9.28.2006

Some Numbers


  • Number of large textbooks purchased: 3
  • Cost: $450
  • Number of required books found in PDF format: 2
  • Number of books purchased from upperclassmen: 1
  • Number of textbooks returned: 3
  • Cash received: $450
  • Amount spent on textbooks: $60
  • Amount of time spent on the first chem problem set: ~ 8 hours
  • Number of problems: 6
  • Number of sets per term: 9
  • Number of trips to In 'n' Out Burger (so far): 3
  • Number of In 'n' Out burgers I need to eat in college per day* 3
  • Student to Faculty ratio at Caltech: 3:1
  • Freshman class male to female ratio at Caltech: 3:1
  • Population of Los Angeles county to South Dakota: 13:1
  • Ratio of females in LA County to males in South Dakota: 13:1



It's day four, and I'm not yet far behind.
* Please refer to this post in which Zack and I visit the In 'n' Out in San Francisco.

9.26.2006

Caltech Ingenuity









09.26.06: Day two of classes. Homework load seems manageable, if not 
reasonable. Chronic depression has not yet set in. However, Physics
lecture doesn't start until tomorrow. I could be in for bad news.


Yes, I know what you're thinking.... that IS a converted recumbent
bicycle in the last picture.

/robert

9.20.2006

Los Angeles



Caltech and Los Angeles

I was not very excited to be at Lake Arrowhead for two and a half days when I could be at Caltech getting used to campus and Pasadena before class started. The talks were all too long and I'm not always comfortable meeting 200 new people all at once. We attended three major seminars, "The Honor Code", "Study Habits at Caltech" and "How to succeed at Caltech" or something like that. Study habits was a scavenger hunt, where we first had to have four people walk on two long two by fours a total of about 50 feet, walking on the skinny part of the board. Throughout the rest of the time, we bobbed for apples, chugged beer (root beer), built lego and balloon structures, dove in a pool for links of steel chain, and completed sudoku puzzles.

I learned that people can be brilliant math and science people without knowing anything about computers. This was news to me.

What was not news to me was the demographic here... Twenty seven percent are women. Nobody I talked to about math had not taken classes at a local college. Many are of Asian descent.

Towards the end of "Frosh Camp" at the Lake Arrowhead resort, upperclassmen presented a series of skits involving rotation. Rotation is during the first week of classes when freshmen are introduced to the various personalities of the eight undergraduate houses by eating two meals over the space of a week at each of the houses, and talking to members afterwards. It supposedly leaves a good enough impression on frosh and upperclassmen that the frosh can be placed in the proper house, which is the social network you are part of for the next four years.

Before the skits, the rules were laid down regarding rotation... basically, don't unfairly bias someone for or against a house. Also, there is a four hour rule, which means that upperclassmen can only take students off campus for four hours. In the past, there have been beach trips to Mexico, I guess.

The first skit was by Avery, which is the newest house. Avery is sort of a "sterile" house as described by some of the freshmen living there now, so I expected the skit they put on to be like the house itself... new, without established traditions, quiet, with white-washed walls... but their skit was possibly one of the most humorous, playing on the diversity of campus and the lack of established traditions.

Page house put on a skit that played on that house's "personality", including talk about kegs that spontaneously reproduce at parties, and the tossing of condoms into the crowd at the end. Page also made as much fun of the other houses as was possible during a short skit, playing on the stereotypes some houses have received.

Ruddock house's skit involved lots of real, although dead, squid and throwing ink at people.

Ricketts house put on a skit that involved lots of swearing, being mad at the administration, anarchy signs, and throwing bottles and cans against the wall while yelling things I didn't understand.

Fleming, Lloyd, and the rest all blended together or weren't understood.

Dabney put on a skit involving a space elephant without shoes, space astronautss, and a space cobbler...

Welcome to Caltech! I hope none of this is confidential or a rotation or Honor Code violation, being that it's a summary of events, I think I'm fine.

Leaving Lake Arrowhead, a few things have been drilled into my head...


  • People here care about you. There are UCCs, RAs, medical centers, dean's offices, and countless other places we are encouraged to go when we have problems. I don't necessarily know what the abbreviations stand for, but I know people are there to help!

  • Many upperclassmen describe Caltech life as hell. For better or worse, it is very true that many seemed at best apathetic about returning to class, and loved to complain or warn you about everything from food to classes.

  • Going to college is anti-climactic after being a Senate Page. Caltech doesn't seem like a big deal. Sure, you have more freedom at college, but you don't work a full time job at the capitol building in addition to taking hard (for a high school junior) classes. And sure, the class size here is small at 215. But by the end of that six months, I felt closer to any one of the 27 pages than to anyone else in my life. I can't help but feeling that that sort of social network will exist at Caltech for me. Any of my page buddies hear me out there? What do you guys think?


But, no matter what.. I sure am surrounded by people who are in a large part like me. I had a conversation with an upperclassman about

rm *
and rerouting
rm --> rm -f -r
when you're deleting lots of directories in the unix shell... and what happens when you accidentally press
rm *
when you're in your root directory. I told myself I wouldn't have conversations like that when I came here, but there I was...

Anyways. Check in later. Watch out for pictures, I'll get a Caltech phlog stream going soon.

9.16.2006

Word of the Day

9.12.2006

iPod FLEA!

Skip showed me this hilarious movie about iPods getting smaller and smaller and smaller... but the scary part is... it's now a reality!! The new iPod Shuffle is Flea-sized! 1 GB and less than three quarters of a cubic inch in size. Wow. What are you thinking, Apple? How many of these are going to get washed and break?



However, props to Apple for what looks like bringing back the aluminum casing from the mini on the iPod nano (now in an 8 GB flavor).

eBay Numbers: September.



Here are some numbers for you.

I started last summer with two (2) out-of-warranty broken iPods. I bought one (1) lot of iPod parts on eBay for $100. I started fixing them in late September/early October of last year.

Today is September 12. Since September 12 of last year, I've received three hundred and forty three (343) positive feedback on eBay from buying and selling iPods and parts. My eBay selling peaked around the holiday season of last year when I received 37 positive feedback during December, 59 during January, and 47 during February.

Since a large minority of eBay transactions are completed without feedback being left by both parties, I've been averaging more than one purchase or sale a day for an entire year. Somebody's got an addiction.

Tonight when my Fox F80x front suspension fork ends, it will be the first time in months when I have been home and I haven't had auctions on eBay.

Keep an eye out... I plan on doing a little bit of blogging about online auctions and eBay before I forget it all while I'm at school.

9.07.2006

Dude, Where's My Disc Brakes?

There's an Escalade in the gap for sale... What's wrong with this picture?



MMMMM... Having rear drum brakes just reeks of class.

9.06.2006

Wal-Mart Bible Letter?? WTF Mate?

My friend Rebecca today sent me a link to a site that tries to disprove the existence of God... get this... by using the Bible. How ironic is that? At the bottom of one of the 50 proofs of why God doesn't exist (this one works by taking Old Testament and New Testament verses regarding prayer literally, and "proving" that since God doesn't answer all of your prayers, he doesn't exist) is a link to this letter signed by 2667 people as of September 7, 2006 to Wal-Mart claiming that the Bible is "obscene" according to "the dictionary". Wal-Mart stopped distributing "America" by Jon Stewart because it's "obscene". I guess some of those darned liberals decided to retaliate.

Wow. Be sure to check it out. It's a laugh* no matter what you believe about the Bible, religion, etc.

*The information on this site is for informational purposes only. Robert Karl and The Macintosh Doctor and its affiliates and content licensors assume no liability for any inaccurate, delayed or incomplete information, nor for any actions taken in reliance thereon. The information contained about each individual and firm has been supplied by such individual or firm without verification by us. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance. Prior to making any investment or religious decision, it is recommended that you consult directly with the individual, firm, or religion and seek advice from a qualified investment or religious advisor. PSYCHE!

Why Bicycling is Cool Part 3

9.03.2006

Dakota 5o!!

Today was the Dakota Five Oh.

I started preparing a few months ago. I saw the ad for the 50 mile mountain bike race in Dunn Bros and thought "Wow. I wish I could do that." For a few weeks now I've been riding my bike everywhere around town with the hopes that 10 or 15 miles a day on the road would help, and also because my car started smoking and died.

I started actually preparing for the Five-Oh last night... gathering stuff together for the race.


I started with a Kona Unit single speed geared 34x17, Shimano DX clipless pedals, a patch kit, pump, spandex, bandana, and gym shorts. And most importantly... lots of food. Powerbars, Clif gel "Shots", Gatorade.

The race starts with 3 miles of gravel uphill and 7 miles of awesome (although uphill) singletrack maintained by the Spearfish Ridge Riders. The rest is a blur. I rode with my good friend Scotty who is a much faster rider than I... but luckily he burned himself out on the first 10 miles following some of the faster riders. We rode from mile 10 or 12 on. After one flat and a couple mild crashes, Scotty and I ended up back at the Start/Finish line 7 hours and 39 minutes later. Amazingly, I wasn't cripplingly tired afterwards... I rode my bike down to Dunn Bros just now.

Earlier this summer I was inspired by Dan at Digipede Technologies. He started this year with 1 pushup on January 1, 2 on January 2, and so on. Today is the 246th day of the year, and he's still going. I decided I'm going to start today with 50 pushups and see how far I can go. It's amazing what you can do with enough gel packs, spaghetti, and a good night's sleep.

Do you know who I am? You must not know who I am. I'm the.... (it's not SoaP, but close. Another internet phenomenon.)