading assignments...

Friday, December 5, 2008

Perl array to hash

For all of you perlers (meaning: me), here's a cool array-to-hash function:

my %color = map { $_, 1 } @color;

Got that from http://www.artima.com/forums/flat.jsp?forum=166&thread=148392 who evidently jacked it from Effective Perl.

Pretty cool huh?

Tonight we watched "The Mouse That Roared" (See Wikipedia for a synopsis) for my civ class. It was pretty funny. Some interesting things I noticed:
  • The obvious cold war influence

  • The flags all had 48 stars on them. I guess I've never noticed that before. The movie was released in 1959, the same year that Alaska and Hawaii joined the Union.


Yeah. Good times.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Big Day

Well, today's a big day. I broke the 300 friend mark on facebook. That really means a lot to me. I'm what's known as a passive facebooker, which means I generally facebook only once a month, so when I got on today, I added 11 new friends who had requested friendship, putting me at 310 friends. But among those friends are two brothers and a sister, and my dad - who I am convinced got a facebook account after a doomsday sermon in RS convinced my mom that facebook was the only good way to keep an eye on the dating lives of her children - so I guess I am at 307 + 3 family members.

Today is also a big day because it is means it's T-minus 7 days until classes get over. I'm pretty excited, and have a big list of things I want to get done over Christmas break.. including catching up on the 311 hours of sleep that life owes me. I also hope to write some convincing grad school essays, kick off a city little league baseball website, look into getting a part time temp job, and go skiing a couple of times. We'll see, though.

The singing class I'm in is getting a little crazy for me. For the last two weeks of class, class members bring music for songs they have chosen to class, and sing them in front of the class, with the teacher helping them. Next week, they will sing the song for the final test. This doesn't sound too stressful, unless you are the pianist, who has to figure out how to play 20 new songs by Monday.. and I only have the music for 10 of the songs. Oh well. It'll be good for my sightreading. We've been doing a pretty standard warmup for class these last couple of weeks. We do the octave lip buzz going up, and the nasal 54321 going down. We finish up with a "eh oh-eh-oh-eh oh-eh-oh-eh eh-oh" drill going 5 3423 1201 51 -- going up and down. It's fun.

Oh, last night the orchestra had a concert. We played a tuba concerto by Vaughn Williams. It was pretty uninteresting, but pretty nonetheless. The entire cello section, as well as several other sections including the basses and violas got lost during the second movement. Whatever.

Breaking news: a fellow labworker has recently discovered the value of doing things that are not school. He almost wishes he had discovered it sooner. That's nice.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Information

So last night I finished up the details for my volunteership at the hospital. On one of the forms, they asked for my birth date, full name, social security number, driver's license number, home address, and phone number. Besides like my pants size, they knew everything about me. I was really nervous, because in my data mining class, we're going over the proper use of data.

This morning in class, we talked about how much information should be gathered. I had a couple thoughts on that:

With regards to terrorists, law enforcement officials have a huge problem with the whole data mining thing because if the computer goes through the data and tells them to postpone this flight and stop the man with the suitcase, they must do it. If they don't do it, they could be held accountable if the man was really a terrorist.
I thought this was interesting, and wondered what makes people trust computer so much. It wasn't only a data mining activity that predicted the 9/11 terrorist activities. It was also Nostradamus, and even folding the twenty-dollar bill in half, and then folding it around... people should have been able to look to their currency and prepare for the terrorist attacks! (see http://www.foldmoney.com/)
So what makes the predictions given by computers so influential? Perhaps it is grounded in the magical mystery associated with computers.

Of course, this doesn't just apply to terrorists. Our data mining teacher had us read an article about how doctors don't want to be subjected to data mining (see http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/04/business/Drugs.php). They don't want their prescription patterns analyzed. Data collection could also eventually lead to a computer giving a recommended prognosis, and the doctor choosing to follow or ignore the prognosis. This would place doctors under the same liability that law enforcement officials are placed under. If they fail to follow the recommendation of the computer and the patient dies, are they accountable for making the bad decision?

I wonder what the solution to these problems is. Perhaps the ugly but true answer may be more information disclosure. To avoid getting stopped at airport security, we may have to enroll in a program similar to FlyClear, (see http://www.flyclear.com/what/) who gathers a ton of information. According to the website, you should have the following items handy during enrollment:
* Driver’s license number.
* Home address for the past five years.
* Social security number.
* Alien registration number (only for permanent foreign residents)
* A valid credit card.
And then "In person, we’ll verify two pieces of approved government issued identification, capture images of your irises and fingerprints, and take your photograph."

If it didn't cost $199 bucks a year (that's like half my annual income), maybe I'd do it.

If everyone except terrorists had a FlyClear card, it would be easy to track them. But I don't imagine everyone will be ok with divulging this much information. Leave it to the granolas to spoil the anti-terrorism movements..

Grad schools

I had a good talk today with Dr. Johnson from Stats about grad schools. Incidentally, the talk happened during my civ class.. but it sounds like I didn't miss anything. Nathan says that he just pontificated the whole class.

Anyway, Dr. Johnson brought up a couple of good points. If I stick with a bioinformatics degree, it will be hard to find a faculty teaching position when I graduate. If I graduate from a biology department, I will also probably have to do a post-doc before I can get hired on anywhere.

This was really good for me to hear. I'm going to have to look into more cs-ey programs. I have always only considered applying for bioinformatics programs, and assumed that my research experience and specialized undergraduate degree would help me get my foot in the door there, but I'm not sure what advantages I will have when compared to other CS students. Especially with the economic recession and people going back to grad school, there will probably be more competition from professionals returning to get a PhD. Perhaps the computer science industry won't be so hard-hit. I haven't felt any less demand for CS graduates in industry, and the same recruiters keep coming to recruit new graduates. I guess we'll see, though.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Gibbs

So I took this Bayesian Statistics class last semester. At 8:00 in the morning. It was killer.
Anyway, today I was doing some stuff in R, looked in my workspace, and realized I still had a Gibbs Sampler method, affectionately named GillsGibbs after my professor. So if any of you are looking for a R function that does Gibbs sampling, have at it:

function(mu0,sigma02,shape,scale,data,n)
{
ybar <- mean(data)
out <- matrix(0,n,4)
w2 <- 1/sigma02
sh <- shape + length(data)/2
sigma2 <- 1/(scale*(shape-1))
for (i in 1:n)
{
if (i == 1) {w1 <- length(data)/sigma2}
else {w1 <- length(data)/out[i-1,2]}
postpre<-w1+w2
postvar <- 1/postpre
postsd <- sqrt(postvar)
postmn <- (w1*ybar+w2*mu0)/postpre
out[i,1] <- rnorm(1,postmn,postsd)
ssy <- sum((data-out[i,1])^2)
sc <- 2*scale/(2+scale*ssy)
draw <- rgamma(1,shape=sh,scale=sc)
out[i,2] <- 1/draw
draw1 <- rgamma(1,shape=shape,scale=scale)
draw1 <- 1/draw1
draw2 <- rnorm(1,mu0,sqrt(sigma02))
out[i,3] <- rnorm (1,out[i,1],sqrt(out[i,2]))
out[i,4] <- rnorm(1,draw2,sqrt(draw1))
}
return(out)
}

It's pretty cool.
However, I do have one quick rant: Why does the <code> tag not preserve indentation?

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Gurlz

So, I'm sitting in my 252 class, and this kid behind me said that he was asked on a date to go to the homecoming spectacular. Of course, this kid is a boy.. it's CS 252. Anyway, somehow, this kid was asked by his date if he wanted to pay for the tickets. I had to laugh... girls these days.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Boston

Boston has been a blast. It started on the plane ride over. I met this guy named Dan, who was a chemical salesman from Boston. AmGen, I think. He told me that a critical part of being a salesman is offering suggestions. He noted that when you compare prices and products at different stores, you are most likely to buy something from the salesman who tells you "what you really need is something that does this, and this is the product that does that." Instead of someone who says "yeah, I think that is a good choice." I thought that was interesting.
Here in Boston, I have gotten excited about research, and realized that a lot of people have no idea what they are doing, and just are publishing what they have found. So I think I'm on the right track with my having no idea. It comes naturally for me. I also saw some interesting approaches to things, and was inspired to try some different stuff when I get home. Things that impressed me were the way people handled the changing of pathways throughout developmental cycles, and how they used a combination of techniques to conquer problems.
Today we got tired of the conference (it's been three days of listening to lectures from 9 to 10 with short coffee breaks and an hour lunch with feta cheese) so we decided to see a little bit of Boston. We saw Bunker Hill, the Old North Church while listening to Dad read Longfellow, and even saw the MIT museum which was really interesting and motivating.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Civilizations Enquirer

It's the last night at home. Tomorrow I'm heading to Boston to present some stuff I've been doing with PathGen at the DREAM/RECOMB conference. I'm pretty excited to go, mostly because I hope to make some connections with people who know stuff about the Broad Institute. It would be very cool to get in there for graduate school.

So today was busy, as I prepared for my extended absence this weekend. I worked all day on PathGen and finally got it to incorporate microarray expression levels. You can even upload an expression file, and have it color them according to that. I was pretty excited. This is a 4-step map from SHH to DYRK1A with some expression information I found on the server that Steven was working with almost a year ago.

And my civ class was crazy. I'm taking this history of civilization class, and our teacher is a little.. well, he a religion teacher, so he isn't the most founded-in-the-facts person in the world. After several weeks of inner anger experienced immediately after class, I realized that I was getting upset because the claims he made were not logically based. And then after a while, I came to the conclusion that my civ class is like reading the tabloids. There is a certain society that enjoys base pleasures such as knowing who married whom, and who had an alien baby with three heads. And that is just fine. But there is also another society that does not read tabloids because the picture evidence is touched up, the sources are not trustworthy, and frankly, they don't care. I think I fall into the second class of people, and enjoy deciding for myself whether a claim is true based on the facts presented. And in my civ class, there are no facts... just large inferences. For example, the teacher claimed that 'No ancient Greek person ever believed for an instant that the world was flat.' Unfortunately, the description of the creation of the earth involves a flat earth with corners. And today in class, things became more like a tabloid as we discussed Lysistrata by Aristophanes. The professor stated that he hoped that we didn't find the material titillating. I agreed. It was repulsive. Of course, I wouldn't really know. I just read the spark notes version, and saved myself the obscene details.

Anyway, that's life.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Hi again

So I went to a focus group for students who were interested in summer internships, and if a blog by the office of internships would be helpful for students. One of the questions they asked us was whether we kept a blog. Sheepishly, I replied that I had, but I was slacking on updating it.

And then I picked up a job as an accompanist for a choir class thing, and the leader/teacher has some cool warmups. And because it is the unspoken duty of the accompanist to provide creative voice warmups for ward choir, I thought this would be a cool place to keep track of them.

So here goes nothing.

Today we warmed up with a practice that was meant to stretch the top and bottom voice range. Going down in sets of five notes .. 54321, we sang "ee" while keeping the sound forward in the mouth instead of letting it go to the back through where it usually goes when people try to sing deep. Then we did 135 up also keeping the sound forward in the mouth. While singing high, it is important to keep the air flowing. One way to practice this is to sing a 'fricative w' .. halfway between an "oo" and a "w" if that makes sense.. the lips are tight together. During the warmup, hold the hand in front of the lips, and make sure air is coming out as you do the warmup. Make sure it comes out at a constant rate throughout the exercise.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Riquewihr

The first stop on our Europe trip was a little town called Riquewihr, near Colmar in France. It was obviously a little tourist town, but the tourists weren't there during the evenings when we were there. The town was surrounded by vineyards, and I guess wine is the main attraction there. Unfortunately, a glass of Fanta orange costs about 3.20 euros, so they must have to import that by canoe from America.. or something.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Spaltungsirresein

A certain feeling of schizophrenia should be expected by those wishing to live the exciting lifestyle of ‘intern by day, tourist after 17:00.’ Though there are definitely advantages and disadvantages of living this complicated routine, I find it to be very rewarding. One of the hardest parts of being a tourist only at nights and on the weekends is that pretty much everything interesting shuts down at 6:00 – that’s all of the museums, the cool little shops, and even the trains stop running as frequently. So all that is left is stuff that’s outside.. that and the bars, which I try to avoid in general. But because everyone has gone to bed or whatever, there are no crowds at the cool stuff. Take, for example, the Berlin Wall. Normally, there would be no way for me to get a clean shot of the wall without anyone standing in my way.. However, late at night, after the internship is over, it’s the perfect time. And that is why I have lots of pictures of sunsets and other things in the dark.
Anyway, this is one of the last remaining chunks of the Berlin Wall. Assumedly, long-armed entrepreneurs have chipped off all of the painted parts of the wall, and with everyone wanting a piece of the wall, there’s not much left. But it was still pretty impressive.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Denkmal für die ermordeten Juden Europas

So one evening, as I was exploring downtown Berlin, I found the perfect place to play Steal the Flag.. except that it's like a memorial for European Jews, so I figure you shouldn't run around in there, even if you run around quietly. But anyway, an entire block downtown is dedicated to this memorial, and is filled with what appear to be short gravestones. When you start walking toward the middle of the memorial, it becomes apparent that the stones in the middle are really tall, and you can't see anything but more stones. And I was there at 10:00 at night, and there was nobody there.. perfect for Steal the Flag.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Berliner Dom

This is a shot of the Berliner Dom at night. I went to a pretty sweet organ and brass choir concert here. It was cool because it was all big and echoey, and when the organist pulled out all of the stops...
I wasn't sure what time it started, so I got there like an hour early and sat down in one of the benches. Even though there were a lot of tourists going in and out, I must have looked a little conspicuous because an older lady came over and asked me if I wanted to go to the 'banquet' upstairs with free food and drinks. My first reaction was to ask her 'Which way?'. Unfortunately, as I approached the banquet, I realized that it was mostly free drinks, with little skewered.. mice or some other unrecognizable food on a long toothpick. Using my mad math skills I learned in 6th grade, I realized that it would take about 283.29 skewered critters to bring any amount of satisfaction, and that just one would probably make me hungrier. And the drinks.. well, we weren't talking about no BYU Sparkle.. so I went back downstairs and sat in a different spot. Man. There's really nothing wrong with green jello and funeral potatoes. But the concert was really good.

Abendrot

So I may be a little biased, but sunsets are amazing in Germany. Perhaps that's because they are few and far between... The sun obeys different rules on this side of the world..

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Ankunft

Ich bin wieder da.
I guess it's been a week now, but things are finally starting to get going. Until yesterday, I was relying on pretty seedy internet cafe establishments, but now I have the internet in my office. I still haven't figured out how to get pictures from my laptop onto this blog, but I should get some stuff up soon.