Day Thirty-Five: So It Is Good-Bye Then...
As this is the last entry I anticipate posting during my time here as an intern (and probably for the remainder of my life: the reader has no doubt learned enough about me from my daily discussions that I think it rather odd to post all one's doings and thinkings on the Internet as one would let a flag fly to the wind, for all to see and interpret), it seems only fitting to fill the entry, as I have nothing else to discuss, which we learned last entry, with reflections on the past seven weeks. It will be brief, I warn you, reader, but nevertheless, a trite, hackneyed, cliche reflection on my time here at the Center for Imaging Science. (Granted, I write cognizant of the fact that my words may be used in he future to inspire and amuse future interns in the program.)
Firstly, keeping my first and second entry in mind, I think it is obvious that the summer has seen a great improvement in my computer understanding and literacy, having taught myself to use MATLAB to the point were I created in the end a 400 line program (the reader, I am sure, recalls, my triumph after successfully creating a four line program in ten hours!), but also creating the filter spreadsheet on Excel, operating XWinNMR for the NMR machine, and using CDs and such to transfer data... as pathetic as it may sound to you, my reader, I would have had no earthy idea just how to use a disk to transfer data! Do not become to excited, though: I have not said that I am now in love with computers and am going to live my life in their service...NO! I am still, unfortunately or fortunately as your view my be, still repulsed by the sheer ubiquity of computers in science, but I suppose I would have found out sooner or later. My romantic bubble had to be shattered at some point, did it not?...
And moreover, I have found myself, these past seven weeks seeing and doing and learning and saying things altogether unexpected, what with my proficient knowledge of MRI technology but also of radio galaxy astronomy, ancient document restoration, and remote sensing. The reader will recall my sheer fascination and excitement with my working to aid in the decipherment of the Archimedes palimpsest that I had been so eager to hear was right down the street at RIT on Nova. I found myself working on this famous document independently! What a dazzling experience. It might sound cliche and hyperbolic to one that has not been in my shoes the past seven weeks, but owing to the great amount of knowledge I gained and experience I was placed in, and people I was obligated to work with (oh... there were many), if the reader will understand my point, as made me a much wiser person than when I began here on July 6th...just read the first few blogs of this record! Although I eagerly await the return of school, I feel I have accomplished and made the most of my summer hours.
Being as it is that there are a number of things that I have gained from this experience that still go unnoted, but my time is running short, it seems most expedient to resort to a list:
- the RIT librarians are not so bad
- working is all about sharing in the bounty of free food (at least at RIT)
- others are not concerned about hanging outdated maps to the extent that I am
- my future employers are going to want to keep my notebook that I bought and I wrote in and I carried from work to my home and from my home to work again as their own
- the map in the second floor computer lab is old
- the architects that designed the RIT campus were loony
- the people who try to pass off an old map in the computer lab are crazy
- Kodak just wants my money
- Kodak is not going to get my money
- one should not walk around for ten days with seven broken ribs
- one needs to turn a scanner on before one tries to scan
- one needs to keep an up-to-date map handy at all times
- one can not rewrite on a CD that is not rewriteable
- one can not write on a CD with a ball-point pen
- no one appreciates classical music
- everyone loves volleyball
- no one is going to change the map in the computer room, ever and then it will be more outdated that it already is now
- do not trust the workers that give you your RIT ID cards and say they will entitle you to all the privileges a regular card-holder would have
- the map in the computer lab is old
There is a vast sea more, but I think it best to arrest the list for now. I will say that I have learned that I am the largest idealist this side of Timbuktu...
All this being said, it seems only fitting that the final "Classical Song of the Day" be a tune that I heard on Classical 91.5 last night; though I did not catch the composer or the title, the lazy baritone's lyrics went something like...
Good-bye-----to sum-mer,
Good-bye-----good-bye.
Good-bye-----forever.
Good-bye-----good-bye.
I now turn my attention, if the reader is concerned, to getting into Princeton (and if not, hopefully another one of the schools to which I apply), learning and living through my senior year, and then letting that wonderful and mysterious hand of adventure push me to the ends of the Earth. (but you have heard far enough of the Tyler, the Romantic this summer)...
And that is all I wrote. Thank you for reading.
Good Day,
Tyler C. Lucero
