So, helping out on a Senior Design project has its perks here at LeTourneau. I got to use a four-channel digital oscilloscope, an RF signal generator, and a network analyzer this weekend. Definitely realizing more and more that Electrical Engineering is the right area for me.
Oh, and if anyone is looking for ideas for a birthday present... I've got something: An oscilloscope, preferably with a digital user interface and at least two input channels. Should be only about $500 to $5000.
"Nothing is more wonderful than the art of being free, but nothing is harder to learn how to use than freedom." - Alexis de Tocqueville
Monday, February 6, 2012
Saturday, January 21, 2012
A Semester to Remember
Oh boy! This semester is going to be fun. Not only am I taking seven classes and labs, I am also grading Circuits I homework, coordinating the final project for Digital Electronics, and helping out on a Senior Design project. Oh, and the work I have to do to apply for a massive scholarship. I have already eaten up many hours researching and writing the essay for that application. I am going to be so busy, it's going to be sensationally fun. As long as I don't fall behind.
If I can carve out the time, I'll try and post something now and then about what I am learning. I feel like I am going to be a little bit of an authority on several fields by the time this semester is over.
If I can carve out the time, I'll try and post something now and then about what I am learning. I feel like I am going to be a little bit of an authority on several fields by the time this semester is over.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Chemistry 101
I learned 4 new things yesterday:
Phosphoric acid (H3PO4) removes iron oxide (Fe2O3).
Common soda contains phosphoric acid.
Contrary to popular belief, or whatever belief there is, the phosphoric acid in soda is far too dilute to react with the ammonia in Windex. Or, they don't react at all.
It takes a while to boil soda down to get a more concentrated phosphoric acid.
You know... chemistry is actually interesting when it becomes practical.
Phosphoric acid (H3PO4) removes iron oxide (Fe2O3).
Common soda contains phosphoric acid.
Contrary to popular belief, or whatever belief there is, the phosphoric acid in soda is far too dilute to react with the ammonia in Windex. Or, they don't react at all.
It takes a while to boil soda down to get a more concentrated phosphoric acid.
You know... chemistry is actually interesting when it becomes practical.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Another Lame Editorial
I am tipping the hat here to Jared Wheeler. He keeps serving up material that is just too good.
After reading this article, I hoped for the periodical's sake that it was an editorial, but even then, I think this article should be embarrassing to the paper.
Okay, so Mr. Weinstein, here's the deal: the job market is riper for STEM graduates than liberal arts majors. Maybe, it's an overreach of the state's power for it to actually monetarily favor one program over another, but let's face the facts, if we are talking about jobs and economic growth, anthropology and the arts can't hold a candle to engineering, computer science, and other applied sciences and maths. It's not that the liberal arts aren't worth studying... they just don't pay you back in cold hard cash as well as studying the sciences and mathematics.
The governor was talking about jobs. But, Mr. Weinstein has to create some underlying motives to make his article more interesting. And so, Rick Scott is really trying to squelch free thought and progressive education, whereby students are nurtured to challenge established social norms and stand up for equality... Oh, those racist Tea Partiers!
After reading this article, I hoped for the periodical's sake that it was an editorial, but even then, I think this article should be embarrassing to the paper.
Okay, so Mr. Weinstein, here's the deal: the job market is riper for STEM graduates than liberal arts majors. Maybe, it's an overreach of the state's power for it to actually monetarily favor one program over another, but let's face the facts, if we are talking about jobs and economic growth, anthropology and the arts can't hold a candle to engineering, computer science, and other applied sciences and maths. It's not that the liberal arts aren't worth studying... they just don't pay you back in cold hard cash as well as studying the sciences and mathematics.
The governor was talking about jobs. But, Mr. Weinstein has to create some underlying motives to make his article more interesting. And so, Rick Scott is really trying to squelch free thought and progressive education, whereby students are nurtured to challenge established social norms and stand up for equality... Oh, those racist Tea Partiers!
Saturday, October 8, 2011
MSNBC vs. Hermain Cain
This video makes for an interesting watch. Lawrence O'Donnell does a pretty good job trying to get Herman Cain to look bad or make a statement that he would regret, but seriously I think the MSNBC host just caused Herman Cain to shine brighter.
Although Cain gives a few answers that seem to dance around the questions, he largely hits O'Donnell's questions right on and also attacks the reasoning that O'Donnell seems to be using in his questions. This candidate makes O'Donnell look like an idiot... it's too funny.
Although Cain gives a few answers that seem to dance around the questions, he largely hits O'Donnell's questions right on and also attacks the reasoning that O'Donnell seems to be using in his questions. This candidate makes O'Donnell look like an idiot... it's too funny.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Two Monitors
Just updating the world... I officially have a dual monitor setup. It's amazing how handy a second one proves to be. I can't see how I got along with only one before this.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Who Can Write?
I find myself pondering a question on the eve of trying out for the LeTourneau Yellow Jacket. Specifically, I intend to become a freelance writer for them. I have a problem though... the school newspaper is so bad, do I want to associate myself with them?
Don't get me wrong. I am not that pompous. I simply wonder that if by writing for the Yellow Jacket I will also become one of those school paper writers who are quietly dismissed and pitied as oblivious and amateur writers (oblivious to their amateurishness). Or, maybe that thought was unique to my mind.
Why do I hate reading the articles in the school newspaper so much?
I think it's because they sound just as if the writer were there talking to you. This may be a desirable attribute to some when they are consuming reading material, but if I want this, I can just go talk to someone. When I want to read about things at LeTourneau, I want to read poetry!
Oh, it's LeTourneau...
Don't get me wrong. I am not that pompous. I simply wonder that if by writing for the Yellow Jacket I will also become one of those school paper writers who are quietly dismissed and pitied as oblivious and amateur writers (oblivious to their amateurishness). Or, maybe that thought was unique to my mind.
Why do I hate reading the articles in the school newspaper so much?
I think it's because they sound just as if the writer were there talking to you. This may be a desirable attribute to some when they are consuming reading material, but if I want this, I can just go talk to someone. When I want to read about things at LeTourneau, I want to read poetry!
Oh, it's LeTourneau...
Sunday, September 4, 2011
The IQ of LeTu just bumped up a few notches.
I have renewed hope for the state of LeTourneau students. I can even say there is a bastion of cynicism on campus, above and beyond myself, that is.
Sunday, I got a chance to read a well-written paper by an honors student from cohort '10. This little essay was questioning the legitimacy of some Peterson material in a Biblical Literature class.
Thursday, I had a wonderful time at supper with a number of the Davis 1 community, the new Honors cohort this year.
Friday, I observed some of the trappings and floor life of this new Honors floor on Davis 1. I was fairly impressed by what I saw, and a little bit jealous.
This last Sunday (yesterday, technically speaking), I had one of the most stimulating conversations with fellow LeTourneau students that I have ever partaken of. You don't just have that kind of a conversation... you partake of it. And, thus I discovered another one among a handful of cynics on campus.
Sunday, I got a chance to read a well-written paper by an honors student from cohort '10. This little essay was questioning the legitimacy of some Peterson material in a Biblical Literature class.
Thursday, I had a wonderful time at supper with a number of the Davis 1 community, the new Honors cohort this year.
Friday, I observed some of the trappings and floor life of this new Honors floor on Davis 1. I was fairly impressed by what I saw, and a little bit jealous.
This last Sunday (yesterday, technically speaking), I had one of the most stimulating conversations with fellow LeTourneau students that I have ever partaken of. You don't just have that kind of a conversation... you partake of it. And, thus I discovered another one among a handful of cynics on campus.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
A Checklist
Today, I...
1. Survived my second day in Engineering Project Management class. My team turned in our project roles, and I am now the Project Manager.
2. Sat through a seminar given by a visiting Ph.D. who was being considered for the LeTourneau Chemistry/Physics department. I discovered that I knew nothing of multiscale coupling and nanometer physics before the seminar, and now I understand possibly two vague ideas about the subject.
3. Survived frisbee golf out in almost 100 degree weather for over an hour.
4. Tripped a breaker in my apartment when I was performing an electrical experiment... *ahem* I mean testing something out.
And, I feel like I have done almost nothing all day. Honestly, this is the slowest start to a semester I have ever had.
1. Survived my second day in Engineering Project Management class. My team turned in our project roles, and I am now the Project Manager.
2. Sat through a seminar given by a visiting Ph.D. who was being considered for the LeTourneau Chemistry/Physics department. I discovered that I knew nothing of multiscale coupling and nanometer physics before the seminar, and now I understand possibly two vague ideas about the subject.
3. Survived frisbee golf out in almost 100 degree weather for over an hour.
4. Tripped a breaker in my apartment when I was performing an electrical experiment... *ahem* I mean testing something out.
And, I feel like I have done almost nothing all day. Honestly, this is the slowest start to a semester I have ever had.
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