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Posts Tagged ‘UofT’

The Many Colors of UofT

It took me a while, but I’ve organized and uploaded all good photos that I’ve ever took of UofT. Some were took in first year, some were took within the last week.

As I take more photos, they will be added to these galleries. For now, check them out!

The Many Colors of UofT

The Many Colors of UofT – Blue
The Many Colors of UofT – White
The Many Colors of UofT – Green
The Many Colors of UofT – Black
The Many Colors of UofT – Yellow
The Many Colors of UofT – Grey

Too often, we students of UofT are too busy thinking about our courses, high GPAs, tests, exams, and stressful things, that the campus – which is supposed to be this romantic and stimulating environment – becomes merely this excruciating distance between our homes and our classes that we have to walk through every day. But that’s not what campus life is about, campus life is an unique and amazing chapter of our life stories, and it’s worth treasuring.

End of Exams, Now the Future

Final exams have finally ended. I guess I’ll first talk about preliminary results. I had four courses the past term:

  • Computer Hardware
  • Engineering Economics
  • Dynamic Systems & Control
  • Operating Systems

Out of the four courses, Hardware and OS were the courses most relevant to my studies, and thus I wanted high marks in those. Engineering Economics was something semi-relevant, while Control Systems is simply a course I had to take to fulfill my kernel requirement. Prior to exams, I had above-average marks in everything except for Engineering Economics. There were four quizzes in econ prior to the final exam, and I had underestimated every single one of them. The core concepts are easy enough and the math is a joke, but I guess having to deal with so many pieces of information in so limited amount of time always gets me at the end. I haven’t failed this much in a course since Signals and Systems in second year.

So I tried my best and gave most of my exam prep time to the econ course hoping for an awesome final mark to balance it out. Despite that, I still made a huge mistake on the final exam. There were five problems where each one would take me about 30 minutes straight of calculations and number crunching. Yet, on the fourth question, I used the wrong approach at the beginning, and only realized how stupid the approach was after I finished the problem. I then had about 30 minutes left, and I had to rush the fourth question again in 15 minutes with the correct approach, and then finish the last question in 15 minutes. Countless errors probably would’ve been made in that mad rushing, lol. I’m hoping the best for that course. Hopefully I didn’t fail.

The other courses are roughly okay. I feel pretty good about my Hardware exam. I didn’t do so well in Control Systems, but I had a pretty good average going into it, and it’s not like I need a good mark in that course. The best news (yet also the most risky news) is probably Operating Systems. Apparently, my adjusted exam mark was a 90%, which combined with near perfect labs mean I’ll get above 90% in the end. However, the professor posted a mark sheet on the course website, and the calculations in there counted my midterm mark of zero. The midterm really shouldn’t be counted since I submitted a petition (I was honestly quite sick on that day). I’m going to hope that an administrative error wouldn’t turn my well-deserved 90+ into a 68.

Now, in terms of the stuff I’ve learned… I’m quite content. Hardware was basically a finish-off of Digital Systems in second year, and it’s nice to learn about computer algorithms for circuit simplification, plus all those different techniques for building all sorts of different types of finite state machines. I’m pretty confident in all those methods now, so that’s good. Despite my horrible mark prospects in economics, I’ve also learned quite a bit from there as it gave a pretty good overview on how engineering firms do all their cost calculations and taxes. I know that if I ever had to do these things, I’m definitely seeking computer-aided help, or if none exist, I’ll program my own (I hate mindless number crunching by hand!). Control systems gave me some good practice in Laplace transforms and matrix operations although I have no idea where I’ll actually use it. And lastly, Operating Systems was the most valuable course this term. I can actually look into various parts of my computer and understand what used to be jibberish to me. The textbook is also a treasure, it’s so well written and so informative that I’ll probably read it just for fun in the future if I ever have the chance.

So, upcoming events now for me include my second attempt at the G2 test on May 11th, and beginning of work at AMD on May 18th. Some day in the near future I’ll also be moving into my new room on the second floor. At residence, Cici and I have already switched into cooking mode. No more eating at Fung, and after two days of successful cooking, it’s good to know I haven’t lost my stirfry skills :D . Eating awesome homemade food is both exciting and wonderful, especially after a year of badly-made cafe food and expensive restaurants.

As the summer begin, I will be adding more sections to this blog. My MMORPG and Philosophy pages will grow whenever I feel the inspiration to write. Meanwhile, there’s this project I want to attempt. I want to write a beginner’s primer on digital photography (the really basics), and also take lots of pictures – especially around campus during beautiful scenes – and make a library of them. I think too often we students are too busy thinking about our courses, trying to get high GPAs, tests, exams, and stressful things, that the campus – which is supposed to be this romantic and stimulating environment – becomes merely this excruciating distance between our homes and our classes that we have to walk through every day. I saw people taking photographs of the cherry trees behind Robarts yesterday, when the sun was just above the line of houses to the west. It was beautiful, and it would be nice if that moment was captured.

Exam Time

I haven’t updated anything for a while, and I expect this to continue until Monday the 27th, when my last exam finishes. The same applies to the general mimiuchi.net blog.

Recent Milestones Reached

Originally posted on Tuesday, March 17, 2009

It’s been a while. I have updated the articles page with photographs from the remaining two days of the cruise trip. Those two days were merely days spent at sea, so there’s not much new things to take photographs of. In any case, this closes the chapter on my week cruise.

<Edit: Since moving to WordPress, the “articles” page is no longer the location for the photographs. Photographs for days 1~5 can be found in previous blog posts. Photographs for days 6 and 7 are here.>

I’ve also updated the cool links page with a few more articles mostly about China and Tibet. One article, the one by Michael Parenti, has an overwhelming amount of citations and sources, whereas the other one, by Peter Hessler, is written with quite a neutral outlook. They’re quite a refreshing change from the media’s constant bashing of China’s Tibet policies. With the Tibet issue, I recognize that there are lots of things that we don’t want to see, like government creating an unofficial state of martial law by sending in lots of soldiers. However, I’m of the opinion that before you demonize the Chinese government, at least try to understand the situation as situations are often much more complex and harder to deal with than people think. The more articles I read on this, the less certain of the whole picture I become, and thus the less I want to make conclusions about it.

This past Saturday I visited a friend whom I haven’t conversed with for a very long time despite the fact that she lives just down the street. From the visit, several things were made apparent. Our lives certainly grew apart since university began. She still houses the same spirit of self-improvement that I no longer share. Actually, that’s not true. I think it’s our psychology that’s different, and thus our methods for tackling our own growth differs as well. I am not as strong or disciplined as she is, so if I try to handle things like she does, I will get burned out easily. This is why a better strategy for me is to maintain constant harmony with myself and allow my irrational desires to push me to grow at a natural pace. And with my rate of growth, I’m quite content.

It seems that we no longer have many things in common to talk about now. It’s kinda interesting actually. She kept on insisting me to relax, and don’t always be so serious, or something like that, yet I kinda wanted to point out that Innis in general is extremely clean, organized, simple, and square-like just like any office building. When I entered her room, I saw two computer screens in a neat room. One screen was displaying news from BBC, the other screen was on several communication streams including Skype. When I sat on the bed, she would be talking to people over IM not unlike a scene where an office worker is communicating with her client over the Internet. When the phone rings, it is immediately picked up in a professional-like manner. When we talk, her voice was quiet and efficient. In that kind of environment, it feels like waiting at a receptionist desk. Naturally, I got into my “serious” mode without even realizing, and later on when I tried to get out of it, it just didn’t feel natural.

I think most of my other friends would agree that I’m usually quite balanced between being serious and being goofy. That’s how I am naturally, but for some reason this becomes restricted in Innis, I guess tis one of the reasons why I dislike that building.

Hmm… Woodsworth rez is probably worse.

Ah, right. I got an AMD job, and it was quite an ego boost. PEY results for first round was released last week, and I was ranked #1 for two positions. When I went to the PEY office, the people there told me that you don’t see people with multiple offers very often during round one, and if you do see them, they’re usually for people with top marks in the program. My GPA right now, although on a rising trend since I rebounded from the fall during first year second term, still only reaches a 3.3. Yet, of the six applications I got a response from, I got four Interviews. Of the four interviews, each one of them went very well, and I got ranked #1 for two of them. It seems that my efforts got me results.

Since the beginning of PEY, I made sure to treat each and every job application as if it’s the job that I absolutely just have to get. To do this, I did my research and made sure to cater every cover letter to the position. It was important to show them that I understand what the job is about, and I tried to do that to the best of my ability. This included attending info sessions, talking to past PEY people, and doing online research on the company and positions. Every time I submitted an application, I would know that my application will be the one that looks a great deal more solid than the average application.

Apparently, doing this got me quite a few interviews. According to the career center, if a company wants to reject a student, then the company must indicate this on the PlacePro system, so I would know if I was rejected. I applied to about 20 places in total, got responses for six, and no responses for the remaining. Some of those companies probably backed out of the PEY system due to the economic scene, others probably haven’t reached a decision yet. Out of the six, I was rejected by two, but got interviewed by four. This can probably be roughly considered as a 66% interview rate, so clearly all those research was worth it.

Then I adopted a perspective of confidence. For each and every Interview, I was never nervous or fearful of rejection. I made sure I dress well. Upon meeting the person I made sure to shake hand firmly and project an image of confidence and professionalism. The thing with Interviews is that, if you can deal with the nervousness of anticipation before and when meeting the person, then everything after becomes perfectly normal. I knew that I was perfectly capable of tackling any problems or questions they might throw at me because I had confidence in my abilities and my personal growth in the past. Throughout the Interview, I didn’t treat it as them interviewing me to see if I’m good enough. Instead, I treated it like we’re both interviewing each other to decide whether we can work well and create something together. Apparently, once you’re in that mindset, talking was easy, efficient, and fun. At the end of each of these Interviews, I’d feel this awesome sense of self. It made me start thinking that if I ever need a mood booster, an interview would do the job.

And apparently this worked. Out of the four interviews, I was really only weeded out by one, and that was the interview where I was interviewed by four employers at once, and it was a management position. I believe I only lost that position because I lacked the experience or training. For the other three interviews (one hardware, two software), I got ranked by them all, as each of them sent me an email afterwards telling me I’ve entered their final selection pool. And out of these three, I got first place for two of them.

So, on Monday, May 18th, I’ll be beginning work at AMD’s Toronto office. The position is a testing position, but quite an extensive one. The idea is to make sure various AMD graphics chips are compatible with all sorts of operating systems, programs, and platforms. Not only will this offer quite some experience with computer graphics in general, there’s also a chance to work with Windows 7 before anyone else. There’ll be lots of challenges ahead, but I’ll definitely be able to overcome them. Meanwhile, this also means I need to obtain my G2 license before May 18th. I’ll also need to look for housing for the summer and next year.

I also attended an info session on graduate school yesterday. The session was hosted by Willy Wong, my old prof for E&M. Graduate school seems to be really tough both to get in and to stay in, but the idea of it is very awesome. Apparently the minimum requirements is a mid-B average. If I maintain my current level of grades, and improve a little in first term fourth year, I’ll have a chance, and if I have a chance, then my pro-activeness will make it an almost certainty. I’m still not going to make a decision about it until after PEY, when I have better knowledge of the industry’s conditions. However, I think it is likely for me to try for a M. Eng after getting my degree. And then if I’m still ambitious (I’m fantasizing now, lol), I might go for an MBA. Ultimately, I want to make a difference with my knowledge and skills, and I want to do it in my own natural way.

I’m getting hungry now. Recently I’ve been criticized by several people for not eating healthily and not exercising. These are things I will get to eventually, but for now, other things have higher priorities.

First University Essay

Originally posted on Thursday, November 27, 2008

Yay! Just finished my first University essay!

Looking back, I could have started the readings a bit earlier. I definitely underestimated them. They’re thin books, but the Castells book can be very difficult to understand at times. Speaking of which, it’s about a month overdue at the Library… I wonder how much I owe…

Even more did I underestimate the length. At first I thought: “2500 words? That’s nothing! I used to write emails longer than that!” Then I realized that it’s five times the length of any essay I’ve ever written before, meaning that I won’t sleep early tonight.

The thesis isn’t the best. In a nutshell, I said that Castells is more detailed and has better insight than Tim Berners-Lee’s book, and I attributed the cause to the fact that it was published a few years later and the Internet is a fast growing entity. Hopefully the TA buys this argument. Though, I doubt I would have came up with a better thesis even if I did read Castells more in-depth. Castells is an academic analysis on the Internet’s socioeconomic impacts, but Tim Berners-Lee’s book is totally different. It’s like… a third of it is an autobiography of his life, a third of it is a biography of the World Wide Web, and the last third were visionary statements, plans, and philosophy. It’s not exactly an academic book. The language is really toned down too, it’s more like a book for popular reading. I don’t think I would have drawn better parallels than I already have for this essay. Bad choices of books? Maybe, but how would I have known? Provided, of course, that I spend a reasonable amount of time on this, thus rendering reading through dozens of books first before choosing not an option.

I hate and love Castells at the same time. His writing style is so annoyingly verbose, and I dislike anyone who actually uses vis-a-vis in writing. But at the same time, I have to agree that some of his ideas are pretty amazing. The most impressive, though, is his seemingly endless amount of knowledge pertaining to the Internet, and to think that this book is supposed to be a watered-down version of a trilogy…

For the record, I finished at 5AM.

AMD Session

Originally posted on Friday, November 5, 2008

Ruby: ATI Mascot Girl

Ruby: ATI Mascot Girl

I went to the AMD session today for PEY. The whole process was pretty exciting. AMD is pretty much the biggest employer for PEY, as they offer more than a hundred jobs for PEY students from UofT. Basically, if I just randomly chose jobs to submit applications for, and went through the PEY process that way, chances are I’d land myself in an AMD job.

And it’s not a bad company either. I’m sure pretty much anyone who has even the smallest interest in computer/silicon technology has heard of them. If not, well, have you heard of Intel, the company behind the Pentium-4 Processors or Core 2 Duo? AMD is their direct competition. My computer runs on an AMD chip, and I’m willing to bet that half of the computer packages at Best Buy also run on AMD processors. This is also not the only fame you’ll get with AMD. Since 2006 they’ve combined with ATI, the maker of Radeon graphic cards, and it seems that lots of work with ATI cards are done here in Toronto, in their Markham office.

I like their perspective towards PEY. See, since they’re such an old partner with the PEY program, they’re familiar with what it is. Also, since they hire so many students per year for many years already, they’re familiar with the amount of skill and knowledge we have. At the session, we had the chance to talk to the managers and members of each of their design teams that will hire. They were all very amazing people. Some of the people are current PEY students, and from the way they talk and the amount of knowledge and skills they hold, it’s hard to think that a year ago, they were just students like us. Though, I should probably also keep in mind that they hired more than a hundred people last year, and the people who showed up at the meeting were only a handful, so I was probably seeing the best of them.

Even so, they’ve done more than just show their knowledge and maturity. On top of that, they’ve demonstrated and made it clear that the path for students like us to grow is perfectly open. They’ve told us about the challenges the job will pose, but if they conquered such challenges, then why shouldn’t we? They offer a goal, and they offer resources. We can shine too; we just need to be smart and work hard.