Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | mawhidby's commentslogin

Out of curiosity, are you hanging your hammock from studs in the walls, using a hammock stand, or something else?


Cool site! Any plans to add IBM Bluemix? Their status page is at https://developer.ibm.com/bluemix/support/#status


Done.

Note a feature in the pipeline which will allow you to subscribe to specific components or specific regions of services. Which will make status notifications for large cloud platforms like Bluemix, Openshift, AWS, DigitalOcean, etc. much more useful.


Recently (as in a crazy experience over the past week), I've been feeling the same way described by you, and by the OP; but I've scaled this up to a much higher abstracted level.

The only way I can really describe it is (in terms of what you just said): "red, green, refactor" your life, not just your job. Constantly question everything you're doing, and find out what you don't like about it. Find the root cause of that feeling, and figure out what you can do to fix it. Find and take the steps to complete that.

Edit: I will add though, that the trick is to do so without stopping progress, as you said.


Congrats, you've discovered pragmatism. You're one of the lucky few.


I'm not really sure why the OP says that the Master's has more coursework than the PhD. At least in my Master's program at UMD, the PhDs have to take the same amount of classes as the Master's students. The only difference is that in the Master's, after you're done with your classes, you either write a thesis or a scholarly paper (for non-thesis based), and you're done. If you're a PhD student, you finish your classes, then you spend the next few years working on research towards your dissertation.

He might be referring to more work for an MS Comps, which is the non-thesis Master's. Instead of writing a thesis (which counts as 6 credit hours) you have to take 30 credit hours worth of classes, and half of those classes must be "MS Comps," where at least 50% of your grade in a class (at least here at UMD) must come from exams. I am doing a thesis-based Master's, so I guess you could say I am able to take all my classes just as a PhD student would - in that in most classes there is a research project due at the end of the semester on a topic of your choosing. This allows you to shape the course to your liking and interests.

For me, being a Master's student has afforded me just as many research opportunities as a PhD student; I just won't be here as long.


He means that the students finish up their coursework during their Masters program, so the PhD work is usually entirely research. Thus during your Masters program, you frequently don't get a good idea at all of how the PhD program is.


I'm not so sure that's what he means. If you look in the comments, the OP says "Ah yes. I should have pointed out that this article only applies to PhD programs in the US (in Computer Science). ... A UK PhD, for example, is rarely seen as equivalent to a US-based PhD, precisely because it is so short and does not typically involve coursework."

For the universities I applied to, you are still required to take classes in the PhD program. Even if you already have your Master's and decide to go for a PhD at another university, your class credits may not transfer (in fact, I was told at a graduate visit day at UMD that they don't accept credit from MS programs other than their own), so you might even have to do the required coursework all over again while going for your PhD.

Personally, I was able to find a graduate research assistantship my first semester here at UMD, whereas most of the incoming PhD students are in teaching assistantships. I feel like I'm getting a good taste of how research/the PhD program.


  >> I was told at a graduate visit day at UMD that they don't accept credit from MS programs other than their own
I don't know how common this is.

I know lots of people (probably most) that get their Master's at a different place than their BS, but don't know any that got a PhD at a different place than their Master's - maybe because as you say the barriers to moving are too high. People that aren't happy where they got their Master's don't get a PhD at all.

(My experience is with the U.S. system)


I think it varies a lot. In my PhD program I am not required to take a single class. Suggested to. You'll fail your quals if you don't, suggested to. But not required at all.


Interesting. If you don't mind my asking, where are you going? For all the schools I applied to, it appeared that the PhD programs required taking classes.


The situation is very analogous to undergraduate with advanced placement (AP) courses.

Any university is going to require you to get credit for, e.g., some introductory computer science sequence (CS1, CS2) to get a bachelors in CS. However, universities vary a great deal in whether they (a) require a particular AP score, (b) require you to take a local test to prove your knowledge, or (c) whether you can just talk to someone and convince them you know the material.

The difference at the PhD level is that in many cases, incoming students have the equivalent of ten undergraduate and graduate courses in the sub-area, rather than one or two. This means that students at less curriculum-oriented universities can largely avoid taking classes, even though classes are "required." People are mostly fine with this because the thesis is usually a much higher bar than core curriculum competency anyway.


Stanford CS PhD has few or no course requirements, or at least they did back in 2002.


My first job was at a McDonald's. My parents made me start working when I was 14, and that was the only place that would hire me. That was almost 10 years ago, and I had a similar experience to what you described, but it appears to me that the quality of most of the chains has gotten better (at least in my area). I still don't eat there, though.

Embarrassing story: Since I was only 14, I was pretty shy when working the counter. One of my managers encouraged me to make small talk with the customers while they waited for their food, provided we weren't busy. I was helping a large woman, and mistakenly thought she was pregnant. I asked her "how long until you have your baby?" and she said "Excuse me!?!?" Turns out she was just fat. Needless to say, I don't ask women about their pregnancies anymore, unless they bring it up first. Sounds like a cliche story, but it really happened :(


Dave Barry once said something like "never assume a woman is pregnant unless you actually see a baby coming out of her".


Not only that, but if it does find a story to the same link, it will upvote it.


I would be interested as well, recently moved to the area. Do you know of any good hacker spaces?


I would choose invisibility, because I believe it offers more chances for good, evil, privacy, and just plain fun. I would want to keep my invisibility as big of a secret as possible; I wouldn't want to be known for my power, so I'd have to be careful when going into and out of invisibility.

Here's some example scenarios I thought up:

Fun:

- Messing with people's minds (which some may consider evil). For example, making them think their house is haunted. Slam doors, move furniture, flip switches, unplug stuff, etc.

- Instigate confrontations (may also be considered evil). Make someone think they shoved them, hit them, etc.

- Going into restricted areas just to see what's there.

- Listening to what people have to say about me when I'm not there (may end up being depressing...)

- People-watching for hours without looking creepy or suspicious

- Just doing normal things while invisible. See people's reactions while you drive a car, ride a bike, etc., while invisible. Doing that too often may draw too much attention to myself, though.

Good:

- Infiltrating terrorist cells; I'd be able to gain information relatively safely, maybe find Osama?

- Security. I can scream and throw shit to scare the hell out of people from stealing stuff.

- Crime-fighting. This is a toughie to imagine scenarios where an invisible man would stop crime, especially if you want to remain unknown. News reports about an invisible person fighting crime would definitely not be something I'm looking for. I'd probably have to learn some martial arts so I can actually kick some ass, and bulk up some. And it's not like you can dodge bullets; if criminals caught on and were aware of your presence, they would just pray-and-spray all over the place, and you'd be sure to get hit at some point. If the criminals aren't armed with firearms, then it could be easier.

Evil:

- Stealing stuff. Assuming that if I'm able to fit an object into my pocket or under a shirt/jacket, it will become invisibile, then it's fair game.

- Infiltrating governments, agencies, etc. for classified information. Maybe it will be considered good if I give the information to Wikileaks? :P

- Murder, or any extreme crimes. Any eyewitnesses would be completely baffled.

Miscellaneous thoughts:

- Useful for if you are trying to avoid someone, or conversely, if someone is trying to avoid you.

- If you've ever wanted to just disappear from the world for a little bit, you got it!

- I'd assume that while invisible, you don't just pass through someone or something, you still have to walk around it. So it would be annoying to constantly avoid people and objects while you walk around, especially if you're trying to be secretive about your power, or not alert people to your presence. No chance for clumsiness!

- It's always best to have a complimentary power, like super-strength. Just one superpower doesn't always cut it, especially for fighting crime.

That's all I'll put, it's getting too long.


I already have emergency savings, the $5k is for me to throw around. I'll check out both Roth IRAs and the savings. And do you have a recommendation for a good online high yield savings account?


right now, ally bank and ing direct are probably the best all-around options (higher rates plus good reputation/services).

starting a Roth IRA early is a good idea for long-term investing. it won't get you rich quick, but there's not much you can do with $5k to get you rich quick. putting it away and crossing your fingers for 7-ish% average yearly return will take that $5k and turn it into $100k or so when you're able to withdraw. and as i mentioned, if you want the $5k back later, you can get it back, penalty free (though you can't touch anything more than the original $5k).


The same editor also posted an article on Engadget about this: http://www.engadget.com/2010/06/10/conspiracy-theory-what-ha...

The poll is back up in that article, and now the iPhone is winning..


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: