Archive for November, 2006

Copernicus and the Revolutionibus Paper Added

I have added my paper titled Copernicus and the Revolutionibus to the writings section of this website.

I wrote this paper for my Rise of Modern Science class, taught by the wonderful Dr. William Kimler. I am currently writing the second essay for his class concerning the Thomas Kuhn model of how scientific revolutions take place.

I urge all my science-minded peers to read (and I mean really read), Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. This is a landmark book on how science is practiced. Written in 1962, it has informed much of the way science is reported…evening coining the oft-used phrase ‘paradigm shift’.

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All Graduate School Applications Submitted

I submitted the graduate school applications to Stanford and UCLA today. All of the schools are finished. Now the only thing that is really left is the NDSEG (National Defense Science & Engineering Graduate) Fellowship. That is due first week of January.

Now I have to focus on my ECE 511 term project, my history paper, and my senior design documentation. Amongst a lot of other things.

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Webcam Capable Now

This Thanksgiving holiday I purchased a webcam. It is the only one in the family so it won’t be with me all the time, but until the end of the semester it will be. I’ve tried it out with my buddy Nader with Skype and it works pretty well. Email me or hit me up online if you also want to give it a go. I feel this will be pretty useful if I end up in another state this time next year.

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A nice ‘Black Friday’

‘Black Friday’, the day after Thanksgiving where most goods are sold across the country than any other day of the year, went actually quite well. Dad and I left the house around 7:30am and were back home by 11:30am. We had a plan, stuck to the backroads, and knew exactly what we were looking for. We made it out with everything except a printer and a pair of brown shoes for me.

The weather was just beautiful today. I went outside to do some reading (essay due next week), vaccumed the car, setup the new web cam, etc. Parents and sisters went to go see Casino Royale (they liked it) so I did some more reading for the essay. Now I’m studying for my wireless communication exam (on Tuesday).

I’ll work most of tonight, go back to teh apartment tomorrow morning and continue working on my essay, studying for this exam, working on my senior design documentation, working on this god-forsaken op-amp project, oh and do this new ece511 hw assignment. Yay.

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Krispy Kreme Challenge 2007

The date is set: January 27, 2007. The Krispy Kreme Challenge is a new tradition that I’m helping to start here at NC State. It is a challenge that involves:

1) Starting at the NCSU Belltower, you run to the Krispy Kreme store on Peace Street, approx 2 miles.

2) Eat 1 dozen (yes, that’s 12) doughnuts.

3) Run back to the bell tower.

4) All under 1 hour.

Last year we had over 150 people come out and participate. This year, my friend Peyton has taken the reins and is working hard to make this year’s event a success. Stay tuned for more.

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Casino Royale

“The name’s Bond. James Bond.” And I never thought I would look forward to hearing that name. I saw Casino Royale tonight and it is excellent. I’ve never had so much fun while watching a Bond film before. It’s by far the best film since GoldenEye, and its better than GoldenEye. Go see it.

I submitted my application to Georgia Tech today. I think the application for Maryland is all set, just pending one clarification on procedure from the UMD office. I gotta get the Berkeley and Stanford applications done too and get those off. I feel kind of bad about asking the people I requested recommendation letters from because the whole process is a lot of extra work for them, and they are all busy. They really should move to a ‘common’ application, like they do for medical school.

As for senior design, we have almost all the parts in so we’re starting to work on that. Greg and I need to start writing stuff for the final documentation too. Sigh.

As for research, the test slice materials came in today. I gotta put in some hours next week and put something together.

Still no real progress for the ECE 511 project….and we have another homework assignment in that class due November 30th.

All I can think about now is keeping this ship from sinking before the semester ends.

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IEEE Conference in February

I will be attending the IEEE International Solid State Circuits Conference this upcoming February in San Francisco, California. I just bought my plane ticket last night. I’m going to use the opportunity to visit my friends Nader and Mary, as well as visit the Stanford and Berkeley campuses.

I’ll be leaving on Saturday, February 10th and arriving back in Raleigh early morning on Thursday, February 15th.

More on this next semester!

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I’m still here…

My apologies for not posting in over a month. And what a crazy last month this has been. I’m going to pledge to post at least one update every week from now on. It will help keep me sane. To get everyone caught up, here are some notable events of the past month:

- went to a luncheon with Apollo 14 Lunar Module Pilot Edgar Mitchell, who was the sixth man to walk on the moon. His daughter is a faculty member in the college of management and he was here to give an NC State student a scholarship.

- took the GRE on 14 October. Bombed it. It was really bad, though I did ace the writing portion of it.

-  The NC State chapter of Nourish International has gotten underway. Lindsay and I have coordinated two meetings so far.

- Nicholas Kristof, two time Pulitzer Prize winning columnist for the New York Times has agreed to come to NC State on February 6-7, 2007 to give an address about the humanitarian crisis in Darfur. Kristof has been tireless in his attempt to raise world awareness over this catastrophe. I am on a speaker committee for that so we have been meeting and working on planning the events surround his address.

-  Senator Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) came to speak on campus for First Lady Mary Easley’s Millenium Speaker Series. That morning, he had been in the Oval Office for the signing of the enemy combatants bill, then flew immediately down to Raleigh. He gave a tremendous speech about the bill and his approach to politics. He’s a character guy — I disagree with nearly all of his stances on the issues but he seems to be heading in the right direction when it comes to military justice. Also, Dave Foley is the guy to play Senator Graham if a movie is ever made about him.

-  My good friend Naman came back from a 4-month assignment to a rural state in India heading up a polio vaccine. He graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 3 years. He was in the states for a few weeks before heading to Cambodia to work in a malaria research lab. From January to July he will be back in India on behalf of the WHO/CDC. He has already been offered admittance to UNC-Chapel Hill’s highly rated M.D./Ph.D. program. Naman is a tour-de-force of a human being and is an inspiration for me. He visited me on campus and we had a really nice talk.

-  I volunteered at the North Carolina Science Olympiad Coach’s Institute on October 27-28. I gave a talk to student leaders on ideas of leadership, as well as prepared and presented four sessions of Simple Machines event and four sessions on the Fermi Questions event.

- I applied for the Hertz Fellowship, which provides money for graduate school. I have little chance of getting this, but it was good for me doing it cause it helped pave the way for others.

- I went with Deanna (an apartment suitemate who is in her first year here as a grad student in soil science from Michigan), Greg, Ben, and Jordan to the NC State vs Georgia Tech football game. We did a really really tiny tailgate before. It was freezing cold…the whole game the temperature hovered just above freezing. It was my first chance to see the newly renovated Carter-Finley football stadium, and it looks amazing. We lost, but it was a good game to watch. Check out my photos page for pictures from the game.

- Jordan’s parents held a surprise birthday dinner at the upscale restaurant 518 West on Glenwood Avenue. It was a nice night.

- Took the GRE again and this time did better. I hate that test.
- Applied for the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. This one was a doozy. We have to write a two-page research proposal. I procrastinated bigtime on this one so the night before the application is due I continue digging around and realize my desired proposal was already done by a research group and they got amazing results. I ended up staying awake the entire night in the lab working on that proposal and ECE 511 hw.

- I had a wonderful lunch with John Gajda, my mentor from Progress Energy. He came over to NC State and we ate at Mitch’s Tavern. John is thinking about starting a part-time Ph.D with Dr. Baran over at NC State.

- Today I shifted gears to my graduate school applications and now I’m working to get all of those done. I need to get letters of recommendation out.  I am applying to Georgia Tech, University of Maryland, Berkeley, Stanford, and UCLA.

- One day Greg, Jordan, and I went and saw Christopher Nolan’s new film The Prestige. Excellent cast, great film. Today Greg and I went and saw Borat. Hilarious film.

- My home sports teams are doing terribly.

- I voted on November 7th and was very happy to see the Democrats take control of Congress.

- The week before the election, I told my friends with confidence that Donald Rumsfeld would step down before the end of November. The stunning victory by the Democrats made that happen a lot sooner than expected, and he resigned the day after the elections. Yep, I called it. 

Anyway, it’s 3:24am right now and I need to wake up early to go by the post office and Kinkos before class. Peace.
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