Entropy in Action
Below is a video where a 9 month old describes entropy to a general audience. This lecture is compressed from 4 hours to 2 minutes.
From Swans on Tea
Below is a video where a 9 month old describes entropy to a general audience. This lecture is compressed from 4 hours to 2 minutes.
From Swans on Tea
I see that a book based on the Last Lecture of Randy Pausch was released a while ago.

While it something that I would not mind reading some day, I really only mention it so that I can link to the YouTube video of the lecture Pausch gave for the Last Lecture “Achieving Your Childhood Dreams”. Watch the whole thing, you will be a better person for it. The insights and clarity are not often available like this.
Well, we made it to 2009, albeit a second later than normal. Looking back on 2008 there were lots of good things mixed in with the not so great.
2009 will, without a doubt, be another “good news/bad news” year. The main focus for me this year is to finish my dissertation and graduate (finally!). So there will be lots in this blog about writing (both the dissertation and the associated journal articles). I am sure there will be all the things that strike my funny bone, and the science-y and family things, so it won’t bore everyone to tears.
Best wishes for 2009 to all of you!
Well, I have been remiss in updating the blog recently, though I have lots of good reasons. Actually they all boil down to one: I have been too busy to post.
What have I been up to? Here is the summary in five lines:
Just to keep you entertained until I have more time to post interesting things, I point you to The Periodic Table of Videos, put together by the University of Nottingham. Check it out, if only for the great hairdo of academia (you’ll know it when you see it).
For example, here is the Cesium video:
There are lots of great videos on their site.
We should run ads like this in every country, every night. Maybe we might accidently inspire some kid out there. It has to work better than previous attempts.
It seems there are online quizes for just about anything these days.
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You Should Get a PhD in Science (like chemistry, math, or engineering) |
![]() You’re both smart and innovative when it comes to ideas. Maybe you’ll find a cure for cancer – or develop the latest underground drug. |
At least I have the internet to validate my career choices. Guess I’ll keep going.
On that note, school starts on Monday, with my final semester of any coursework. One way or another, I’ll be done with classes this semester.
Last week, in addition to being introduced to the Miracle of Science Bar and Grill*, I had the opportunity to attend the professional short course from MIT’s Edgerton Center, High-Speed Imaging for Motion Analysis: Systems and Techniques.
Below are a few of the images captured during the course, during the bullet lab. It consisted of taking still images with a 500 nanosecond strobe of (what else?) .22 bullets going through things. These were taken in a dark room with the camera shutter open, and a microphone trigger for the strobe. I re-hosted these and others in the general photography section of this site and in addition you can find them on the Edgerton Center Site, along with others from previous years.
Hmmm. It sure has been a while since I have posted! I seem to be missing the whole month of April. Sorry about that!
Things have been crazy, but I am still alive. So here’s the cliff notes version of April:
More updates in the near future.
This is the second post in a series on getting your first engineering job, you can find part one here.
I wanted to cover a couple of things related to that first job; things that I learned along the way, both when I was looking for work and in the last couple years looking at resumes.
There are lots of places on the internet to get advice on all aspects of the job search, from resumes, to cover letters, to interviews, and follow up. The things mentioned here are what I noticed, and more specific to job searches that I have experienced rather than the basics covered elsewhere.
For job openings you could scour the classifieds (or the latest equivalent, craigslist), but online job searches seem pretty efficient. Networking is also very productive, people that belong to the professional organizations where you are a student member, some of the “non-traditional” students that have jobs, previous places where you worked as an intern (and enjoyed it).

For the resume preparation, I have a few tips that I don’t often see in other resume writing articles. But first there is something I want to emphasize, that is oft repeated elsewhere: The purpose of the resume isn’t to get you a job. The purpose of the resume is to get you an interview. So for resumes, here’s the advice I have:
There is a relatively new aspect to resume submittal that I don’t see covered very often. When applying to some of the larger companies around, it is often necessary to submit your information through their website. If they don’t have a way to attach a file like a word document or a pdf, then you are going to have to submit it through the text box. The problem? Well the text box strips out the formatting. Just try taking that nicely formatted Microsoft Word resume (the one that you have slaved over for hours if not days) and cutting and pasting it into the text box. It isn’t exactly the clean, easy to read presentation that you need to get past the initial screening process.
So what can you do about this? Well the answer is another version of your resume. One that you write in a text editor without tabs, bullets, or other formatting. A plain text editor like Notepad in Windows or TextEdit in OS X.
One other thing related to electronic submissions. Searchable keywords are being included as a part of the resume submittal process. Now, in and of itself this isn’t a bad thing. Unless the search that is used to find candidates that match particular requirements isn’t very sophisticated. Consider the wording. If you have experience in solid modeling, and used PTC’s Pro/Engineer software, you might want to use that as a keyword. So you add “Pro/Engineer”. But the engineering manager that is looking for a new hire was in a hurry when they wrote the job description and the human resources person doesn’t know anything about solid modeling. So they searched the term “ProE”, or “ProEngineer”, or “Pro/E”. Actually the last one might bring up a hit, since it is a subset of “Pro/Engineer”. So if there are options for the way a skill will be searched, try to include as many of these as possible in your keyword list.
With all of the ways that your information can get lost, never looked at, or just ignored, it becomes more important than ever to get around the HR hurdle and get your resume in front of those managers that are looking for someone like you. This might be unwelcome news for the introverts in engineering, but the networking is very important.
I think there will be one final installment to this series, with a few tips and observations about the interview.