A in Graphics
Today I received an email from Dr. Olano. I got a 93 for the class, which means I get an A for the semester. Now I just need an A in Research Skills to get a 4.0.
Today I received an email from Dr. Olano. I got a 93 for the class, which means I get an A for the semester. Now I just need an A in Research Skills to get a 4.0.
Today I read the rest of the research papers. Actually, near the end, I just started skimming them, reading the abstract, skimming the contents, and reading the conclusion. I’ll have to go over all the papers once more tomorrow at work.
The final exam, according to UMBC’s schedule, is at 3:30pm. That gives me plenty of time to do a couple things at work, flip through all the papers as a refresher, and head to school.
I’ve recently been obsessed with reading about wheels/tires/suspension for my car. I currently have some worn down Hankook tires on the factory 15″ rims, and am thinking about upgrading to 18″ rims, but I’m not sure if I should buy them new or used.
Why? Because. Larger rims need tires with a smaller profile (the height of the tire between the outer edge of the rim and the outer edge of the tire) to maintain the same circumference. The smaller that profile, the firmer the tire (usually), so it should result in a sportier ride. I’m also not sure if I should spend the money on upgrading my suspension instead, since I am starting to get some squeaks when I go over bumps. The squeaks are probably just the sway bar bushings, but everyone says the suspension is probably toast at 100k miles anyway.
Decisions decisions…
I need to get an A in Graphics, which means I need to do well on the final. Since I have no idea what my grade is, I need to do really really well.
I’ve read 20 research papers today. 18 more to go! The final is on Tuesday.
This semester has been rough.
I took CMSC 601 Research Skills and CMSC 635 Advanced Computer Graphics on the suggestion of my temporary advisor, Dr. Penny Rheingans. I didn’t really want to take two classes since I have a full time job, but work has been pretty flexible, and gave me some time off for school work and projects, so it wasn’t as bad as it could have been. Still, taking two classes wasn’t easy. The project I did in graphics overlapped a little with my research proposal for 601, but not enough! Writing that final research proposal took so much of my free time, just looking up references and reading the extra papers.
In the end, the Research Skills class was definitely worth it. I never knew you could log into UMBC’s library website to get access to all the journal, conference, and database sites for papers. Previously, I just searched for the papers while at work, or while at school. I also think I became a better writer, since Dr. desJardins gave really thorough feedback on everything.
Dr. Olano seemed to be more interesting when he was teaching a class in his field. I took him for architectures a few years ago, and just remember that class as being boring. Maybe it was just the subject area; how can architectures not be boring? One thing that didn’t really change though was the feedback received. In architectures, we received grades for all the assignments in a reasonable amount of time after the submission of the assignment, but no feedback on anything. All the assignments just had marks for points taken off, with no explanation. This semester, in 635, I have yet to receive a single grade and the final exam is on Tuesday. Granted, there were only two big homework assignments, and one final project, along with some ambiguously graded items like presentations, participation and questions to the assigned papers, it still seems odd that no one has a grade yet. The final exam is worth 20% of the final grade, and it would be nice to know what grade I need to get an A.
So… now I have to study like I need as much of the final exam contribution as possible. It would be awesome if I knew that I only needed a 50% on the final to get an A, but I don’t know that, so I can’t expect that. This weekend and all day Monday, I need to reread 55 papers in 10 topic areas well enough to understand the key concepts and answer some possible questions from them on the final. What fun. 55 siggraph style papers of dense, jam-packed content.
635 was very useful. I’ve applied the final project to something at work, and I have some additional ideas that I want to try at work. I think Advanced Computer Graphics and Data Visualization were the two most useful classes I’ve taken so far, just because I was able to use the concepts at work.
Tuesday evening will feel great! I’ll be done with the semester.