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Last day of class, in my undergraduate. April 11, 2008

Posted by Da in Personal.
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It has been a long run:

Tsinghua University

2002.9 – 2003.7 First Year: an exciting start

2003.9 – 2004.7 Second Year: the journey continued

University of Toronto

2004.9 – 2005.4 Second Year (again): arrived at a new harbor, then make another start

2005.9 – 2006.4 Third Year: moving forward

2006.9 – 2007.5 Internship at Altera: a fun excursion

2007.9 – 2008.5 Fourth Year: finally arrived at the destination

2008.9 – ??? Will be heading for a new destination!

Protected: Acknowledgments for My Grad School Applications April 9, 2008

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My Grad School Applications April 9, 2008

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Update: this post appears to be the most popular post on my blog—I guess quite a few people find it when they are googling about graduate school applications. As a result, I choose to remove the personal portion and leave the general parts. (2009)

Recently I accepted one of my graduate studies admission, which marks the end of my graduate school applications. I will talk about some of my experiences about this tiring but enriching process in this post.

Why Graduate School?

This is the first and foremost question to be answered. I am devoting the golden age of my life to graduate studies, and there better be good reasons for it. For me, the main reasons are:

  • To learn more knowledge: I want to broaden my view and deepen my understanding on various subjects that I am interested in.
  • To do creative work: I want to do original research with real impact.
  • To have fun: I feel that research and the process of seeking truth/insight is very fun.

I know the above reasons may be a bit idealistic, but nonetheless, they will be my aims for graduate studies.

Area/School Selection

I choose communications as my area of research, as I find it very interesting, and I like the research style for this field — researchers in this field try to find a fine balance between pragmatic system design and theoretical generality, which is very inspiring and intellectually beautiful. Many problems in this area are simple to state, but hard to solve. In some sense, they are like puzzles, but they are more than puzzles as they are directly related to our daily life and social well-being.

I chose to apply to nine programs in eight schools. All of them are the schools in which I can see myself happily studying:

EECS@MIT, ORC@MIT, EECS@UC Berkeley, EE@Stanford, ECE@UIUC, EE@Princeton, EE@Harvard, EE@Yale
ECE@Univ. of Toronto

In addition, in Europe, both EPFL and ETHZ are great schools. In the U.S., UCSD is also very strong in the area of communications. But I didn’t apply to them due to my location constraint.

Application Process

There is not too much to talk about for the process itself. Just prepare all the application materials according to each school’s requirements and submit them on time.

Most application require the following information/materials:

  • academic background: GPA, publications, research experiences
  • application document: reference letters, personal statement (or Statement of Purpose/Objective, etc.)
  • test scores: GRE, and others

All these are, of course, important factors in graduate school application. However, most of them are more or less fixed before the application starts. So if one really wants to further improve ones’ application material, s/he should do a good job on preparing the personal statement and reference letters. But a good resume is an important prerequisite, as it will probably determine whether your PS and reference letters will be read at all.

Personal Statement

I would suggest one should start to write the PS as early as possible, because not only that a good essay may need many iterations to improve, but also the process of writing “forces” one to think through one’s decision on choosing graduate school, which is very beneficial.

For details of writing, there are lots of resources online. Just be yourself and don’t use any cliches that bore the readers. Don’t be “braggy”, and let facts speak for themselves.

Reference Letters

In general, at least three reference letters are required and it will be nice if one can find professors that satisfy the following “criteria”:

  • they are familiar with you and have a positive impression about you
  • they are working in the same field or in a close field to the area you are applying to
  • they have good connection with people in the school/program you are applying to

Professors are very busy so it will be good to ask them as early as possible, though they may still leave it to the last minute. Most of the time it is quite alright for them to submit the reference letters a few days after the deadline, so don’t panic about that.

Contacting professors

In general, it doesn’t hurt to contact professors educatedly — you should do enough reading about their research and know that you really want to work with them before contacting them. I didn’t try this as I didn’t have sufficient time to do enough research, so there is not much for me to offer on this.

Protected: Campus Visits April 1, 2008

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Feel so painful… March 25, 2008

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I don’t know why.. but I just could not hold my tears after sending the decline email to him..

But after all, a tough decision is finally made.. and a new start will be there…

Why do I love Math? March 2, 2008

Posted by Da in Mathematics.
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The following article in Chinese may explain it:

《费马大定理》阅读手记

which is a remark of the book:

Fermat’s Enigma: The Epic Quest to Solve the World’s Greatest Mathematical Problem

The intellectual beauty of mathematics is simply irresistible. One of my friend from Engineering Science will study Applied Mathematics for graduate studies, because “there are so many beautiful things to learn“, with which I fully agree.

The Advantages of Closing a Few Doors March 1, 2008

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My graduate school application results are out and I have fortunately got into quite a few great schools. Naturally, choosing which school to go becomes not easy. On this, Professor Wei Yu kindly pointed the following New York Times article to me, and I found it very enlightening, and hence share it here:

First, please play this game: Door Game

Then, read this article: The Advantages of Closing a Few Doors

For me, the take home message is don’t be “so obsessed with weighing the options“, when they are intrinsically equally good.

CSUA Annual Conference February 17, 2008

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I was selected as one of the four CSUA (Canadian Satellite Users Association) Broadcast Technology Scholarship recipients last December. In January, they invited me to attend their annual conference, which took place at Toronto Marriott Downtown Eaton Center (More conference details here).

There are a few interesting things happening to the broadcast industry recently. The most interesting one for me is the competition between traditional broadcasting, such as TV, and media distribution via the Internet, such as Youtube, Joost or even iTunes. Internet programs have certain advantages (customizable, interactive, etc.) over traditional broadcasting, but the latter also improves, by providing interactive services(VoD), better-quality programs (HD), etc.. And as broadcasting is still the most efficient way for large volume content distribution (e.g., HD program), this industry will remain prosperous in the near future. (So for all my friends who does research in networking — there is still much to do, such as efficient multicasting and P2P streaming. Actually both of these technologies exist already, but neither of them is capable of delivering HD program yet, hinting much room for improvement.)

While competing with Internet, the broadcasting industry also leverages networking technology for content handling and distribution. Most programs are stored on harddisk rather than tape (though tape is still used for archiving programs), and most programs are transmitted via the network from the content generator to content provider. CSUA has renamed itself to CBDA (Canadian Broadcast Distribution Association), to reflect the change that satellite is no longer the only way for broadcasting content distribution.

There are also some other interesting topics in the conference, such as government regulation, the consolidation of the satellite industry, and a report on CES2008. On the whole, it was a fun two-day escape from school.

Upcoming blogs January 22, 2008

Posted by Da in General.
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Recently I have changed my blog system and address, but, indeed, as Lei said, it’s tasteless as I didn’t write anything interesting at all. So, I am going to write something hopefully interesting and even thought-provoking for certain people, in the following month, in the following two topics first:
1. A brief retrospect of my life in the past 23 years.
I have lived for quite a while now…
I will postpone this a bit, after my graduate application results are out.

2. The (Canadian) Broadcast Industry
As a winner of the 2007 CSUA (Canadian Satellite Users Association) scholarship, I was invited to attend their annual conference on January 21st and January 22nd. It has been a great experience and I will try to give a summary here.

As we all know, procrastination is one of our biggest enemies… I hope I will deliver what I promised here in a month. Stay tuned!

Status update December 19, 2007

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I have finished all my finals this morning. It is relieved to see such a busy semester come to an end. And 2007 is almost gone too. So a brief update for the summer and the past Fall semester.

In the summer, I have been working Professor Kschischang and his Ph.D student Danilo on some network coding research, and got some results. Interested people can go to the Academic page on my homepage for more information.

In the past semester, in addition to dealing with courses, graduate school application had also kept me busy. I have applied to nine programs in total, mostly in ECE or EECS. The results will be out next Spring and I will have my finger crossed.

That’s pretty much it. I will stay home for my holiday, taking a rest.