Showing posts with label geek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geek. Show all posts

6.19.2009

Mom's Present

From my last post, the world now knows that Wednesday was my mom's birthday. My dad and I decided on a joint present, at least in a way. He had the idea and bought the present, and for my part, I baked my mom's cake and offered to set the present up.

I started grinning like mad when the majestic stainless steel and glossy white robotic stork gently set the box wrapped in silk on the doorstep very friendly UPS delivery woman appeared at the door and had me sign for the cardboard box she said was from Apple. That's right—it's a brand new computer; the white MacBook, to be exact.

So, today I will be setting it up. My mom must have thought I was crazy when I called her today at work and asked to make absolutely sure she didn't mind missing the initial setup, her new computer's first startup and first time connecting to the internet, etc. But I already knew I was crazy, so that's ok. She said she doesn't mind.

Mom, I hope you enjoy your new MacBook. You are an amazingly patient person, especially if you can stand the constant appearance of the spinning beach ball on your iBook G3. But hopefully that won't be a problem anymore, or at least not until your '09 MacBook can be considered "vintage."

I love you, Mom! Happy Birthday!

2.02.2009

I can do it!

I woke up this morning with vestiges of the bad mood I had yesterday (completely unrelated to the Super Bowl).  I'm stressed.  I didn't get as much homework done as I should have.

Somehow, during breakfast, I heard the strains of "Don't Stop Believin'" in the dining hall.  It got stuck in my head.  I like that song's chorus.  It reminds me that there is hope.  God has a plan, and it involves this homework.  And I can do it.  And I can avoid the distractions; I can ignore those little online flash games calling for me to come play them if I really want to get this stuff done.  Because somehow, the ability to solve differential equations or take partial derivatives will be important someday.

I won't stop believing.

(Sorry if I got that stuck in your head, by the way.)

1.28.2009

Thanks for Asking...

Yeah, yeah.  I'll get back to my breakfast and homework in just a second.  But this just made me laugh, even though I know it was sent out in all seriousness and that a lot of guys would be interested.  (Please keep in mind that I am a woman.)

My email inbox, as of a minute ago:  "Would you like to become a part of [the] only all male engineering fraternity on the Virginia Tech campus?"


Um. 


No thanks.  


(Disclaimer:  There is a Greek women in engineering organization here.  But I have enough on my plate.)


EDIT:  I just got some emails mentioning said women's engineering sorority, just to be fair.  They too went to the entire listserv.  

1.14.2009

Dexcom Trial

I usually don't do much blogging about my diabetes, so this post is very different from my others.  Beware of the diabetic lingo!

Anyway, I finally just finished doing something I've been wanting to do for a while:  try out a Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (CGMS).  CGMS's approximate one's blood sugar every minute or so (time period depends on the model), but since the method CGMS's use to approximate blood sugar is not quite as accurate as a normal blood glucose test, some normal blood glucose tests are still neccessary to calibrate the CGMS and to verify unsavory blood sugar results before treating them.  CGMS's are useful for predicting high and low blood sugars, though, and they show trends very well on pretty little graphs so one can see the effects of one's eating, bolusing, and exercising habits on one's blood sugar.
After I mentioned to my endocrinologist that I wanted a trial, she reccomended I go to a local Inova branch, where the insulin pump/CGMS trainer would set me up with a loaner.  The trainer, who also trained me on my very first insulin pump trial about seven years ago, was very helpful and friendly.  She inserted the sensor, and it barely hurt—no more than a good infusion site insertion, I'm happy to report.  Since she wasn't allowed to loan out the Navigator (the CGMS I want) because it is so new, I got hooked up to a Dexcom Seven, just to let me see what using a CGMS is like in general.  I had thankfully already accepted the fact that I would feel like even more of a cyborg than usual, so with that hurdle out of the way, I was ready to give this a good shot.


The Dexcom Seven CGMS I used, shortly after pulling out the sensor.


The first twenty-four hours were only moderately accurate.  After the initial calibration, the Dexcom showed me trends pretty well.  To turn the Dexcom's reported numbers into my actual blood sugar readings, however, one would have to add about 30 mg/dL to each one.  It kept vibrating and beeping at me to tell me that I was below 40 mg/dL when I was between 70 and 80 mg/dL.  It kept that up for a couple of hours, at which point I was almost in tears.  I wanted to bring my blood sugar up so I could go to sleep without going low during the night, so I was eating some carbs to bring my BG up, but I was pretty scared that the Dexcom would keep me up all night, telling me I was low.  Argh.

Eventually, my numbers came up, I went to sleep, and life was good.  The Dexcom started looking like it was getting more useful and accurate readings around 2 or 3 PM the next day, and as long as I calibrated it when my blood sugar was relatively stable, it stayed about as accurate as it could be (there is a bit of a delay between traditional blood sugar tests and CGMS readings).  It caught several lows and highs during the nights of the week I used it, which was very useful.  Really, no diabetic likes waking up low at 3 AM.  Or waking up to the alarm clock each morning, testing, seeing a low result, and wondering how long they had been that low; that's just plain scary sometimes!  Thank you, Dexcom, for sparing me of that for a week.

On the con side, those late-night lows were annoying, and since the Dexcom alarms every 15 minutes if one's blood sugar is still below target, sometimes I got to sit around for a while to make sure my blood sugar was stable and high enough for me to sleep.  Better than waking up extremely low and discombobulated at the normal time, though.

Today, when I had to take the Dexcom off to give it back to Inova, I was kind of sad.  This device had been my constant companion for a week, watching my blood sugars even when I normally would not.  Watching the trends has been enlightening, and I'm sure I will do things a bit differently in my bolusing now.  I am even more certain now that I want to get my own CGMS.  I am fairly sure my parents' insurance will pay for it (Thank you!).  Now I just need to get started with that lovely pile of paperwork.  But for the safety factor I have appreciated for the past week, I think it will be worth the hand cramps of signing my name a few gillion times.

12.28.2008

=D

Merry Late Christmas, everyone! I always miss holiday posts or manage to post something silly, don't I? Of course, I'm sure you read about my mom's and my extremely exciting Christmas Day here (and if you didn't, you should, hint hint). My mom gives me waaaaaay too much credit. I'm just glad I could help and that we made it to Texas safely.

We finally got around to opening presents on the 26th, since my mom and I were too exhausted from flying. It was fun, as opening presents always is. I also got to show my grandparents the tablet Virginia Tech's Engineering department requires me to use. It is a laptop computer, but one can write on the screen using a special stylus. To make that easier, the display of the laptop turns around and flips down so one can use it as a clipboard or make writing while at a desk easier.

After I showed them my tablet and told them about the amazing opportunities they had, my granddad left for a moment. Us girls kept talking, and my mom told me to pull up RoMeLa's website so I could show them what I was getting involved with. Just as I was returning from the computer room, my granddad was back, carrying a long rectangular leather case. Since my mom had mentioned that my granddad was planning to show me his slide rules at some point, I had an idea of what was in that case. My face lit up, and he showed me a little of how to work it. He unfortunately can't remember all of it, but he's worked hard. He deserves a break.

So, while everyone was watching the news that night, I dug around on the interwebs to learn how to use my newly-inherited Pickett N4-ES. It was apparently the TI-89 of slide rules back in his day (for those not familiar with Texas Instruments' lineup, it's a crazy-awesome calculator that can do a lot of stuff). I'm still learning how to use the N4-ES, but I plan to keep going. I can multiply, divide, and do exponents now. I still plan to use my TI-89 for my math classes, especially since I think my professors would not appreciate me using a non-calculator during tests, but I am still just blown away that I get to now learn how to use a slide rule. Especially one I inherited from an engineer I admire very much. Thank you so much, Granddad! I love it!

10.28.2008

...?

Ok, so those of you puzzling at my last three posts may wonder whether my blog got eaten by the dreaded Question Mark Monster or something.  Nope.  And as much as I would like to say a cute kitty decided to go to sleep on my keyboard, I don't have one.  The probable culprit:  I tried to blog from my phone earlier about the flurries and my flu shot.  (By the way:  We had a few flurries today, though not enough to actually show up on the ground.  And I got my flu shot.)  Why that posted three posts full of question marks and random letters, I don't know.  Though  I did get confirmation texts from Blogger on my phone saying that all three of my posts posted successfully...  Maybe instead of me getting the flu, my blog posts did?  

Anyway.  I can't decide whether I should delete them or leave them for the hilarity factor.  If you have an opinion one way or the other, please share.  In the meantime, I'm going to go hide from the dreaded Question Mark Monster.

10.20.2008

I never thought I'd be so happy to hear that a Windows computer was working again!

My tablet should be ready to be picked up!  I could have picked it up today if I had gotten the voicemail before the bookstore closed (oops; I had my phone on silent) but I can get it tomorrow at 9AM!  Finally!

=D

10.19.2008

Yay mobile blogging!

Ooh! I just realized that with the unlimited texting plan my awesome parents decided to get, I can blog from my phone! Yay!

10.06.2008

I never thought I'd be so happy to see a non-Mac computer...

I finally got a loaner tablet from the nice people at SoftWare Assistance Triage.  (SWAT.  Silly me, I thought it meant "Student Workers Applying Technology in Elementary school...)  So I can do my homework by hand instead of having to figure out how to type the least squares regression equation or how to do any work I would usually do by hand with a mouse.  Yesterday I discovered a lab that had the software I needed, which was awesome and got me off to a great start.  But they didn't have tablets, so I was stuck trying to either type all my mathematical work or writing with an external mouse.  But now, I have a tablet.  And I will hopefully get mine back soon. I'm so relieved right now--sometimes the way things work out is unbelievably amazing.  God is way awesome! 

10.02.2008

My tablet is INSANE!

So.  I am writing this from my Mac (which I love) instead of from my school tablet (which, up until a few hours ago, hasn't been too bad) because… well, you know how the definition of insanity is that you do something over and over and over again just the same way, yet you expect different results?  Yeah.  My tablet is trying to start up.  Over.  And over. And over.  I've changed what settings I can without actually being able to get to the operating system, yet it still hangs at one particular point in startup.  If I try to boot from a CD, it is either a CD that will wipe my hard drive (BAD, since I have taken some important notes since I last backed up my computer) or… it is a CD  that tries to start me up in a version of Knoppix.  A very limited text-only version of Knoppix, I might add.  Open source OS's are cool, but not when I don't know how to use them, and the commands I find for them online don't actually work, or at least not with the version on the CD.

Might I mention that I am spoiled, since my Mac rarely acts up, and if it does, I have the system install CDs which WON'T try to wipe the hard drive and will let me start it up and try to get stuff off the drive before wiping it?  I wish such  things existed for Windoze.  I am sick of being frustrated.  Some things just make sense.

Right after I finish my Vector Geometry test tomorrow, I am so going to one of the Computer help people.  Argh.

9.22.2008

Bis Donnerstag Abend!

Well, if you were a freshman Engineering student on the VT campus this week, you'd be a bit nervous.

The first big Engineering test is Thursday night.  So I'll be a bit sparse(r) until then.

So I leave you with some funny stuff I found yesterday and today: (Sorry the pictures are tiny.  If you click on them, they might open slightly larger.  Maybe Thursday after the test I'll be able to figure out how to make them readable... sorry!)


I find it funny that the only non-colloquial word that means “cheesy” has to specify that it actually means “like cheese.”  Which is a funny phrase anyway.  “How does it taste?” “Like cheese!”  Lol lol lol.  I kill me. (This is from my favorite German-English dictionary, by the way.  http://dict.leo.org )
Thank you for telling me you can’t get on the wireless, Windows.  I appreciate the notification.  But it isn’t necessary, since I turned the wireless switch OFF since my dorm room doesn’t get wireless.  No wonder!  =)
Okay, I'm done.  Off to do homework and go to SLEEP before I get sick or loopy.  Or both.  

9.17.2008

I survived Engineering Expo!

I started freaking out slightly on Monday night.

About Expo.

It's Virginia Tech's big Engineering career fair. I had not really talked to recruiters before, or at least not with motives of, you know, some day earning my own money and having a career. Real Life still scares me, mainly just because it is unknown.

But at least I know how to talk to recruiters now. I talked to four companies, and I have to say that's pretty good for a painfully shy freshman. Several of the recruiters were surprised to see freshmen out on the floor. I was a bit of an extra surprise, since my name tag actually said I was a sophomore. Why? I got 30 hours of AP credit. Not a bad reason, but I'm still a newbie.

I had heard conflicting opinions on how students were supposed to dress. Lots of people said that business casual was the absolute minimum, and if you overdress a bit, you stand out in a good way. Then I heard an older student say that she was more nervous when she overdressed, so she suggested just wear business casual. I opted for the dressier option; these people came many miles to talk to us and possibly hire us. And they are successful enough to come tell us about what they do and get us excited about it. So I wore my two suit jackets from Ann Taylor Loft and some dressy pants. (One jacket per day. I just realized that that looks like I wore two at once. No, that would be standing out in a bad way.)

Pretty much all the recruiters I talked to were really nice. I didn't get to hand out any résumés, but that's okay. There's an Internship and Co-op fair in the spring, which is more what I'll want. Though now I have fifteen copies of my résumé printed on nice résumé paper with the watermark going the right way (to say nothing of the eight or nine I printed with the watermark backwards...).

Well, I have an assignment to do on the experience. I didn't get any interviews or offered any internships, but I got something a lot more valuable: I learned to talk to the people who can get you those things.

I'm guessing I'll be freaking out about Expo a lot less next year...

9.10.2008

Laura = Backwards Compatible?

Well, I just got back from the Math Empo again. I have a proctored Linear Algebra test I have to take by Monday night, so I figured I would do it tomorrow in the six hours between my Engineering Exploration and my Chem class. So I went tonight to learn to use the only calculator program one can use on proctored Empo tests. It's a funny little program called SlideRule. It's one of those calculators where you can't put in a negative sign before a number--the number must be inputted first, then made negative. Same with square roots and other common functions: number first, then function. I'm so used to my TI-89 Titanium (Dad, you really should get one. They ROCK.) that does things the other way around that I decided to go re-learn how to use simpler technology.

Oh, and this one doesn't do fractions or exact answers; just decimals. *sad*

But on the plus side (no pun intended), the Math Empo is full of iMacs. Which is sweet. It almost makes it fun.