"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Month: February 2013

New digs at Quantum Catch

Day 533 of 1000

Desk at the building next door (quieter for the programmers)

I have some new digs at my job in Prescott.  It is the small office next door to the old digs.  The place we are in now used to be a store front for a window shade store.  We are all sitting in what would have been the showroom/reception office.  The cooling, which is just fine right now, is two small swamp coolers.  This summer, everyone doubts whether they will work very well.  I actually like the office quite a lot because it is a lot quieter and we have both a window and a door that let in sunlight–the very thing that will work against us in the summer.

I cannot wait to bring Lorena to Prescott…

Day 532 of 1000

…now that I have a decent.  Check out the kitchen and living room in my new hotel.  Also, we are literally two minutes away from a Costco and a Trader Joes.  No excuses for exercise either.  They have a nice exercise room, pool, and spa.

Kitchen at Prescott Marriott Residence Inn

Living room at Prescott Marriott Residence Inn

Is a double degree in math and engineering worth an extra year of college?

The math department switched Christian’s adviser on him last week.  He met with his new adviser late Friday afternoon.  Christian worked hard to make a plan to finish his degree by spring of 2014 that would prepare him to go on to a PhD program in Electrical Engineering.  His previous adviser thought it was a fine plan.  Our friend Igor (PhD mathematical physicist and all-around really smart guy from Russia) thought it was a fine plan.  I thought it was a fine plan.

A professor in charge of graduate research in the Electrical Engineering department at Stanford thought enough of the plan that he said, “I would be delighted to meet you to show you Stanford and talk about research opportunities…”

A professor who runs a research program in Control Theory in the Electrical Engineering department at Cal Tech said, “It looks like you’re doing the right things academically.”

The new adviser was very interested and engaged during the advising session, but developed a plan that would take entire fifth year of college to complete.  I think part of the problem is that Christian’s previous adviser told him to add Electrical Engineering as a second major because, if he did not, the University would not allow him to take many of the Electrical Engineering classes he needs.  He explained that to the new adviser, but she pushed on anyway because I think she really believes that is his best path to getting what he wants.

The kids and I have spoken about this often.  There might be some circumstances where it makes sense to take another year to get a second Bachelors degree having to do with a desire to get into a graduate school that requires a specific bachelors degree for entry into a program.  Still, there are a LOT of good schools in this world and it most often makes more sense to pick a different school that allows a student to take leveling classes before or after they are admitted to a Masters degree program.  The result is way better.

I worked with a girl started with a Bachelors degree in English then took two years of classes (part time) at a good regional university that lead to her acceptance into a Masters degree in Mechanical engineering.  She did it by getting good grades and getting to know the people who had the power to accept her into the program.  I got a weak (because I did not work hard, not because the program was bad) Bachelors degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing when I got out of high school.  I took quite a bit of math and science before I switched to business, then got an associate degree in electronics, something that flies completely in the face of the advise I am giving here, but I thought that is what I needed to do to get a job.

Ten years after I left school, Bachelor and Associate degrees in hand, and after I worked my way into an application engineering position, I got recruited by a professor at University of Texas at El Paso to set up a machine vision lab.  When I got there, he asked me why I did not get a Masters degree in Industrial Engineering while I was at it.  I explained that I only had an associate degree and a Bachelors degree in Business.  He said that would not be a problem, I could take some leveling classes to pick up the stuff I did not have and demonstrate I could handle the workload.  Two years later, I was accepted into a top ten Industrial Engineering PhD program at Texas A&M.  I did not finish there because of life, but they were very happy with my academic background.

The point is it most often does not make sense to get a second Bachelors degree when it will take an extra year and a lot of extra money to do it.  Christian has done a ton of due diligence with respect to what he wants to do when he finishes here at NCSU.  He has talked to advisers at school, highly qualified people he met in his internship work over two summers, and even me.  He has started contacting people in charge of graduate programs where he wants to go.  He developed a study plan very early and has continually reviewed and revised it based on input from others and research about the schools and areas of study he wishes to pursue.

We spent about two hours last night to write a concise email to his new adviser to explain all this.  We had some heated discussions about what should be in the email.  Christian did all the writing. He wrote a first pass, then made lots and lots of revisions.  In the end, the email was much shorter than the first draft.  He made his case to the adviser.  In his meeting with her, Christian could tell she was a very good adviser who tries to get things right for her charges.  She has already given him some good advise about changes he could make that he plans to implement.  This kind of iterative approach works very well in these kinds of situations and we have great hope Christian can put together a plan that will get him what he needs while it avoids wasting time and resources.

Back to Arizona after a couple of weeks of craziness

Day 531 of 1000

This last month has been fairly insanely busy.  After the holidays, I went out to Arizona for a couple of weeks, followed by a weekend trip to Oregon to visit my parents who have very recently moved into a memory care facility.  That was too long to be away.  I do not like to be away from the family on weekends, so two weekends in a row is definitely too much.  Next time I go to visit my folks, I plan to go on the weekend between my two weeks stay in Arizona.

  • I arrived home on a Monday evening
  • I started a new job on Tuesday morning
  • Overnight guests arrived on Tuesday evening
  • We had some drama
  • I wrecked the pickup in an ice storm on Friday
  • We jumped through hoops to get everyone where the needed to be with only one car starting on Monday
  • We found out the pickup was totaled on Wednesday
  • I got caught in a traffic jam on I40 on Thursday that was bad enough I got home to late to go to bible study in our one car
  • I dropped everything to run to Durham on Friday so I could sign for the wrecked car check so we did not have to wait two more weeks to get it

Fortunately, we had a normal, go to the library to study day yesterday.  Normalcy is nice.  I get on a plan this afternoon and will not be back with the family until the fifteenth.

Redhat world headquarters – insult to injury

Christian at the Red Hat world headquarters on the Centenniel Campus at NCSU

Thank goodness for the Prescott Valley Library–a world class public library in anybody’s book.  Amazingly, I would have say that, even though it is dramatically smaller, as a place to work on volunteer developer on fine side projects, it works for me just as well as the fabulous new Hunt Library at NCSU.  Hopefully, I will be there this time next week.  Just like biscuits and gravy at McDonald’s, there is something else Prescott Valley does not have.  On the drive to the Hunt Library this morning, about a block before we got there, we passed the world headquarters of RedHat, one of the premier open source software companies in the world–right on the NCSU campus.  SAS is there, too.  NCSU is really doing some amazing things at their school.  Just one example of this is their category leading Advanced Analytics Institute as a prototype for the rest of the world on how to prepare engineers for industry better than anyone else.  Kudos.

Reference biscuits

Day 530  of 1000

Biscuits and Gravy at Cameron Village, Raleigh, North CarolinaRemember back when I was whining about the biscuits at McDonalds in Prescott Valley, Arizona?  Well, we went to McDonalds in Cameron Village (Raleigh, North Carolina) close to the NCSU campus.  Well, we went back to our favorite McDonalds in Raleigh (at Cameron Village) and got the biscuits and gravy.  My suspicions were confirmed.  First of all, they don’t even offer the biscuits with gravy in Prescott Valley and the biscuits the offer there are wildly less appetizing then those in Cameron Village.  Enuf sed.

I am rich!!!!

Day 529 of 1000

Well, we got our check today for my wreck last friday.  I was actually a little surprised that the deemed the pickup “totaled”.  I really liked that truck and very much would have liked to have had it repaired.  As a person who likes to think he has the attitude, “like the stuff you are stuck doing because it really doesn’t do any good to not like it”, I REALLY do not like to shop for nor buy cars.  This is all compounded by the fact that I am a big Dave Ramsey fan and do not like the idea of spending money on something for which I cannot pay cash.

So, because this is my second bad bad car incident in less than three years I have a choice.  Do I buy a car for $5K that will get me where I want to go and spend the rest on paying off my now diminishing rapidly car loan or do I spring for a new car with a small payment in addition to the one I have left on the previous new car purchase.  Throw Jon’s advice into the mix and I have quite the conundrum.  In the end though, I think it is a no-brainer.  I really need to think about how I am going to pay for the kids school for the next year or so, so I am pretty sure we are going to get an inexpensive used car and to from there.

So now we are down to logistics.  I have to find a car, negotiate the price, figure out how to get it to a decent mechanic (if I knew a decent mechanic) to see if it is any good, get the insurance swapped, get the license tags swapped, and do this all while all three people who are capable of helping are trying to go to two different schools, church, and shopping on wildly different schedules while I am in Arizona.  Maybe I should be thankful I am in Arizona.  Honestly, I feel guilty that I cannot do all this myself, but I cannot.  On the other hand, it makes a lot of sense not to buy anything until I get back.

That is what I am going to do.  Wait until I get back.  I will have the rental car in Arizona.  The rest of the family will do what they always do and drive the mini-van to school, church, and shopping while I am gone.  Then I can deal with it when I get home in a couple of weeks.  Procrastination is my friend!

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