Thursday, September 25, 2008

PhD. Applications.

Finalized my list of schools to apply to for my math PhD.
I'm applying to 13 schools, in three countries, in two continents.

This is going to be a fun semester :|

Just about filled in the first of my thirteen applications, to the National U of Singapore.
It would be nice actually if I ended up in Sing, four hours from KL. I could go home on the holidays, maybe even on the weekends. The food would still be bad, but it won't be as awful as what they claim to be Asian cuisine here in the States (barring places like LA, SF, Houston of course)
Grandma could come to my graduation.

I could see myself choosing NUS or NTU over stronger math departments in the West. So many factors to consider.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Hurricane Ike


Yowza. It's been raining all week, and Dallas-Fort Worth should get the brunt of Ike's wrath this weekend.

Mom, don't worry. I'm hundreds of miles inland. The rain won't be much worse than the monsoon season back home.


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Monday, September 08, 2008

Life Group

Scott and I will lead a life group that will meet on-campus, Sunday 6-8 pm
We will meet in the Miller Conference Room in the Student Union.

Miller is on the third floor, room 3008.

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Saturday, September 06, 2008

New Microsoft ad

In an effort to counter the wildly popular Mac vs PC ads by Apple, Microsoft hired Jerry Seinfeld to make ads for them



What?

I like this quote from the comments:

This ad makes perfect sense!

Think about it. You sit down at your PC to perform some task, like creating a TV commercial. But your operating system is so unstable you end up doing everything but that.

Genius!

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Friday, September 05, 2008

The LOLCAT Bible

I just wasted two hours looking through the LOLCATS bible translation project. You should too, it's hilarious.

If you don't know what LOLCAT is, look at the Wikipedia Article or the icanhazcheezburger site. Time Magazine had an article on it too.

Sample: Genesis 1:28-
"go forth and multiply"-> " O hai maek bebehs kthx"


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Wednesday, September 03, 2008

USM is our apex university

The Higher Education ministry has just announced that Universiti Sains Malaysia is our new "Apex University". The goal is to make USM a top 50 University by 2020. USM is to become an "Institution of Transformation, Excellence centres and Specialised Development" whatever that means.

I am a bit disappointed Universiti Malaya wasn't chosen, primarily because it's the university closest to my home. Also, UM was a very good university not too long ago, and it would have been nice from a historical perspective to bring it back to its glory days.

I know professors in UKM were talking about this program since about four years ago, so hopefully that means the ministry has been doing a long and thorough period of evaluation, and that USM is indeed the best choice.

Wow, Penangites are a lucky bunch. First the word heritage site thing, and now this.

News report in the Malaysian Insider


Edit: Press Conference:

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Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Chrome


Google just released its own web browser, Chrome
Unfortunately, it's only available for Windows, so I don't have a chance to try it out yet. But ye masses under Microsoft's thrall should give it a go. Google promises that Linux and Mac-compatible versions will be out soon though.

Market share in the Browser Wars is roughly at 70% Internet Explorer, 20% Firefox and 10% Safari.

Ultimately, I think the release of Chrome will hurt Firefox more than IE. The people who use IE use it because it came bundled in their computer, and are ignorant of, or won't bother to consider the other browsers in the market. This is the only reason I can imagine anyone using IE rather than Opera and Firefox, two browsers that are superior to it in every conceivable way.

These diehards will not switch even if Chrome makes your CD drive spit out gold coins.

If Chrome turns out to be awesome- and with Google's resources and expertise behind it, this is a fair assumption- Firefox might be swept into oblivion.

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Monday, September 01, 2008

When I run, I feel His pleasure

On the plane from Malaysia, I got the chance to watch the classic (Academy-award winning) 1981 film, Chariots of Fire. Chariots of Fire is the true story of the British track team for the 1924 Olympics, focusing in particular on Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddel, the gold medalists for the 100m and the 400m respectively.

Liddel is a missionary to China who puts off his work for a few years to train and compete in the Olympics. He discovers that the heats for the 100m (his best event) is going to be held on a Sunday. As he believes that running on the Sabbath would be dishonoring God, Liddel drops out of the 100m, to the horror of his team-mates and the British Olympic committee. The British contestant for the 400m offers to trade places with him, and Liddel manages a shock win in the event, despite not having had the opportunity to train for the 400m.

***

There are two compelling scenes that make Liddel an especially compelling character for me. Firstly, his sister is very upset at him at first for neglecting his ministry work at their church because he spends so much time training for the Olympics. Liddel responds to her with what I feel is the best line of the film:

"I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure. "

Sometimes my friends disapprove of me investing so much in math, given how useless it is. I've had Christian friends tell me that I should do something that 'builds the kingdom'.

I know God made me for a purpose far greater than to be a mathematician, But in all humility, He made me freakishly good at math. And working on math makes me feel happy. When I'm working, even on a mundane homework problem I feel His peace, I feel his pleasure.

And although I disagree with the assertion that math has no practical application, I can, at least say for certain that it is more useful than running around a track.

***

I'm also deeply compelled by the very idea of skipping the Olympics, in an event you've been training for for years and years and are expected to win. Liddel got a lot of criticism from his team officials, the press, and the Prince of Wales for his decision, and stuck with it.

Frankly, I've been around a lot of devout Christians, but I don't know anyone who has taken the fourth commandment as seriously as Liddel did. Even Christian Radio stations, like KLTY over in Dallas-Fort Worth operate on Sundays.

I tried intermittently to put off work on Sundays a few years ago. I also made a more sustained effort this past academic year. I would start from Sunset on Saturday night to Sunset on Sunday, and devote that time exclusively to Church, prayer, and (casual) reading, and swimming (I'm thinking of disallowing swimming though). This isn't proof of anything, but I've gotten a perfect 4.0 (i.e. A's in all my classes) since I started doing this seriously.

I wasn't always faithful to doing this, and I think I want to make a more sustained effort this year. I think my good friend Jason put it well when he noted that we take the other 9 commandments seriously, so why not this one?

***
Here's a clip of the movie, one of the closing scenes.

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