Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

Graduation redux

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

On Monday I was admitted by the University of Cape Town to the degree of Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Mathematics of Computer Science, in the first class. While I am, of course, very pleased to have graduated (and incredibly pleased that the Year From Hell is over), the whole “graduation experience” wasn’t nearly as exciting as last time, I guess because this time I knew what to expect.

Anyone who has mentioned graduation to me will have heard my description of it as “three hours of boredom punctuated by a moment of excitement”. (I didn’t make that up; it’s a paraphrase of the quote about war: “long periods of boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror”.) I guess I attend it anyway because it serves as a useful psychological “marker” that the degree is over. If I didn’t go, I think I’d have a huge sense of anticlimax.

(The fact that I go may also have something to do with my parents being on staff and thus able to sit on the stage and put the hood over my head; also something to do with my grandmother’s demand for photographs.)

Graduation

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

This is my annual look-at-me post.

On this coming Wednesday (the 12th) I will graduate from UCT with a BSc in Computer Science and Mathematics. I will receive the degree with distinctions in Computer Science and Mathematics, and with a distinction in the degree overall; I will also be on the Dean’s Merit List. My final marks for this year are:

CSC3002F Computer Science IIIA 91%
CSC3003S Computer Science IIIB 94%
MAM3000W Mathematics III 90%
MAM3004Z Mathematics 304 81%

It actually feels quite weird, to have finally reached this point. For the last three years, I’ve worked away at my courses, but I’ve never really had a feeling that I was actually approaching an endpoint. Now, suddenly, it hits me: I have finished my undergraduate studies. Wow. It’s actually quite a big deal.

Of course, I’m returning to UCT for Honours next year, so it’s not as if what I do with my day is actually going to significantly change (although I will have a much heavier workload). But still. Wow. In a week’s time I’ll be able to style myself Mr. Adrian Frith, B.Sc. (Cape Town). (Although it would be rather pretentious to do that outside of a formal academic setting.)

Cape Town drivers…

Friday, July 27th, 2007

So, I take my drivers license test next week Friday. I’ve been learning to drive for a year now, and for the last month I’ve been driving to and from university almost every day (with a qualified driver in the car, of course). And this has been through the rush-hour Mowbray traffic. So I’m used to most of the odd and dangerous things that Capetonian drivers do. What happened this morning, however, still has me amazed five hours later.

On the way to UCT from Pinelands, I was on Raapenberg Road where it joins Klipfontein Road. (OpenStreetMap plug: here). I was the first in the queue, stopped at the lights and waiting to turn right onto Klipfontein. Because the lights at Liesbeeck Parkway (here) were out, the traffic was really clogged up. Indeed, when the lights changed to green for me, there was no space to turn into on Klipfontein Road because the whole intersection was full of cars going straight on Klipfontein that had entered the intersection without being able to clear it. So, naturally, I didn’t move into the intersection because I was waiting for some space to appear to turn into.

This, apparently, was not good enough for the idiot in the Mercedes behind me, who was clearly in too much of a hurry to actually think. He decided that if I wasn’t going to go, he was going to just pull around me and enter the intersection. When he did this, of course, there was absolutely no space for him to go, so he ended up stopping in the middle of the intersection.

Now, of course, the lights change, and Mr Merc is blocking both lanes of traffic going the other way on Klipfontein. And, as is the way of such things, a space didn’t open for him until the lights were about to change back again – and enough space opened up that I could go across as well, ending up right behind him. So, ultimately, for the sake of getting exactly one car ahead, he blocked two lanes of traffic for a whole traffic light cycle.

Hmm. Maybe a diagram would explain things more clearly:
Idiot Merc Manoeuvre
(click for full version)

What is even more disturbing is that the traffic turning left from Klipfontein onto Raapenberg (left lane of yellow cars in the diagram) get a green arrow when the light would otherwise be red for them. So, by pulling out into the opposite lane, Mr Merc could quite easily have hit an oncoming turning car; and if he had they would no doubt have crashed into me.

Results

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

So, I’m going to start this blog with a rather pleasant post: I’ve finally got my results for this year, and they are (if I say so myself) rather good.

These are they:

Course Code Description Mark
CSC2001F Computer Science 2A 88%
CSC2002S Computer Science 2B 89%
CSC2003S Computer Games & Simulation 75%
MAM2000W Mathematics 2 87%
MAM2047H Applied Mathematics 2047 86%
Weighted Average 85.3%

Furthermore, I got on the Dean’s Merit List (which means, essentially, that I have the normal number of course credits, passed all my courses this year, am repeating nothing, and got over 70% average). And I got an FSA (don’t know what it stands for), the largest possible academic merit scholarship, for next year.