31fps by Sam Purtill A blog about business, technology, and life

30Mar/071

Rejected at Stanford.

I write to notify you that we are, regrettably, unable to offer you admission to Stanford University for fall 2007. I appreciate the thought and effort you put into your application and into selecting Stanford as one of your college choices. The overall strength of our applicant pool and relatively small size of our freshman class means that we disappoint the majority of our applicants each year. I am personally sorry to share this disappointment with you.

Well, I guess this means...

Santa Clara University Class of 2011, here I come!

Filed under: College 1 Comment
29Mar/070

Computer Science? Not for me…

I'm sitting in the Point Break Cafe at Point Loma right now writing some Python.

After talking to the CS Professors here at Point Loma today, I don't think I am going to major in CS. Why? They force everyone to learn one of the worst languages ever created: Java. I don't mind learning C++, I could probably learn both languages in about 2 months if I really wanted. But I don't want to spend 4 years getting my mind destroyed with all this Java, C++ crap. I feel like a prisoner every time I try to write Java; on the other hand, in Python and ActionScript I feel like I am completely free to do whatever I want. It's a beautiful thing. I completely understand why Paul Graham says that college can be the worst thing to a hacker.

I'm now thinking I should just get a degree in Engineering, probably Mechanical. Will I ever use it? Probably not. But who cares, no one really uses their undergrad degrees anymore. It's the mindset that I want to get from the engineering degree, or whatever field I choose. Shoot, maybe I should just get a degree in Philosophy. I applied for the Engineering department at Santa Clara, so I am totally good with majoring in that there. I think I am going to shoot myself if I listen to another professor tell me how much Java and C++ I'm going to learn in their classes.

What a load of garbage.

I find out about Stanford in 22 hours and 30 minutes. Let the countdown begin :)

Filed under: College No Comments
29Mar/070

YouTube

I am generating random codes for a certain part of Classowl, and I decided to do the little algorithm that YouTube does to generate their random codes. According to the compiler, there are:

5.20365606838e+019

Different possibilities. Chances of a duplication, even if there are billions of random codes in the database, are next to nothing.

Down at Point Loma right now, this school is gorgeous. Too bad it's not in Silicon Valley.

Filed under: College, Python No Comments
26Mar/070

Stanford… 4 days until I find out

I got an email this afternoon telling me to go online at 3pm on Friday to see if I get into Stanford University. Yes, the "Harvard of the West Coast"... I'm shaking in anticipation... I think if I get rejected, I'll handle it pretty well since I already got into my #2 choice.

Also, flying down to Pt. Loma on Wednesday night to see if they'll give me a scholarship.

Been away from blogging because... I've been working! Yeah, that's what people do when they're not wasting their time blogging. :)

Filed under: College, Life No Comments
26Mar/070

I am hungry.

Plus this recipe sounds good, so instead of saving the link in my bookmarks I'll just post it here. Take it if you want. Got it from here.

coq au vin

The recipe

Serves 4.

a large chicken, jointed into 6 or 8 pieces, giblets and carcass saved
an onion, a carrot and a few peppercorns for the stock
150g pancetta or unsmoked bacon in the piece
30g butter
2 medium onions
a large carrot
2 ribs of celery
2 cloves of garlic
2 tbsps flour
2 tbsps cognac
a bottle of red wine
4 or 5 small sprigs of thyme
3 bay leaves
40g butter
12 small onions, peeled
200g small mushrooms
boiled or steamed potatoes, to serve

Put the chicken carcass, its giblets and any bits and bobs of bone and flesh into a deep pan, cover with water, add an onion and a carrot, half a dozen whole peppercorns and bring to the boil. Turn the heat down and let it simmer until you need it.

Cut the pancetta into short strips; they need to be thicker than a match but not quite as thick as your little finger. Put them, together with the butter, into a thick-bottomed casserole - one of enamelled cast iron would be perfect - and let them cook over a moderate heat. Stir the pancetta from time to time - it mustn't burn - then, when it is golden, lift it out into a bowl, leaving behind the fat in the pan.

Season the chicken pieces with salt and pepper and place them in the hot fat in the casserole, so that they fit snugly yet have room to colour. Turn them when the underside is pale gold. The skin should be honey coloured rather than brown - it is this colouring of the skin, rather than what wine or herbs you might add later, that is crucial to the flavour of the dish. Lift the chicken out and into the bowl with the pancetta. By now you should have a thin film of goo starting to stick to the pan. This is where much of your flavour will come from.

While the chicken is colouring in the pan, peel and roughly chop the onions and carrot, and wash and chop the celery. With the chicken out, add the onions and carrot to the pan and cook slowly, stirring from time to time, until the onion is translucent and it has gone some way to dissolving some of the pan stickings. Add the garlic, peeled and thinly sliced, as you go. Return the chicken and pancetta to the pan, stir in the flour and let everything cook for a minute or two before pouring in the cognac, wine and tucking in the herbs. Spoon in ladles of the simmering chicken stock until the entire chicken is covered. Bring to the boil, then, just as it gets there, turn the heat down so that the sauce bubbles gently. Cover partially with a lid.

Melt the butter in a small pan, add the small peeled onions and then the mushrooms, halving or quartering them if they are too big. Let them cook until they are golden, then add them to the chicken with a seasoning of salt and pepper.

Check the chicken after 40 minutes to see how tender it is. It should be soft but not falling from its bones. It will probably take about an hour, depending on the type of chicken you are using. Lift the chicken out and into a bowl.

Turn the heat up under the sauce and let it bubble enthusiastically until it has reduced a little. As it bubbles down it will become thicker - though not thick - and will become quite glossy.

Return the chicken to the pan and serve with the potatoes.

Filed under: Food! No Comments
21Mar/070

Information should be free and publicly available

Just like Free Willy. Thanks for the inspiration, Zuck.

It's 3:45am. I love coding to death.

Filed under: Quotes, Web 2.0 No Comments
21Mar/070

DRY: My New Favorite Acronym

One of the core principles of Django is DRY. DRY stands for Don't Repeat Yourself.

I have written hundreds of lines of code on the current Client Management System I am building for one of Okapi's clients, and I keep finding ways to not repeat myself in Python. Every time I state a static variable twice, I realize, that's repeating myself. It's time to write a function to return this variable!

I'm: Tired. Working hard. A mess.

Filed under: Django, Technology No Comments
20Mar/072

Accepted! 1 down, 2 to go

I am freaking out, I just got my acceptance letter to Santa Clara University. To be honest, I really didn't think I was going to get accepted to any of the three I applied to, but so far, I'm 1 for 1 ;). I think it was because of my essays, Uncle Brent helped me out a lot on them. I'll post them as soon as I hear back from Stanford and Point Loma.

AAAAAHHH!!! WHY AM I SO LUCKY!?

Filed under: College, Life 2 Comments
20Mar/070

Justin.tv embed

20Mar/070

Justin.tv is so tight…

Justin.tv just came out yesterday... Around the same time Adobe Apollo was released. Two of the biggest technological innovations of our day happening simultaneously :D.

I just called Justin, bought the Justin.tv shirt, sent em a text message to sign it, and now I'm going to bed. I'll be sure to take pics with the shirt once I get it.

Yee! I've been deep in Django these last few days. Love it.

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