Monday, August 10, 2020
Friday morning potpourri in lab
Friday morning potpourri in lab I have a couple of unrelated things to relate today, so Ill put headings in bold and you can skip around as you see fit. On reward as a motivation. So by way of introduction, it is 9:50 AM on a Friday morning. I have no classes on Fridays (except for a 7.28 recitation to which I have never gone), so you might wonder why on earth I am awake and not curled up in my cozy bed. (Im wondering that a little myself.) I am, somewhat involuntarily, in lab, finishing up a Western blot. I swear, my cells call the shots around this joint. The sort of puzzling thing is that nothing that Ive done this year really matters for my next steps graduate schools dont ask for mid-year reports or expect that youll keep your grades up after acceptance, so I could literally have gotten/get straight Ds all year and still happily gone off to graduate school in the fall. At this point, my project may or may not be done by the time I leave for grad school, so working really hard on it between now and the end of summer isnt necessarily going to net me any publications. And yet Im getting A-/B+s in all my academic classes and working 20+ hours a week in lab. Its nice to know I dont do it for the tangible rewards. :) MITs campus and being happy to be alive. Ali Yahya on CC was asking about the MIT campus, and it made me think of my favorite places on campus to sit and take deep breaths and enjoy being alive. (You have to have those places anywhere you are, or youll go crazy, I think.) People are very concerned about the aesthetics of various college campuses, something I dont necessarily understand I mean, really, how superficial is that? I think what matters more is the number of places you can really enjoy, regardless of the overall look of campus as a whole. People really denigrate the MIT campus, which I think is a little odd since there are so many great things about campus that youd overlook if you were obsessed with all the buildings being the same style or something. Campus tends to feel very home-y and lived-in, maybe because it is somewhat small and there are main thoroughfares like the Infinite Corridor which most people travel during the course of a day. There are a lot of benches in most of the main hallways, and people sit and talk on them and drape themselves over them and sometimes nap on them. I think its a very friendly campus, and I enjoy running into people I know every time I walk through the halls. My favorite places on campus 1. The 24-hour reading room in Hayden Library. There are cushy chairs and lots of quiet. I like to take naps there. The rest of Hayden (the major campus library) is also good for sitting and taking deep breaths and reading. Plus Hayden has a huge collection of science journals! Whats not to love? 2. Overlooking lobby 7 from the second or third floor. Theres this cute little bench where I like to sit, or sometimes I just like to lean over the balcony and watch people. Lobby 7 is very grand and open and dome-y, and I get a little swell of pride reading the inscription around the dome Established for Advancement and Development of Science its Application to Industry the Arts Agriculture and Commerce sort of makes me feel like a nice little stone in the giant edifice that is MIT science. 3. The new Brain and Cognitive Sciences building. I like to sit on my labs balcony overlooking the atrium and take in the blue sky through the skylight. (I did this yesterday for almost an hour, just sitting and enjoying the sun.) 4. The roof of the Student Center. (Not that Ive ever, ahem, been there. Just using my imagination.) Im sure the roof of the Green Building is even more spectacular. 5. Killian Court. Especially on sunny days, you can sit and look at the elegant columns and enjoy the sunshine and watch the river. 6. (Not on campus, but close enough to go on a lunch break) Boston Common. I like to take the T into the city if I have a long lunch and watch the ducks on the duck pond. Adam. Adam posted a comment on his entry last night (even though I told him not to). In case you didnt see it, it said Mollie told me that Im supposed to answer all these comments/questions when I write my next entry. But, Im too impatient. Minh: Once I build my planes I fly them. Thats the fun part. But I seem to get into a build, fly, crash, repeat cycle. So Im always building something new. Rosen: Most of my airplanes are built from kits, but with heavy modification. The blade runner was a toy helicopter I picked up at the Discovery Channel store, then modified it (alot). The small blue plane was my own design, and uses electronics out of another cheap rc toy. I reorganized my public folder and put all my airplane movies here. I will personally apologize for the quality of the airplane movies, since I am the one filming them and a) I am not a particularly good cameraperson and b) my camera is not a particularly good camera. Minh asked Adam if MIT students really make enough to pay off the MIT self-help portion of financial aid (currently $5500 but possibly changing). It really depends on how much you work. If you are funded through the UROP office and work both terms of a year plus the summer, you make $6775 in a year. If youre funded through your UROP supervisor, you can make significantly more I cleared about $10000 last year. If youre taking a private internship, you can make even more than that Adam gets paid twice what I do to work at Draper. You can always take out loans to meet self-help, as Dinyar noted, but if you work during the school year and the summer, making $5500 in a year shouldnt be a huge problem. Laura expressed surprise that Adam was using Explorer for his webpage. I hadnt noticed, and upon reading the comment I snarked at Adam. Im enough of a computer snob to use Firefox religiously (although not enough of one to not use Windows XP) Adam uses Firefox reluctantly, but swears that Dreamweaver works better with IE. *sigh* I will let Adam write an entry about his research soon although I dont know how much hell be able to say he is funded by the Department of Defense, after all! RD decisions. I want to wish everybody absolutely the best of luck. Ill be in Maine with Adam skiing this weekend, but I fully expect to come back to everybodys news through blog comments or through email.
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