Archive for the 'High School' Category

Facebook is an inspiration for me

I’m inspired by Mark Zuckerberg. Is that a bad thing?

[Zuckerberg] began messing around with computers early on, teaching himself how to program. As a high school senior, at Phillips Exeter Academy, he and D’Angelo built a plug-in for the MP3 player Winamp that would learn your music listening habits, then create a playlist to meet your taste. They posted it as a free download and major companies, including AOL and Microsoft, came calling. “It was basically, like, ‘You can come work for us, and, oh, we’ll also take this thing that you made,’” Zuckerberg recalls.

He sounds just like me. I also began messing around with computers early on, and taught myself how to program. That was a long time ago now, but I still remember those days very well. As soon as I came home from school, I’d plug in my Cybiko and head to the Cybiko Forums to see what other developers were doing. I’d try coding some of the many, many ideas I had and quickly get stuck. So I IMed Greg Smith, the creator of the “B2C” or “Basic-2-Cybiko C” compiler. He would help me figure out what I wanted to do logically, put it into code, and actually write some real programs that did interesting things. I was hooked: finally I could create applications on my own– and very useful ones, too. I loved the fact that as soon as I announced a new version of my latest application, 10-20 people would be clamoring to download it. I’d get daily feedback from users of my programs, and I worked from their input to improve. That was a very early stage of programming for me, and I admit that my programming skills back then were severely lacking. Still, that’s how I learned the logic and syntax of BASIC and C, and lots of things about the practical aspects of how converters and compilers work. I learned how to work with variables of different types and to draw graphics on the screen. It was mind-blowing, and I loved it.

Continue reading ‘Facebook is an inspiration for me’

Church, SIT, Nick, Natasha’s Recital, Alex, CS, GWA

Talk about putting lots of things into one post. First I went to Evergreen with Michael Stalcup and Theo. It was a very interesting sermon. Personal examples really help to communicate the message. Then I went to SIT (Sophomores-In-Training, I think we’re calling it) at Larissa’s. It’s the very last Spring Training session. Next we’ll be going to the Summer Conference. I’m actually looking forward to it. I’ll need to make sure the date is cleared, and invite friends to come. Nick came to USC for the Admitted Students Reception, and it sounds like he thought it was pretty cool. Hopefully he decides to come.

Continue reading ‘Church, SIT, Nick, Natasha’s Recital, Alex, CS, GWA’

Breakfast at Commons, Interview, and Explore USC

Yesterday, I tripped on the stairs in GFS. Brick floor, and my hands were in my jacket pockets, so I hit the corner of a brick stair with my chin. I have a bruise there, at the bottom of my jaw, but luckily, my mouth wasn’t too far open, and my tongue was not sticking out. So when my jaw was slammed shut from the impact, my tongue was fine. It’s also good that only my chin hit the ground (and knees). If it had been my head or face, that could’ve been worse. I am very fortunate. Thank God. I am never going to walk with my hands in my pockets again, especially on stairs; no matter how cold it is.

Continue reading ‘Breakfast at Commons, Interview, and Explore USC’

Weekend at Home

I spent my Saturday mostly playing Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix. Just about the best GameCube game I’ve ever played. It has been discontinued, so we had to pay almost $100 for it. But it was still well worth it, in my opinion. It’s an excellent game. It’s a true DDR experience for the GameCube, and it features classic Mario tunes. That includes Dr. Mario, and even some Donkey Kong. Awesome stuff, and great exercise too. Unfortunately, that means I didn’t get any homework done. I again brought all my stuff home, only to not touch it until Sunday. At least I got my clothes washed, and I got my iPod Socks. They’re awesome, and well worth the almost-$30. It comes to nearly $5 per sock, but considering the quality, style, and color, it’s worth it. I use it for my cell phone now. I wonder if a sock would fit my cell phone. Maybe the guitar tuner too. Speaking of which, I’m going to need to get a 9V battery for it soon.

Continue reading ‘Weekend at Home’

I’ve been on the web for a long time

and a lot has happened in just the past 10 years or so. It has now been about 10 years since I first got started in web development. Why the sudden focus on time? I logged into my Amazon.com account and looked at my wishlist. This was listed in my profile: “Suzanne Middle School.” I’m in college now. And I’ve been using Amazon.com since before high school. Think about that.

School’s out

I’ve completed my first semester of college. Audrey is on break, now, too. Amy has another week, though. It’s nice to have no school weighing down on me. I’d been sleeping in, but this morning I woke rather early: around 8 am. I guess that’s a good sign. I like to wake early. It provides more time for the day. At the same time, I like sleeping for a long time. So I suppose the solution is an earlier sleeping time. But I also like staying up late. It’s hard to find enough hours in the day. Most days, I find about 23 hours. The other hours are lost somehow. Maybe that’s a mystery for physics to explain.

Continue reading ‘School’s out’

Hoofprint ad

I recently ran an ad in Walnut High School student newspaper, the Hoofprint. It promotes my site, intelliot.com. If you’ve come here thanks to that ad, welcome! I hope you stick around and become a regular reader. You can bookmark my blog or add it to your RSS reader or news aggregator. In any case, leave a comment, even if just to say hi.

Football Day

Man, what a day for football. After watching the last quarter of the USC-UCLA game at Caltech, I came back and spent some time online before going outside to play football with Michael, Kipp, and some other random folks. Quite simply, it was amazing. I brought Shawn with me, and he played for some three hours. My roommate also joined in about an hour after me. Mike and Kipp were probably there the longest overall, some four or five hours I suppose. It was just that fun. I made some “tackles” (2-hand touch) and several catches (even a touchdown)!

Continue reading ‘Football Day’

Crush007 Modified Phishing Scam

I’ll quote a conversation I had about half an hour ago with a friend from high school:

Krishna: hey
Krishna: how ya doin?
Me: just fine
Krishna: cool
Krishna: i got this site it predicts ur love life
Krishna: its so cool
Krishna: its so accurate
Me: haha
Me: how would you know if it were accurate?
Krishna: it seems accurate
Krishna: its so kool
Krishna: i was like WTH when it seemed accurate
Krishna: as long as ur honest it works
Krishna: http://www.crush007.com/love.cgi?id=1133402504xnb
Krishna: its amazing
Krishna: it takes like 2 minutes to do
Krishna: check it out
Me: no thanks
Krishna: haha k
Me: krishna?
Me: why are you IMing me now, of all times?
Krishna: haha dont no
[Some time later...]
Me: wow
Me: you’re more stupid than i thought
Krishna: ?
Me: in fact, you’re a complete idiot
Krishna: ?
Krishna: y?
Me: (i finished my work, so i decided to actually look at the link you sent)
Me: “As soon as your friends fill in their secret details in the questionnaire, the data will be mailed to you!!”
Me: yeah, you actually thought I would bother filling it out
Krishna: ihaha nah
Krishna: u dont fill stuff like that
Krishna: it was a joke
Krishna: haha
Krishna: sorry dude
Krishna: ttyl man
Krishna: good luck at USC

Continue reading ‘Crush007 Modified Phishing Scam’

Radicalism

We had a TO (Thematic Option) event tonight where we discussed various aspects of radicalism. I didn’t speak up during the discussion. Why?
(1) I feel that I can better put my thoughts into writing.
(2) The technology aspect, while it was mentioned, was not the point of the discussion.
(3) I didn’t feel the audience would be interested in the side of “radicalism” that I would have presented.

Continue reading ‘Radicalism’