Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Graduated School
More and more of this endless surfing and link-chasing across the vast internet has lead me to believe there is enough free resources online to skip over the graduate education thing and head straight for whatever it is to be headed-for. Resources like MIT's Open Courseware, Academic Earth's library of video courses, and even Apple's iTunes U create a classroom anywhere you have a cellphone signal. Has the internet tackled the wheel as top on the invention list yet?
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Sunday Punday
Procrastonation this afternoon has lead me to the iPaul's photo library. This picture was stumbled upon way back in February as I was passing through the second story stairwell in the Purdue Physics Building.
I challenge you to find a better example of a mind always at work. Someone should seriously consider adding a pun section to the SATs and GREs. What better way to test for the intelligently-logical? At the least, a pun section would have raised this blogger's verbal score.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Op-Ed Columnist - What’s Our Sputnik? - NYTimes.com
Tom Friedman this week has an article, titled What's Our Sputnik?, commenting on the US interest in the "War on Terror" verses the impact China and their ever-growing world economic influence. A quote in the article reads:
"Our response to Sputnik made us better educated, more productive, more technologically advanced and more ingenious," said the Johns Hopkins foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum. "Our investments in science and education spread throughout American society, producing the Internet, more students studying math and people genuinely wanting to build the nation."
This country has always needed a sudden fear factor before it comes together to fight and move in a uniform direction. Our last being 9/11, which we have responded with an invasion of Iraq and slowly into boarding countries half-way across the world. Friedman uses the analogy of the Russian's Sputnik space program in the 1950's/60's, which lead to the US rush to math and science books. Also, the attack on Pearl Harbor was the wake-up call that finally sent us into WWII.
Currently, we Americans have yet to experience something of this magnitude firsthand. We float along commenting on the world issues that "potentially" pose a threat to our nation, but have yet to made a sudden impact of our daily lives. One could argue Katrina is the impact of climate change, but we all know there is little environmental data to support an argument either way. It was just a hurricane that hit the wrong place at the wrong time. I personally see climate change as a big issue, and even if its threat is only 40% realistic, that should be enough for this country to lead the world in the green-energy direction. If the scientists are wrong about it, then shit, what are we left with? Less pollution, more coral reefs, silent cars, and sweet ass houses that have 1/3 the energy bill of older homes. How is that going to have a negative effect on the country?!? We love to buy anything and everything new and hip, so lets just make the new and hip stuff good for the earth.
Global warming and climate change issues aren't going to cut it. These temperate gradual changes aren't seen first-hand in the daily lives of us Americans. What Mother Earth really needs to do is drop one big super-storm consisting of snow, sleet, rain, snowballs, cats, dogs, transformers, Tiger Woods, and high-trans fats before we significantly respond in any way to climate change.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that we need a blatant impact. A transformer snowstorm. A $12/gallon gas price. A heating bill that's through the roof. An East Coast summer of entirely polluted beach fronts. A Chinese invasion of athletes, celebrities, and culture. A Japanese automaker sweep of all auto markets. SOMETHING that will wake this country up from the celebrity-gossip-induced internet-youtube-video-sucking sports-obsession consumer-spending country we presently live in.
In closing, Go SOX!
"Our response to Sputnik made us better educated, more productive, more technologically advanced and more ingenious," said the Johns Hopkins foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum. "Our investments in science and education spread throughout American society, producing the Internet, more students studying math and people genuinely wanting to build the nation."
This country has always needed a sudden fear factor before it comes together to fight and move in a uniform direction. Our last being 9/11, which we have responded with an invasion of Iraq and slowly into boarding countries half-way across the world. Friedman uses the analogy of the Russian's Sputnik space program in the 1950's/60's, which lead to the US rush to math and science books. Also, the attack on Pearl Harbor was the wake-up call that finally sent us into WWII.
Currently, we Americans have yet to experience something of this magnitude firsthand. We float along commenting on the world issues that "potentially" pose a threat to our nation, but have yet to made a sudden impact of our daily lives. One could argue Katrina is the impact of climate change, but we all know there is little environmental data to support an argument either way. It was just a hurricane that hit the wrong place at the wrong time. I personally see climate change as a big issue, and even if its threat is only 40% realistic, that should be enough for this country to lead the world in the green-energy direction. If the scientists are wrong about it, then shit, what are we left with? Less pollution, more coral reefs, silent cars, and sweet ass houses that have 1/3 the energy bill of older homes. How is that going to have a negative effect on the country?!? We love to buy anything and everything new and hip, so lets just make the new and hip stuff good for the earth.
Global warming and climate change issues aren't going to cut it. These temperate gradual changes aren't seen first-hand in the daily lives of us Americans. What Mother Earth really needs to do is drop one big super-storm consisting of snow, sleet, rain, snowballs, cats, dogs, transformers, Tiger Woods, and high-trans fats before we significantly respond in any way to climate change.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that we need a blatant impact. A transformer snowstorm. A $12/gallon gas price. A heating bill that's through the roof. An East Coast summer of entirely polluted beach fronts. A Chinese invasion of athletes, celebrities, and culture. A Japanese automaker sweep of all auto markets. SOMETHING that will wake this country up from the celebrity-gossip-induced internet-youtube-video-sucking sports-obsession consumer-spending country we presently live in.
In closing, Go SOX!
Friday, December 25, 2009
Op-Ed Columnist - The Copenhagen That Matters - NYTimes.com
A Thomas Friedman article regarding Denmark's tax on gasoline.
"Already the green taxes here are quite high," said Espersen. "And even though we know this is not popular with business and industry, it has made all the difference for us. It forced our businesses to become more energy efficient and innovative, and this meant that, suddenly, we were inventing things nobody else was inventing because our businesses needed to be competitive."
This is more or less a survival of the fittest, isn't it? When in the last 100-years have you known America not able to survive with the fittest? I say bring it on and make us Americans think a little instead of sitting on gchat all day at work waiting for something to problem-solve.
"Already the green taxes here are quite high," said Espersen. "And even though we know this is not popular with business and industry, it has made all the difference for us. It forced our businesses to become more energy efficient and innovative, and this meant that, suddenly, we were inventing things nobody else was inventing because our businesses needed to be competitive."
This is more or less a survival of the fittest, isn't it? When in the last 100-years have you known America not able to survive with the fittest? I say bring it on and make us Americans think a little instead of sitting on gchat all day at work waiting for something to problem-solve.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Ahoy from Einstein's
I have to find some European friends so I have someone to bullshit
with in the wee hours of the morning.
with in the wee hours of the morning.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Dr. Duval
I think I have decided I am going to be come a pediatrician, but I am not sure how that is going to work with the engineering background. We'll see how it goes.
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Sunday Night Landscape Keyboard
Purduves post 2-weeks of classes. Courses include BioFluids, mechanics
of MEMS and NEMS, Biosensors, and a medical device regulatory affairs
seminar. Not too bad for a crop of titles. The professors are legit,
very sharp, top in their fields (or so they seam), and witty (a laugh
in the classroom every 5-7 minutes should be part of Obama's education
reform).
of MEMS and NEMS, Biosensors, and a medical device regulatory affairs
seminar. Not too bad for a crop of titles. The professors are legit,
very sharp, top in their fields (or so they seam), and witty (a laugh
in the classroom every 5-7 minutes should be part of Obama's education
reform).
It is eye opening moving into a 10x8' dorm room and realizing the
little I/we need in our lives to get by. A bed, small dresser, closet,
and small fridge is the ticket. Plus, its so easy to keep things clean
in such a small space. One more shipping crate for a kitchen and
living room and it's smooth sailing.
5.5 miler today. Tomorrow hopefully will bring another.
Check out Bar. Absolutely gorgeous. But to Marissa.
Sent from the iPaul
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