Good One, U of I

Hahaha, I hate April Fools, but this was pretty phenomenal, U of I.

It showed up on the front page without the big “April Fools’ 2014” on the main banner. The only hint was at the bottom: “Did you know Vandals have a fierce sense of humor? Have a very happy April Fools’ Day.”

Children of Dial-Up

So who remembers this glorious noise?

The March List

  • This year has been very, very slow for music. I hope it picks up soon!
  • I’m ready for this semester to be over and it’s not even April yet.
  • We’re playing this gorgeous song in concert band. I love it.
  • This fan fiction I’ve been writing for like 3 years has kind of turned into a dumping ground of depressing, over the top drama. Just how I like it.
  • One thing I really do like about my Math-Stats teacher is how he actually talks about the people behind the formulas. I really, really appreciate that. Like, he doesn’t just say “now here is the Neyman-Pearson lemma,” he actually tells us who Neyman and Pearson were. WHY DON’T MORE PROFS DO THAT.
  • When I was young, I used to think the phrase was “hard-earned criminals” rather than “hardened criminals.” “Hard-earned” made sense to me because these were the criminals that were so good at eluding the police that once the police finally captured them, they could say that the capture was “hard-earned.” I was a dumb kid.

This Title is a Poem

So I had this thing on my MySpace (REMEMBER THAT NONSENSE?) and for whatever reason I lost it. So here it is again.

Untitled

 

What poetry form are YOU?

 

Whaaaaat

LEIBNIZ CAME UP WITH THE ALTERNATING SERIES TEST?!

WHY THE HELL DID I NOT KNOW THIS ALREADY?

GOOD LORD THIS MAN IS AWESOME

YES, CAPS LOCK IS NECESSARY I MEAN THIS IS LEIBNIZ WE’RE TALKING ABOUT

*goes to hyperventilate in the corner*

Take a Gauss

Every mathematician needs a site like this.

Favorites:

  • Gauss didn’t discover the normal distribution, nature conformed to his will.
  • Gauss can recite all of pi – backwards.
  • Gauss doesn’t understand stochastic processes because he can predict random numbers.
  • Gauss is an exclusive member of an empty set.
  • Gauss can calculate the determinant of a non-square matrix
  • When Gauss was thirsty, he used Banach–Tarski paradox to get more orange juice.

Whistle While you Twerk?

This is freaking catchy, yo.

The Cones of Rebelling

HAHAHA, oh, Yale.

I read about the Conic Sections Rebellion quite some time ago, but I’d forgotten about it.

The rebellion refers to two incidents that occurred at Yale in 1825 and 1830. Both were students’ responses to having to draw out their own conic sections diagrams for exams rather than being able to refer to the diagrams in their textbooks.

A large number of students refused to take their final exams because of this, resulting in about 50% of the students in both the ’25 and ’30 incidents being expelled. That’s awesome.

I HAVE NEWS!

So guess where my crazy life adventures are taking me next?

CALGARY!

I got accepted by the University of Calgary will be starting my Masters in statistics in September.
I am SUPER FREAKING EXCITED!

Here are some facts about Calgary/U of C:

  • Population: 1,096,833 (third highest in Canada after Toronto and Montreal)
  • Hosted the Olympic Winter Games in 1988 (Jamaican bobsled team!)
  • It’s one of the sunniest cities in Canada, with about 332 days of sun every year.
  • U of C has about 25,000 undergraduates and 6,000 postgraduates
  • U of C is ranked as one of the best universities in Canada (6th – 8th, depending on the ranking)
  • The university library is the sixth largest library in the country.
  • YOU CAN TAKE PROFESSIONAL SPEED SKATING LESSONS AT THE OLYMPIC OVAL ON CAMPUS I AM SO DOING THAT

I reiterate: I am SUPER FREAKING EXCITED!

Summer Reading List

Okay, so I know we’re still in March, but there are a few non-fic books I want to read this summer* and thus decided to make a list of them now.

GO!

Leibniz: An Intellectual Biography by Maria Rosa Antognazza
The only reason I haven’t read this beautiful bio of my main man more than once is because it deserves my full attention—something I haven’t been able to give it since last July. But it will definitely be read again!

Godel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas R. Hofstadter
My mom bought me a copy of this book a loooong time ago, but I’ve never gotten past the first 15 or so pages. It seems quite interesting, I just haven’t been able to get into it yet.

Mathematics From the Birth of Numbers by Jan Gullberg
Another book I’ve had for a long time. Not so much a “reading” book as a “here’s everything about math ever” book—I think I finally have a strong enough math background to make sense of a lot of the components of this book.

A History of Mathematics by Carl B. Boyer
IF I CAN’T TAKE THE DAMN CLASS, I’LL READ THE DAMN BOOK.
If you don’t know why I want to read this, you don’t know me.

 

*I say “this summer” because it’s a lot easier for me to concentrate on awesome books when I’m not freaking out about school.

Dinos

I woke up with this song stuck in my head for absolutely no apparent reason:

This is from the 1993 movie We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story. Did anyone else ever watch this? Remember how freaking dark it got about two-thirds of the way through?

Sorry, not much going on today.

HAVE A THING

Cross out the things you’ve done:

Graduated high school. Kissed someone. Collected something really stupid. Smoked a cigarette. Got so drunk you passed out. Rode every ride at an amusement park. Gone to a rock concert. Helped someone. Gone fishing. Watched four movies in one night. Gone long periods of time without sleep. Lied to someone. Snorted cocaine. Failed a class. Smoked weed. Dealt drugs. Been in a car accident. Been in a tornado. Been to a funeral. Burned yourself (not on purpose). Ran a marathon. Cried yourself to sleep. Spent over $200 in one day. Flown on a plane. Been cheated on. Written a 10 page letter. Gone skiing. Been sailing. Have a best friend. Lost someone you loved. Shoplifted something. Been to jail. Dangerously close to being in jail. Skipped school. Had detention. Got in trouble for something you didn’t do. Stolen books from the library. Gone to a different country. Dropped out of school. Watched the “Harry Potter” movies. Had an online diary. Had a yard sale. Had a lemonade stand. Actually made money at the lemonade stand. Been in a school play. Been fired from a job. Swam with dolphins. Taken a lie detector test. Voted for someone on a reality TV show. Written poetry. Read more than 20 books a year. Gone to EuropeLoved someone you shouldn’t have. Used a coloring book over age 12. Had surgery. Had stitches. Taken a taxi. Seen the Washington Monument. Had more than 5 IM’s/online conversations going at once. Overdosed. Been in a fist fight. Gone surfing in California. Had a hamster/guinea pig. Pet a wild animal. Used a credit card. Did “spirit day” at school. Dyed your hair. Got a tattoo. Got straight A’s. Been on the Honor Roll. Know someone with HIV or AIDS. Made-out with someone. Played on a sports team. Snuck out of the house.  Swore at a teacher.  Gone laser tagging. Had a romantic relationship. Been on the TV. French braided. Skinny-dipped. Driven a car. Performed in front of an audience. Gone bungee-jumping. Been to Mexico. Crashed a car. Sky dived. Been kissed in the rain. Made an 11:11 wish. Drank alcohol. Forwarded a chain letter. Made a mistake.

Book Review: Of Human Bondage (Maugham)

Have I read this before: Yup! In fact, this was the very first book I read when I started my book list back in 7th grade.

Review: This is one of the longer ones (~700 pages in the copy I’ve got) and it doesn’t really pick up until Philip, the main character, leaves England and heads to Paris for art school.

Ah, Philip. I don’t know if it was Maugham’s intention to have the reader get ridiculously frustrated with Philip’s on/off relationship with Mildred (who is the most obnoxious character ever), but if it was, mission accomplished. By like the time he takes her in after she’s destroyed his life for like the fifth time, I was like “COME ON, PHILIP, NO!”

Anyway. Other than that, this was a very appropriate book for me to read at this point in my life. The book basically chronicles Philip’s attempts at “starting his life” and, in this process, all his social awkwardness, self-doubt, career changes, and fear. I don’t remember it being so relatable in 7th grade, but I totally felt it now. Like I said, it takes a little while to get into this book, but I think it’s worth it, especially for those of us in our 20s.

Favorite part: There were a few good lines/sections in here, particularly regarding the idea of free will and determinism. I particularly enjoyed Philip’s conversation with Cronshaw in chapter 45, all about free will vs. determinism. And this quote in chapter 28, as Philip is renouncing his religion: “From old habit, unconsciously he thanked God that he no longer believed in Him.”

Rating: 5/10

Oops, I arted.

It’s been like a century since I’ve drawn, eh? And wow, shocker, I’m still drawing the same old crap!

Digital Fibrillation

I don’t have a title!

CRAP I just realized that my 8-year blogging anniversary is happening in like 45 days. What should I do, anything special?

I was actually thinking of doing a week of vlogs, but I’m an ugly buttface and no one wants to see that AND the basement’s always filthy and no one wants to see that AND that’s like the week before finals or something and I’ll be in too much of a panic to be entertaining.

Heck, I’m not even entertaining now and it’s spring break!

BAH.

GIF - Excited

YES

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA LOOK WHAT I GOT!

asdf

$20, free shipping, on eBay. That’s the cheapest I’ve seen this book go for.
Doesn’t Blankie look like a serial killer?

Check the back:

dfsdf

Mr. Disch is officially awesome.

AND THIS POEM:

Lives there a man with soul so dead
He’s never to his toaster said:
“You are my friend; I see in you
An object sturdy, staunch, and true;
A fellow mettlesome and trim;
A brightness that the years can’t dim.”?
Then let us praise the brave appliance
In which we place this just reliance.
And offer it with each fresh slice
Such words of friendship and advice
As “How are things with you tonight?”
Or “Not too dark but not too light.”

I’ve heard the book is quite different from the movie, so I’ll have to read it and check it out. Some of the pages are pretty loose, though, so I’m hesitant.

But I finally have a copy!!

Trackin’

So I have this program on Big Compy called IOGraph which tracks your mouse movement as well as how long the cursor sits still in one place. So since it’s spring break and I have no life, I decided to track my mouse movements doing various tasks, each for approximately a half-hours’ worth of time. Note that the black dots are “pause points” with bigger dots = longer pause time.

Ready?

Here’s 23.2 minutes of playing Half-Life.

IOGraphica - 23.2 minutes (from 22-00 to 22-23)

 

Here’s 26.7 minutes of formatting one of my archived blog years in Word (2007 – 2009; one of these days I’ll be done with that project).

IOGraphica - 26.7 minutes (from 22-30 to 22-57)

 

Here’s 32.6 minutes of playing The Sims 3 (creating a family).

IOGraphica - 32.6 minutes (from 23-58 Mar 22th to 0-31 Mar 23th)

 

Here’s 36.1 minutes of “doing whatever.”

IOGraphica - 36.1 minutes (from 23-17 to 23-53)

Interesting, huh?

MY EARS

WHAAAAAAAAAT THE HEEEEEEEEELL

Holy Jesus crackers, I love this.

Download for free from his SoundCloud!

 

Well today was eventful

  • Took my algorithms test at 12:30, then my mom and I headed towards Pasco to go see BRIAN REGAN! On the way there, we drove through a torrential downpour and then through some MEGA wind. We also saw herds of tumbleweeds catapulting themselves into the roads like lemmings.
  • Once we got to our hotel, I made coffee, ‘cause I just always do that at hotels, then drank like three sips of it ‘cause I put way too much Sweet n’ Low in it, then screwed around in the fitness room before going to the show.
  • Brian Regan was, of course, hilarious. We spent the rest of the night watching “Say Yes to the Dress” ‘cause absolutely nothing else was on and the hotel internet was very slow.

YAY! Thanks for the late birthday present, mom!

PONDER

I was out a’Stumblin’ across the internets tonight and I came upon this question on Quora:

Is going for a Ph.D. worth it if I’m extremely passionate about a field but don’t really want to spend my 20s poor, toiling away in a lab, and living in a city that I don’t particularly want to live in?

An important question, am I right?

Well, maybe I’m a little bit biased here, but I really love this response written by Mark Eichenlaub (it’s linked right here, but I’ll copy/paste ‘cause it’s important):

I have anosmia, which means I lack smell the way a blind person lacks sight. What’s surprising about this is that I didn’t even know it for the first half of my life.
Each night I would tell my mom, “Dinner smells great!” I teased my sister about her stinky feet. I held my nose when I ate Brussels sprouts. In gardens, I bent down and took a whiff of the roses. I yelled “gross” when someone farted. I never thought twice about any of it for fourteen years.

Then, in freshman English class, I had an assignment to write about the Garden of Eden using details from all five senses. Working on this one night, I sat in my room imagining a peach. I watched the juice ooze out as I squeezed at the soft fuzz. I felt the wet, sappy liquid drip from my fingers down onto my palm. As the mushy heart of the fruit compressed, I could hear it squishing, and when I took that first bite I could taste the little bit of tartness that followed the incredible sweet sensation flooding my mouth. 

But I had to write about smell, too, and I was stopped dead by the question of what a peach smelled like. Good. That was all I could come up with. I tried to think of other things. Garbage smelled bad. Perfume smelled good.  Popcorn good. Poop bad. But how so? What was the difference? What were the nuances? In just a few minutes’ reflection I realized that, despite years of believing the contrary, I never had and never would smell a peach.

All my behavior to that point indicated that I had smell. No one suspected I didn’t. For years I simply hadn’t known what it was that was supposed to be there. I just thought the way it was for me was how it was for everyone. It took the right stimulus before I finally discovered the gap.

I think it’s quite likely you’ve found such a gap. I think that you’ve been given the opportunity now to realize that you are not extremely passionate about your field, because if you were this question would never arise. 
Try these things:

  • Name one hundred questions you have about your field
  • Think of a time when you’ve brushed off work, a social engagement, or some other plan because you got so excited about an idea that you had to work on it right away
  • Think of a time when you talked to someone about your field not to make conversation, not because you thought they’d care, and not because it’s what you know, but simply because you couldn’t restrain yourself despite your better judgment.
  • Find ten diary entries you wrote in which you talk about how many interesting things in this field you learned.
  • Describe an independent project you pursued without hope of ever getting any credit for it.
  • Think of a time when you lay awake at night, unable to sleep because of your excitement about the field.
  • Think of a time when you were frustrated with a textbook because it refused to get to the good stuff, or hid the beauty of the ideas, or otherwise did injustice to the field.
  • Think of a time when you got in a shouting match over an idea.

I wouldn’t expect you could do all these things, since they depend on your personality as much as your passion.  But here’s one more test:  when you read the first item about listing a hundred questions, before you moved on, did you think “I could do that, no problem”, or was there a specific old question you’ve thought about time and again and never solved that immediately popped to mind?   (I assume you didn’t actually do the exercise; almost nobody would, regardless of passion.)  If you’re passionate, you think about questions like those compulsively, and there will almost always be one there.

If you couldn’t do most of the things on the list and you skipped over the first item without an old question jumping into your mind, then you, like I, are missing a piece of the forbidden fruit. You have believed that you are passionate. You’ve told everyone you are and acted like you are and done all the right things, but it just isn’t there.

When I was a kid, I was the only one who couldn’t smell, but I’ve learned over time that there are many people who don’t feel passion about what they do, but never even realize it. It is practically a motif of my generation that we feel adrift, unsure of what to do with ourselves despite endless possibilities. In large part, I think this is because many of us are desperately searching for a passion that we can only partially fool ourselves into believing we’ve found.

If you’ve passed the test and realized that you are passionate, go to grad school because once you’re engaged with great ideas, you won’t care that you’re poor and unappreciated and working long hours and living in Crapville University Town. Or if you failed my test but think it’s bogus, go to grad school for the same reason.
But if you think you feel passion the way I experience smell, do not go to grad school. In that case it will eat your soul.

_

“I think that you’ve been given the opportunity now to realize that you are not extremely passionate about your field, because if you were this question would never arise.” I really like that.

It’s a little like that “flip a coin to make a decision” thing. If there are two options that you feel are equally desirable, flip a coin to decide between them. As you flip the coin, you’ll realize that there’s one outcome that you’re hoping for over the other.

I think I’ll come back to the topics talked about in this post in a little while when things get a little more settled (you’ll know what I’m talking about when it happens), but I just wanted to post this because a) I like the analogy of anosmia, haha, and b) this is definitely something we should consider not only when it comes to big choices like grad school vs. no grad school but also when it comes to weighing the benefits of making sacrifices in any other aspects of our lives.

 

Theorem Fun

Welcome to another edition of “let’s learn about the person behind the theorem!”

Today’s edition: Joseph Liouville, after whom the Liouville’s Theorem is named. The theorem is associated with complex analysis and states that every bounded entire function must be constant. We unfortunately didn’t have time to get into the proof/applications during today’s class, but for now, let’s just look at Mr. Liouville, shall we?

Liouville was born in Saint-Omer, France, in 1809. Apparently he was very organized in terms of getting stuff done with math and played a key role in both founding some mathematical journals (like the French mathematical journal Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées) as well as recognizing some important works that were, at the time, unpublished.

He himself did quite a lot in various fields of mathematics: number theory, complex analysis, topology, mathematical physics—he was also the first to prove the existence of transcendental numbers in 1844 (though the term “transcendental” was first used by—guess who?—Leibniz, back in 1682 and then refined into today’s definition by Euler).

He also has a crater on the moon named after him!

IT’S A BLOG POST

This is how I feel today:

GIF - Eagle Dance

And that’s all you get.

!

CALGARY!!!!

The New Science

WHY HAVE I NEVER HEARD OF THIS GAME BEFORE??

From the site:

“In The New Science, you play the role of one of the great scientists from the scientific revolution in 17th century Europe. You are attempting to publish your remarkable scientific discoveries in order to gain prestige, be seen as the finest mind of your era, and consequently be appointed the first President of the Royal Society.”

And which great scientists can you play as?

LEIBNIZ!
ALSKFJASLDFJALGSLA

This looks really, really interesting. I need this game, yo.

(And a dorkfest of friends to play it with.)

Impossible Music

Specifically, a type of music called Black MIDI. Black MIDI is named as such because the idea is to include as many notes as possible into a short little arrangement. Making a score of such an arrangement would be such a befuddlement of notes and accidentals and other such things that the staff would be just a block of black ink—hence, Black MIDI.

Also, it would be physically impossible to play “by hand.”

Example of such a thing:

(Note: this may glitch out near the middle, depending on the speed of your compy)

It’s actually kind of cool-sounding, huh?