Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Booyah!


Alright. I think it might be a fact in life that the things that make you want (sometimes not even just want...) to tear your hair out when they go wrong are also the things that make you grin uncontrollably and feel like jumping around the room when they go well. Computer programming is one of these things.

I just wrote a program to handle transactions in a savings account. Without errors. On the first try. :D
(for you non-programmers, without errors means I didn't misspell anything (even the crazy words that only exist in the Java-programming language), didn't misplace any semicolons, did all the crazy Java syntax correctly, everything... I'm so proud!)

Alright. Unfortunately, even that success doesn't mean my work is done! I wanted to share that with you, though. :)

(I've attached a picture. Don't feel the need to look at it if you don't want to! And if anyone reading this is actually a serious programmer, don't laugh at me. I'm just learning how to do this!)

Monday, January 30, 2012

Back to the ol' grind.

10:00 a.m.

Lecture hall N2

January 30, 2012

My exams are coming closer. That wouldn’t be a problem if we weren’t also getting new homework every day in each of my classes. I may have mentioned this before, but I think you really are a student when you experience the feeling of: “I can’t go to this lecture – I need that time to do the homework for the lecture!”

But don’t worry. It’s all getting done, slowly but surely – classes go until the 17th of February and my first exam isn’t until the 1st of March. *breathe in, breathe out*

This weekend, we had a lovely visit from C’s mom – we spent a lot of time walking around the city and seeing/showing off the sights here in Mainz and going to see a movie (Ziemlich beste Freunde/Untouchables/Intouchables -- amazing film!) on Saturday night, and yesterday, we went to see the Mainz soccer team fantastically beat the Freiburg soccer team. What a game – in the first FIVE minutes, two goals for Mainz, and a red card for Freiburg. Fantastic!

Now, unfortunately, C’s mom had to go back home and for C and I, that means another week has started – classes, homework, trains, going to the gym, wanting to take naps – the whole routine. We’re spicing up the week, though. Tuesday night is Pub Quiz night at the Irish Pub in town, Wednesday is making sushi at another exchange student’s house, and at some point during the week, I’m going to hang out with some of my math friends and reminisce about how much fun the Math Department Ball was last Thursday. J

And a video is in the works. I got lots of great suggestions – show us more of the university/the other students, do a video in German, show us some of the fun things you’ve been cooking, show us what it is you actually DO for your math classes…. Some combination of those things will be coming soon!

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Learn something new every day!

Whoa! I just figured out that if you click on the pictures on this page, you get to see them much bigger and prettier! Cool... maybe you already new that. :) If you didn't, try it out!








Just one thing to add...

There's a problem with having class at 8. You have to eat breakfast around 7. Which means....

My stomach just growled so loudly I am certain the entire department heard it!

Happy Coincidences

This is a good day.

I didn't think so when the alarm went off at 6. I went to start preheating the shower (oh, yes. Just like an oven.) I was thinking about how on Thursdays, I only have one lecture but it's at 8:00 and Thursday's also the day when all of my homework is due, for every class. That means that sometimes, Thursdays drag on. Somehow every week, a bit of the homework for each class gets pushed until Thursday so after that 8:00 lecture (it's Differential Equations - my Complex Analysis class is actually only half Complex Analysis - DGL (Differenzialgleichungen) ((as I refer to them now)) is the second part) I hang around in the math department until my homework buddies are done with their classes and then we work and try to get our homework in enough order to be hand-in-able. In any case, Thursday evenings I look forward to since everything is turned in and the new homework isn't online yet, so I literally have nothing to do (besides studying... mrrrh. Curse of being a student. You're never really done!) - but the actual day part of Thursday can be a bit of a drag.

But this morning - this morning there was tons of laughter over breakfast and coffee, I left in time for the bus and ran into my homework partner for DGL at the bus stop (I realized about two days ago that she lives maybe two blocks away from us!) and we rode to campus together (I now know about a bus that stops much closer to the math building than the one I had been taking!) and had as good of a time in class as is possible to have. Then I went over to the math department and got myself a cup of good, strong coffee and have been writing back to various people and finishing up odds and ends of assignments for the past hour. Then I got an email from someone in my Computer Programming class who had been AWOL during the last week - he had told the other people in our homework group that he was going to be gone, but not for how long, and also not why. Turns out: he was at a training for a program he's going to do in May -- going to be an English teacher in Thailand, through AFS (American Field Service). !!!!

For those of you who don't know, I also went through AFS to Thailand and have been looking for some way to connect with this guy in the group since I had the feeling he was a nice guy but shy and I had no idea who he really was, therefore working together was sometimes awkward. But we've been writing back and forth for the past half hour and decided I should teach him some Thai, and -- I'm just so happy.

It's also stopped being so cold today. I mean, yes, it's January so the weather has a right to be cold, but the past few days it happened so suddenly I just felt chilled to the bone. But today, it's warm enough to rain but there's no wind. I love rain. I love the smell of rain and the smell of the streets after they've been soaked with rain. This day is just unfolding into so much more fun than I had expected. I just had to share it!

And I'll get around to posting the pictures from Erin soon! Happy Thursday, all!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Me Again!

Checking in at 2:04 in the afternoon on January 15th.

I wanted to inform everyone that after the visit to the doctor that I had last Tuesday, I now have an official clean bill of health. This is the first time in about two months that I've actually felt like me - healthy, awake, energetic, and happy. It feels wonderful.

Possibly the best thing was going for my first run after that long time of being sick - I had my iPod with a book on tape going and went on a different route through the city than I normally do when I run and I just felt alive again. Health is under-appreciated. I'm sure not taking it for granted now.

Among other things, the semester has officially started back up again (yes, to my friends who are reading this and not studying in Germany, we are still in our fall semester. Classes end on February 17 and then there's a two month "break" ((this is when final exams occur)) and then the spring semester starts in April) and the fact that I'm no longer exhausted from simply walking up one flight of stairs makes going to classes and understanding what's going on much easier. And, to make things even better, Erin was here to visit last week!

Erin, who is studying abroad this year in Scotland but usually studies with me at Mills College, was a fantastic houseguest! While she was here, we drank a lot of tea, went on several lovely walks through the city (during which she took several lovely pictures - Erin, can I steal some of them from your facebook page and post them here?) and even had a double-feature movie night with a friend of ours here (David) where we watched Crash (Called L.A. Crash in Germany) and The Princess Bride. There was also some Sopio playing (a game you really ought to know) and a good deal of talking about how strange it will be to be back in California next year.

Unfortunately, Erin had to leave to get back to her studies, but it was wonderful to have her here, and I hope she comes to visit again before the year is done.

I've been thinking quite a lot lately about trying to make videos more often. I don't know what any of you thought of the last one, but I wanted to know if you have any ideas about videos I should make. Is there anything in Mainz you'd like to see more of, or something that I haven't even shown or written about but that you are curious about? Should I explain some of what we're doing in my classes? Give you a more close-up look at anything? Are videos better than blog entries? Worse? About the same?

If you can spare the thirty seconds it takes to write a comment here, please do so. If writing a comment seems beyond you technologically, you can also write me an email. :)

I've gotta go work on some programming homework, but do check in. I like it better when I know for whom I am writing, if you know what I mean.

Have a lovely rest of your Sunday and a good upcoming week!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

OH. MY. GOODNESS.

So, in preparation for the inevitable semester, I have been doing quite a bit of studying these days - rewriting homework assignments, rereading notes, recopying important information from notes, doing new homework, etc. Today, I started doing another very useful thing I have never done before: looking up videos on youtube about what I'm studying. I don't think it is a fact specific to math that often, when you want to learn something, it's good to have more than one person explain it to you - that way, you get a more complete picture of what's going on. So, I've been using the internet to do just that!

Now here is the fantastic coincidence. I'm looking up something rather obscure (well, not obscure at all if you're in a complex analysis class, but I'm assuming you are not) on youtube: I put into the search bar "Complex Analysis Residue Theorem", and the first two hits on youtube are videos from the same guy, and his voice puts me to sleep, so I don't watch them. The third video is entitled:

2553 Math II lecture 14 chapter 6.5 residues and residue theorem part 5


Sounds good, right? Guess what. IT'S IN THAI! I don't know what kind of crazy cosmic coincidence that was, but I haven't laughed that hard in a long time - and I haven't heard Thai in forever! I'm gonna go and watch the rest. :)

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Welcome, 2012!

Hello, all.

I hope you had a lovely New Year's Eve/Day and are not feeling overwhelmed by the winter holiday season being over and that bringing in the inevitable return to work/college/school. I invite you to take the minutes it takes you to read this as an excuse to not think about that workplace/those exams/or that really annoying teacher of yours that you'll have to see really soon! Take a second to scroll down and listen to one of the fun songs listed at the bottom of this page and just chill while you read. :) I put those there for a reason, you know.

C and I celebrated New Year's Eve here in Mainz, and as much as I really am a fan of holidays in the U.S., I have to say I have never experienced such an incredible New Year's Eve. (My American friends - in Germany, they have fireworks on New Year's Eve. Why don't WE have fireworks on New Year's Eve??)

So, besides the base-level coolness of fireworks in the middle of winter, we are also in Mainz. With the Rhine (yes, it's spelled differently in English). Claudia and I walked down the many steps out of our apartment and down onto the street at about 11:30 at night and started to walk in the direction of the Rhine. As we walked, more and more people came from different directions, all headed towards the river. By the time we got there, it had really turned into a beautiful pilgrimage with people of all ages and kinds walking in pairs or groups or just alone in the middle of the street, no cars to be seen.

As we were walking, there were already the occasional bursts of light from an alley or booms in the sky from people who just couldn't wait until midnight to set off theirs. Eventually the pilgrimage river reached the banks of the actual river and spilled out in all directions. C and I walked down a path that runs parallel to the river with trees arching over on each side. We saw people walking around with sparklers and bottles of champagne and as midnight came nearer, more and more fireworks were bursting around us.

I was a little sad as I heard them all go, thinking that midnight itself would be less exciting since people couldn't seem to restrain themselves. I asked Claudia to check her cell phone to see how close to midnight we actually were -- and then the world exploded.

It was deafening and, in the actual meaning of the word, awesome. Awe-inspiring. All around us sparks and flames were dancing in the air, the noise was colossal and you couldn't even hear your ears ringing because there wasn't a minute when another firework wasn't racing its way into the sky right next to you. Anywhere we turned the sky was full of red, green, yellow, blue, white - people around us were kissing, smiling, laughing, wishing complete strangers a Happy New Year, and doing what we were doing - staring up into the sky with wonder. All the dancing sparks were reflected in the river, and when we looked across the river, we could see Wiesbaden (another large city that is only separated from Mainz by the river) and we watched as an endless rippling curtain of fireworks erupted over the houses on the far bank.

Claudia and I walked and watched, walked and watched, pointed and gasped, and eventually, after at least a half-hour of the amazing show, decided to make our way home. All the way I was thinking about how, unlike Christmas (which can tend to be a little sad after you grow up a bit and the magical Christmas you remember having as a kid never seems to happen again, even when you try your best to have it the same as it was), New Year's is almost always a happy holiday for me. And as I looked around at the people next to us on the streets, I didn't see anyone frowning. There were the blissfully happy couples, old and young, the families with children holding their ears shut at the sound of fireworks but still watching them with smiles they couldn't contain, here and there a person standing alone looking lost in thought (maybe with their minds wandering to a person he or she would rather have been standing there with - I've been that kind of person on New Year's before - there's kind of a poetic happiness to that, too, so I'm counting those people as happy), groups of teenagers roughly shoving fireworks into old bottles to get them at a good angle to shoot up into the sky (even if that's not my favorite thing to see on New Year's, at least they were glad to be doing what they were doing), and even as the streets echoed with the booms of the fireworks and the air became harder to breathe with all the excess smoke while, I still felt like I was walking in my own world.

After what really felt like an adventure navigating the labyrinth of smoke-shrouded streets with people setting off fireworks around corners, we made it back home. There was some staring out of the window looking over the train tracks and talking about all the things that we had done in the last year, and then we fell, very sleepily, into bed. Definitely the best New Year's Eve of my life. And so far, this new year has been pretty good as well.

We're headed to Frankfurt today to help look at a potential apartment for a friend of Claudia's, and that's a wonderful excuse to go back to the exquisite Thai restaurant we graced with our patronage the last time we were in the big city. I'm looking forward to it!

P.S. This vacation is fun. Why do classes need to start again?

P.P.S. I've been working quite a lot (well, a reasonable amount) on studying for my classes over break, and stochastics is starting to make sense! Wahooo!