Posts

Students of the Cubicle

Students of the Cubicle

Expectations of qualifications in the hiring world seem only to go up in scope and complexity, so much so that I think people forget that they’re not meant to be in school forever. I hope that as I grow and gain new experiences I’ll get a clearer idea of how to address or attenuate this confound.

March 26, 2023

Under the Hood

Under the Hood

Ultimately, my schedule is starting to constrain me to mostly technical coursework, and I’ve resisted less and less as time goes on. But I still find ways to integrate the humanities into my daily life. Oh, and ChatGPT put generative artificial intelligence on the map this autumn.

December 24, 2022

An Inconvenient Summer

An Inconvenient Summer

At times my college journey has felt like a mosaic of shapeless clay—mesmerizing and directionless—and at times it’s felt like a pristine ceramic vase—coherent but brittle.

September 4, 2022

Sun’s Out, Guns Out

Sun’s Out, Guns Out

Students I saw on campus were washed up at the shore and stressed and hurting. When you’re in a state like that, the set of solutions to a differential equation suddenly isn’t that important anymore. So as the days went on, I sought to further a sense of purpose and community in my life and work.

June 13, 2022

The Imaginary Bird

The Imaginary Bird

Upon a journey to understand quantum hardware, algorithms, and theory among other subjects, the men and women behind what I study came into clearer view. Then, I thought, perhaps it is possible to be shielded from a storm by building a shelter with the very material that afflicts you.

March 25, 2022

Night and Day

Night and Day

In only a few months of on-campus life, I have met several new people, familiar faces, siblings of familiar faces, and colleagues from Zoom University. I’ve visited the Cantor Arts Center and attended football games. Perhaps college is a big all-you-can-eat buffet, with analogous agony and ecstasy.

December 10, 2021

California Dreamin’

California Dreamin’

After a remote freshman year, I am moving in today and at last and can independently confirm that my college campus exists.

September 16, 2021

Quarter 4: A Reflection

Quarter 4: A Reflection

My internship gave me the chance to view the current political and journalistic landscape through code.

August 27, 2021

On Writing a Novel

On Writing a Novel

As the fundamental laws of physics change when an object goes from the quantum scale to a normal Newtonian size, so a novel is not governed, necessarily, by the same principles as most forms of writing.

August 25, 2021

Quarter 3: A Reflection

Quarter 3: A Reflection

When I computed my final Fourier transform on June 4 and handed in my last exam of the school year, the relief I felt was slight but nonzero nevertheless.

June 18, 2021

Quarter 2: A Reflection

Quarter 2: A Reflection

With a couple of days until winter quarter started, reopening plans were canceled for the second time after several reaffirmations, and adapting to that news has taken the whole ten weeks.

March 19, 2021

Quarter 1: A Reflection

Quarter 1: A Reflection

The subject matter of my courses has been endlessly fascinating.

November 21, 2020

A Panoramic View of Chicago

A Panoramic View of Chicago

In this complex city, the camera can direct one’s attention to the forms, lights, shadows, and patterns that resonate the most, opening the mind to subjects that may have never gone noticed before.

November 17, 2020

The Great Exultation

The Great Exultation

“Harmony, balance, and rhythm. They’re the three things that stay with you your whole life.”

June 18, 2020

Music and Math

Music and Math

What’s the first thing you see when you look at a piece of sheet music? A fraction.

January 24, 2020

A Lifetime of Cars

A Lifetime of Cars

For years, I had heard the urban myths and legends of a possible space-age Corvette with a mid-mounted engine. As of July, the dream is now the reality.

October 31, 2019

Breaking 300 in the Bugatti Chiron

Breaking 300 in the Bugatti Chiron

When the Bugatti Chiron first debuted, I noticed that its speedometer went to 500 kilometers per hour—a bit over 300 miles per hour. Surely they were joking, right?

September 3, 2019

The Future of Computing

The Future of Computing

After visiting Argonne National Laboratory today, there is no reason at all to be afraid of the future of computing.

January 31, 2018