Apparently another semester is now upon us.
When did that happen, and who forgot to tell me?
Every year it feels like Christmas break gets shorter and shorter, though in reality they’re all about the same. I’m not sure whether to attribute this to having a job I go to every day, the fact that this has been my third winter-y break, or some other mystery factor, but regardless; it certainly didn’t seem long enough for my taste.
At any rate, today was the first day of Spring 2007 at UB. Hooray! Well, it should have been hooray. Instead it was a lot of frustration and “oh no, not again.” I only had one class today, a lab at that, which didn’t appear to meet at all, but of course that was by the time I got there. I was up early, had packed my stuff the night before, and was all set to start. I got dressed, got my coat, got my stuff together, got in the car, and headed out. Briefly. The car overheated, I pulled over, and many an adventure was had in getting it to somewhere safe, and getting myself a ride to school. All was well in the end (thanks, Mom) and although I missed my class (if said class even met at all,) I did, in fact, make it to work well ahead of time.
What I am dreading is tomorrow. Mondays and Wednesdays shall henceforth be known as…well…The Days That Shall Not Be Named. I think it’s most appropriate. These Most Horrible Days this semester are 12 hours long for me – running from 8:30 in the morning until 8:30 at night. Ugh. Classes are stacked up mostly back to back with a slight break from 3-7 pm (now mostly occupied by a shift at work) with very little in the way of breaks between them. I’m not sure exactly how I’m going to figure out lunch yet, but considering my “pre-lunchtime” class is a CSE lecture, I’m hoping it’ll either end slightly early most days (as in most other lecture classes of this sort I’ve had) or I’ll be able to sneak out five minutes early so I can have some time to grab something and eat it in the 25 minutes that follow before my next class. Ugh.
At any rate, I’m not looking forward to it. At all. If there’s one thing I really hate, it’s driving home, alone, in the dark, every day. Which I will be doing every day (excepting Thursdays!) for the next 15 weeks, or until it starts to get dark later, whichever comes first.
I was trying to remember anything about how I motivated myself to get through high school – because high school was pretty miserable – and it was kind of depressing to remember that there wasn’t a lot. One thing I did recall doing back then was to go through my little assignment planner notebook and note in the corners of the pages how many days or weeks or months were left. So I decided to give this another try, and while it seems kind of silly, it actually does have a purpose. I went through my Official Fancy UB Planner and marked off all 15 weeks, so I’ll know at any given point where I am in the semester. I remember last semester always trying to remember what week it was, less for wishing for the end of the semester and more for trying to remember when projects were due. So now I’ve killed two birds with one stone – I’ll know how much time I have left, and I’ll know when things are due. Yay for strange organization?
On Monday (there were no classes, so this Monday doesn’t count and can still be referred to by its proper name) I reformatted my laptop in preparation for school, because there’s nothing quite so nice as having a completely fresh install to work from. Except I apparently was having some kind of temporary fit of insanity or curiosity, and installed the Windows Vista Beta 2 I’ve had lying around a while instead of XP Tablet. Initially, I planned to install, play around with the tablet features I hadn’t tried when I previously installed it on my desktop over the summer, and then install XP again over it.
Well. Vista says otherwise.
I’m apparently having some difficulty in booting from the CD-ROM, so my XP CD can’t do it’s thing, and running it from within Vista is entirely useless, as you can’t “downgrade” an operating system that way. I could take the hard drive out and format it with my desktop, but that’s a lot of work that I don’t feel like doing right now. So until I de-lazify, or bother reading up on how to do it without removing the hard drive, I’m doing an experiment. Well, two experiments, really.
Experiment 1: Vista Beta + School?
This is probably a horrible idea in its own right, mainly because this version of the operating system really is beta software. For anyone not in the know, that basically means it’s unfinished, and I’m the tester. I’ve thought this through, and after becoming a backup fanatic at the end of last semester, this really shouldn’t be much of a problem.
Essentially, the idea behind this experiment is to see how Vista positively (or negatively?) influences my day-to-day schoolwork. I realize I’m sounding like a Microsoft commercial here, but stick with me. This could be interesting. I plan to take screenshots. Lots of them.
This all ties in with my second experiment,
Experiment 2: The Paperless Experiment
I got the idea for this experiment after reading through the posts about a similar challenge on The Student Tablet PC, and it really seemed like an interesting and useful idea. After all, I paid all this money for this computer, why not use it for everything it was built for?
Goals of the experiment:
To see how little paper documentation I can get away with carrying around. While I’ll have to have a folder to stick paper class handouts in, I intend to scan them later and keep them with the rest of my notes in OneNote. This will be a challenge, being in an art major, because there are a lot of printouts required for class assignments, which I’ll make an exception for, but other than that – I’m going to try and do this without carrying around a notebook where possible. This will (in theory) save me from losing or ruining a lot of important things, as well as be more organized. I also won’t have as much weight to carry around all day, which would be extremely nice. I tried going half-paperless last semester, and it worked surprisingly well. In fact, I feel it would have worked better if I had stuck more to the computer rather than juggling between paper notes and digital notes. Anyway, we shall see.
At this point? I don’t have much else to say. I’m going to consider tomorrow Day One of both experiments, and see where this all goes.
Hopefully the long day won’t be quite so horrible as i’m anticipating. D: