Saddle
So after a long really long hiatus, I’m kinda back. Sort of. There are so many interesting things going on that it’s hard sometimes to sit down and write about them. But write I must, or else the blog grows old and stale (which it already has, so I need to reverse the trend). With the break finally over, I’m free from:
- 23 hours of class a week
- Hundreds of hours of RA responsibility
- 4 hours of tutoring a week
- Miscellaneous computer work (such as Pre-Med Club)
- And all the other normal college student responsibilities
It was a tough semester, to be sure. But with 5 out of 6 classes reporting, I was still able to keep all A’s… although one of them was very close (and it’s a good story too). Here’s how it came about.
One of my 6 classes was Pathogenics— the study of infectious diseases and the organisms that cause them. We studied pathogens such as Yersinia enterocolitica and Staphylococcus aureus, as well as nastier stuff like Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Clostridium difficile. I really enjoyed the material (it’s related to what I hope to work with, after all), and I didn’t find the class very difficult. However, for some reason I could just never get a handle on the tests the professor gave us. I would go in feeling as if I knew all the material, and come out with a mid-to-low B on each exam.
Going into the final, I had three Bs and a C on the 4 exams… not an A in the bunch. The C was dropped, but I still needed a 95% on the final to make an A. I doubted that could happen, since I hadn’t made an A even on the “easier” tests. But then, the professor told us that not only would the final not be cumulative, but that he would add 10% to each person’s final exam score. At that point, I needed only an 85%, which I thought was doable. I studied an obscene amount for the final, and went in feeling good about it. However, as I started answering questions, I left more and more blank. I ended up leaving 35% of the test blank on the first run-through (in which I answered only stuff I knew immediately). Not good. I went back and started working the problems that were left, and got many of them answered, but had to guess on a few. I walked out of the test unsure of how I had done. It was graded that night, and I got… 82%. This gave me an 88.13% for the class, and an 88.5% was needed for an A. Only 0.37% away! I e-mailed the professor out of desperation, just to see if there was anything that could be done.
It turned out that he remembered a day of class a couple months back during which I had noticed an error in his lecture notes and corrected it. He told me that I would be given 2 bonus points for catching the error, which pushed me up to an 88.6%! Enough to round to the A. More grace than I deserved, probably, but warmly welcomed.
Work on ZetaBoards continues mostly on-schedule. We’ve hit some frustrating setbacks, but all in all it’s shaping up very well. I think the beta testers have had a good time working with it and I’m definitely looking forward to the reactions of those who said it would never come. Plus, it’s going to remove so much workload from our moderating team, with the new moderation features that are in place. We’ll be able to concentrate more on building and less on maintaining.
This is one of the most open breaks I’ve had in awhile; not much is going on, and I don’t have any specific plans, other than ZetaBoards development. So I decided to start with something I’ve wanted to do for awhile: invest in the stock market! I’m opening an account with TD Ameritrade (although if someone has another suggestion I’d be happy to listen), but I’ll start small with only a few companies that I’ve personally researched and looked into (mostly ones from which I own products). I’ve taken quite a few hours to research things before even opening an account. It seems that expected return, as per the S&P 500, is about 11% yearly. Thus, if you can beat 11%, you are “beating the market”, and if you can’t beat 11%, you might as well have your money in a SPYDR (Ticker: SPY) or similar. I tend to have fun with games in which one tries to outsmart the {opponent, AI}, so the market isn’t much different. Since I’m not looking to invest in high-growth items that fluctuate wildly, as long as I don’t try to get out immediately I should be all right. The principle of buy-and-hold tends to work out in the long run.
In addition to all this, I’d sure like to get my site redesign in place. I’ve talked to Nicola about helping me with it, but I’m afraid it has to wait until after ZetaBoards, which might mean this summer. I have some new ideas to implement, including OpenID integration (another post soon about this), better scheduling and visualization of where I am throughout the day, and overall making the site more interactive.
This break will be fun ![]()
7:20 pm
I’ve personally never fully understood the stock market. Although I know that it goes up by a certain amount and you only gain when the amount per share is more than the price you purchased… only because my parents do the stock market.
1:41 am
Wow … And I thought I was busy. You’re crazy, Seth. :-X
You should seriously talk to me more. >_>
1:57 am
I’m not sure quite yet how to feel about it, but it’s definitely not everyday you run across another keyboardopensourcejesus nerd randomly on the internet. Hi.
12:25 pm
And no more idiots posting non-stop about why they feel your betraying them by not having ZB done `yet`.
Good going on the good grade for the exam about [insert freaky latin word here]
8:46 pm
Awesome job on the A.
See, bonus points really do come in handy.
And ZetaBoards will be marvelous–a feat in the message board world.