 Saturday, August 20, 2005

Yesterday, I called a few people for a night out in Central Square on a
whim. Only Milt and Fanny responded to my calling. We started the night
with dinner at Rangzen Tibetan
restaurant. I was thrilled to finally dine at Rangzen as I have heard
many good things about this restaurant. Indeed, I was impressed by its
Tibetan food. I also learned from last night that Rangzen serves
inexpensive buffet for lunch and being halfway between my apartment and
MIT, I know that I will be coming back to Rangzen for more Tibetan
delights very soon.
We got a call from Blanche and Ketan after dinner who
suggested that we watch "Wedding Crashers" at Loews Boston Commons. The
movie was aptly suitable for Milt and I as we will be attending 2
weddings in September. Aside from the superfluous sex theme, the movie
deploys the same type of humor like those of "Old School", "Anchorman",
and "Meet the Parents." Overall, it was an entertaining movie to watch
on a Friday night. After the movie, we went back to Central Square for
a few pints at my home bar, the People's Republik. It was a good Friday
night to be doing something on impulse.
| 8/20/2005 11:38:07 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Social |
|
|

Errata... As it turns out, the Economic review class that I mentioned on my last blog is for TPP students only. It is not the same as the one that is offered for the MBA students.
There were reports of theft in my apartment building's mailboxes
recently. Coincidentally I have not received my last 2 issues of the Economist. So, I am delighted to finally receive this week's issue of the Economist in my mail.
Speaking of Economics, I heard this on Marketplace
(the radio program) while driving yesterday. It seems that the U.S.
dollar is losing its appeal to overseas. Reports shows that confidence
in greenbacks is falling, which is reflected in the low dollar value
against the Yen and Euro. In today's economy, we import much more than
we export. With the ever increasing trade deficit, we are becoming more
dependent on foreign investment to stabilize the dollar. On the
political front, deliberate resistance to halt foreign acquisition of
U.S. assets may send yet another bad image that investments in U.S. is
more of hassle than it is worth. But the bigger question is why should
foreign investors be buying dollars now, only to invest in our public
debt? Perhaps, the looming budget deficit may be the biggest factor in
turning investors away from investing in the U.S. economy. If all this
is true, this means that the dollar will continue to decline and
inflation will eventually rise. Interesting piece...
| 8/20/2005 1:57:24 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Radio |
|
|
 Friday, August 19, 2005

Yesterday, I met with Pat Hale, the SDM Program Director, and Yoko Urano, the TPP
Program Administrator, to sort out a few administrative and logistical
concerns of my dual degree status. It was a productive day. I am really
looking forward to meeting my new classmates in the TPP program.
According to Yoko, the incoming TPP class is 40 students strong,
representing diverse cultural and academic backgrounds. I have also
learned from yesterday's meeting with Yoko that there's an optional
week-long Economic Review that new TPP students should take especially
if they have little or no background in Microeconomics. I believe that this is the same Economic review class, along with 2 other review classes in Math/Statistics and Accounting, that MIT Sloan
offers to its incoming MBA students. Since my undergrad Microeconomics
course was so badly delivered, my knowledge on economics is rusty. So
it would be pertinent for me to attend this week-long review class.
Besides, I heard that there'll be unofficial happy hours at Sloan next
week.
| 8/19/2005 9:26:28 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
School |
|
|

Since Dinesh, a recent SDM graduate, was throwing out a bunch of stuff as he prepared to move out of Sidney-Pacific dormitory, I eased his burden by collecting a handful of his swags. I am planning to, once again, sell my excess personal inventory at the MIT Swapfest this coming Sunday. I shouldn't have any problem selling Dinesh's items along with my stuff as I suspect that there will be plenty of incoming and returning students at the swapfest.
On other news, Pat Hale, our program director, was pleased that a handful of students showed up at Wednesday's SDM info session to meet with prospective students. He said that prospective students appreciate a different perspective to the program from current students. Conversely, I also learn something from prospective students about their profession, motivation, and career objectives. It was insightful.
| 8/19/2005 3:20:20 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Personal |
|
|
 Thursday, August 18, 2005

I have just written a paper titled "Analyzing Link-Level Acknowledgements Using Extensible Information" with 4 other distinguished experts in the field of Network Communication. You can download the full paper here.
...
If you think I wrote that paper, think again. Some MIT students from CSAIL wrote a web application called SCIgen that randomly generates Computer Science/Engineering technical papers. And in the grand tradition of MIT hacks, the writers of SCIgen tested out their program last spring by generating a random paper and submitted it to WWSCI 2005 conference.
"Three Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate students attracted a flurry of media attention in April after a questionable academic conference accepted their randomly-generated, nonsensical paper. Now the students are stars of a lighthearted video they made when they went to the conference even though their invitations had been withdrawn."
Check out their home-brewed video here.
| 8/18/2005 11:39:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Humor |
|
|
 Wednesday, August 17, 2005

My powerbook has been crashing the past few weeks. We are talking about
hard (kernel-level) system hang-ups here. For weeks, I tolerated the
inconveniences associated with system crash and rebooted my machine
every time without complaints. But when my mac crashed over 20 times
over the course of last weekend, that's when I told myself "enough is
enough."
I really like the way Apple set up their Apple Stores. A typically
Apple Store personifies the Apple culture right on the mark. Its uber
coolness and hipness appeal to both the young and the old (like me).
The staff are friendly, passionate, and knowledgeable on their products
that they sell. I have grilled the store staff with several hard
computer-related questions before and they have responded well to my
questions. But far from being satisfied because of my powerbook
problem, I brought my mac to the Apple Store
in CambridgeSide Galleria last night for a technician (or what Apple
call an Mac Genius) to look at it. As I described my problem to Mr.
Mac Genius at the store, it suddenly dawned on me that I had added a
new variable call extra RAM into system a few weeks ago. Innocently
enough, the 512MB DIMM module fits right into the powerbook and it is
even recognized by the system; however, but I was starting to suspect
that the DIMM is the cause of my problem as the problem started
surfacing after I had installed the RAM module. For this reason, I told
Mr. Mac Genius that I am going to revert my machine back to the
original factory memory configuration to test my hypothesis, thereby
possibly avoiding my powerbook from being sent back to Apple for
service. So far, my powerbook has not crashed since the reversion.
Unfortunately, we found another problem during my visit to the Apple
Store. Apparently, the base of my powerbook is slight warped and not
laying flat onto the table surface, consequently causing the powerbook
to wobble when I type. Mr. Mac Genius told me that I should send the
powerbook back to Apple for service. There is actual a good chance that
I may actually end up with a brand new powerbook as replacement for
this flaw. Hmmm... That's quite an appealing suggestion.
| 8/17/2005 11:04:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Mac |
|
|

Yesterday was great day for me. First, I declared summer semester
officially over after turning in my final paper for Fabrication
Technology. What a relief. I can finally start to enjoy my summer. But
the day got even better. Other than the great news from TPP,
I got a few of surprises in my mail as well. I was happy to receive a
rebate from Apple for their Student Union promotion within 2 weeks of
mailing my rebate application to them. The big surprise, however, was
my receipt of a refund from Comcast. They said that I double paid for
my July bill and they are refunding me the surplus. Sweet!
| 8/17/2005 12:11:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Personal |
|
|
 Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Other than the heavy school load and apartment moving, another high
stress that I experienced this past summer was my admission application
for Technology and Policy Program
(or TPP). Since TPP doesn't accept GMAT but GRE scores as part of their
admission application, I had to take the GRE 1 1/2 months ago. The
stress and efforts spent in the TPP admission process finally paid off
today. It is now official, I was notified earlier today that I have
been accepted to the TPP program. In other words, I will be pursuing 2
degrees simultaneously at MIT.
So what made me decide to suddenly take a policy track in my academic
pursuit? I think it was my self-affirming experience in last year's
tsunami disaster that made me contemplate on how responsible and
pragmatic engineering can help to solve issues and problems confronting
the human society. I grew up asking big questions, so naturally I want
to broaden my academic interests to include economics and policy.
Specifically, I am interested in assessing opportunities, hazards, and
benefits of nanotechnology in society and politics. With this in mind,
I need to start searching for research opportunities and a thesis
advisor in this area. Also, with this new development, I won't be
graduating in June 2006 as originally planned, but by January 2007. For
once, I would just like to take my time to finish up my classes and be
more engaged with the student and research community at MIT. I am glad;
my academic plan at MIT is finally taking hold.
| 8/16/2005 11:36:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
School |
|
|
 Monday, August 15, 2005

I was supposed to run the Witch City Triathlon 2 weeks ago. But due to the excessive school load I couldn't find time to train and eventually gave up on running the triathlon. Today, I received a surprise refund check from Fiske Independent Race Management or F.I.R.M, the organizer of the event. Kudos to the organizer for the cash.
On a different note, the evening run today was great. With my chest pain gone, my strides were strong and my posture confident and relaxed. The temperature was nice too. Overall, it was a good run. I just have one more thing I need to do today: to complete my final paper for Fabrication Technology. So let's get it over with...
| 8/15/2005 8:32:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Sports |
|
|

For people who have read the excellent book The Whale and the Reactor, are immediately familiar to Langdon Winner's thesis on how technology are often design, built, and then deployed in society with little concern for sustainability, humane regard, and conservation. Being a fan of the book, I was especially excited when I found Langdon Winner's blog on the Internet earlier today.
| 8/15/2005 5:30:25 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Blog |
|
|
 Sunday, August 14, 2005

For dinner last night, Brian R. and I went to Sushi Express, which is known for its inexpensive sushi offerings. The sushi was so-so. It was not fresh enough to satisfy the picky taste of mine. But knowing that bad sushi is after all compelling food, the dinner was still better than the regular food that I eat. While checking Citysearch for their review on the Sushi Express, I saw that the restaurant scored a 9.0 on the review. I am curious what other factors beside taste were used to judge a restaurant in their resturant review? I just don't see Sushi Express scoring an almost perfect score on any restaurant review. Not that I have anything against Sushi Express but it is hard to believe that Sushi Express is in same league as Fugakyu and Ginza, 2 fantastic Japanese resturants in Brookline but scored only a 9.1 on Citysearch. Another problem I seem to have with the rating system with Citysearch restaurant reviews is that the scores tend to be inflated. When I rate restaurants, I do consider other factors such as atmosphere and price, but with a strong skewing towards food taste - the pertinent criterion. If I am doing the judging, Sushi Express scores a 6.0 from me. But to be fair, sushi, more than any other food, is highly dependent on the quality of its ingredients. It may be hard to serve good sushi with the kind of pricing that Sushi Express is offering. So I would still recommend that place for sushi but only if you are on a shoestring budget.
| 8/14/2005 12:49:25 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Food |
|
|
 Saturday, August 13, 2005

Last night was an interesting night. I met up with Dinesh, a SDM 04 student, at Tavern in the Square to talk about MIT, SDM, TPP, and life after MIT. After dinner, I went home to catch up on the research required for my Fabrication Technology paper while watching my favorite Sci-Fi TV program, Stargate SG-1 (yep, it was productive night). I took a quick break at 11pm to meet up with Dave, Christian, Matt, Brittany, and Dave's friends who are visiting Boston at Grafton Street.
Earlier this morning, I stopped by at the SDM office to pick up the graded final paper for our Supply Chain/Operations class from my mail folder. Yahoo! our team got a perfect 100 for the paper. Next, I spent the entire afternoon unpacking (I finally found time to unpack the remaining stuff at my new apartment). Later in the afternoon, I played tennis with Fanny. It was good to hit the ball after 2 months of inactibity. Believe it not, I was actually hitting much better today than I did 2 months ago. Too bad Fanny will be returning to Amsterdam in 6 weeks. I will sure miss playing tennis with her. It was a scorcher out there. I was drained not from working out but the heat and humidity after an hour of tennis.
| 8/13/2005 11:23:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Personal |
|
|

I believe that I am the one person left in my SDM cohort who is not done with school just yet. I had decided to take 3.371 - Fabrication Technology, a class that's not normally taken by SDM students, at the beginning of the semester. Yeah, Fabrication Technology is one of my classes that I have elected to take as part of my grand career plan of picking up an additional speciality while studying at MIT. I only have a final paper on a topic of my choice due next Tuesday. I did a partial research on the topic yesterday and it seems like I have enough material to write about a 10-page paper on polyimide and electronic packaging. Unfortunately, with most of my other classes complete, my motivation has really waned the past few days. I better get this paper done soon before I have zero motivation.
| 8/13/2005 8:15:27 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
School |
|
|
 Friday, August 12, 2005

My classmate, Yoav, had written two insightful articles about his experience in consulting. The articles can be found here and here. I was struck by his comment on whether to specialize in a specific field or to seek for inter-disciplinary competence. Interestingly enough, I have heard arguments on specializing versus generalizing from my numerous conversations with classmates and friends. Overall, many people have advocated a specialist approach but with experience working different industrial context. In other words, if you are an IT person, understand about a few area - manufacturing, aerospace, public sector, etc - where your IT skills can be applied. I am in a juncture in my life where I am contemplating about changing career and even industry. I have a general direction on where I am going but I don't have the specifics yet. But that's the beauty of being in graduate school; I get to ponder and experiment what exactly I want to do by actively engaging in electives, career opportunities, activities, and the school student community.
| 8/12/2005 8:59:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
 |
|
|
Personal |
|
|
|
-
Name:Samuel Chow
-
Location:Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
| May, 2008 |
| March, 2008 |
| February, 2008 |
| October, 2007 |
| August, 2007 |
| July, 2007 |
| June, 2007 |
| January, 2007 |
| December, 2006 |
| November, 2006 |
| October, 2006 |
| September, 2006 |
| August, 2006 |
| July, 2006 |
| June, 2006 |
| May, 2006 |
| April, 2006 |
| March, 2006 |
| February, 2006 |
| January, 2006 |
| December, 2005 |
| November, 2005 |
| October, 2005 |
| September, 2005 |
| August, 2005 |
| July, 2005 |
| June, 2005 |
| May, 2005 |
| April, 2005 |
| March, 2005 |
| February, 2005 |
| January, 2005 |
|