Monthly Archives: November 2007

There’s no place like ~

Aaah… nothing beats being home! I just took the train home to my family’s house in Västerås and am now relaxing a bit from the hectic life in Linköping. Time to meet some old friends, play lots of music on an acoustic piano and have a large room all for yourself…as soon as I get those calculus assignments done.

Math

Credits to xkcd

Somebody stole my integral

During the math lecture today something interesting happned. The lecturer wanted to turn on some more light in the lecturing hall but failed miserably by accidently pressing the alarm button next to the light switches. The burgular alarm immediately went on, with sirens blaring in the whole area. Most students thought that there was a fire alarm and exited the room and there was a general confusion in the whole place. Class eventually resumed, but it added a fun twist to an otherwise very long and intense lecture on primitive functions.

Back to the books for more studying now, no time to blog…

RDNZL

Had a small “lunch-leak” in my backpack on the way to school this morning. The noodle and chicken stew found its way out of the lunch box and through a tiny hole in the plastic bag that was supposed to take care of those leaks and out in my bag. Half a deciliter’s worth of ginger-and-garlic-spiced gravy found its way out and into my books, among them my precious book on calculus. The computer was saved by the fact that it resides in a separated space, thank God. I will never use that type of lunch box again, I’m gonna stick to my newly-bought doubly-sealed boxes that I bought from Ica last week.

Three weeks to go to the next examination period (colloquially called Tenta-P) and more than half of the calculus course to go. This week, for instance, we have no less than four lessons in this subject with loads of assignments each to do. I sat almost the whole weekend studying, and I probably will continue doing so this week. Everything else is now of lower priority; the school goes first.

Christmas is also approaching fast, during which I will be with my family back home in Västerås. For new year’s eve I’m going to Livskraft 2007, just like I did last year. Looking forward to it.

In early January I will be working a week or so with ABB, then I’m off for some examinations in Linköping. I’m going to try to improve my grades in the introductory math course and digital electronics (colloqually called plussning).

中文, Mandarin

The winter has arrived in Linköping and has brought snowfall and icy roads, and the morning bike rides to the University become very interesting in terms of not slipping. The days are getting very much darker as well; after 5 PM total darkness resides. Only recently I got my bike lights fixed after the front light was stolen outside the central station, so until now I had to have an extra lookout for those sneaky cops in hoping to avoid paying hefty fines. Rumor has it that the police in Linköping is very strict about the lights and fine you several hundred SEK for anything that is missing.

In school the Calculus I course has been progressing fast. We are finished with the limits of functions and are now focusing on derivatives. I have now put up a goal to finish all the extra assignments in addition to the compulsory to improve my skills and get more involved in the complicated math. The other math course, Linear Algebra, is more fun than the calculus especially since I am making such good progress in that course. Linear transformations is a field of the algebra that I actually have found quite easy, and for the first time I have today finished the daily compulsory assignments even before the lesson was over.

Now for the fun!
The last months I have wanted to start learning a new language. My German skills have improved enough for me to start focusing on something new, but I was not sure on what. The candidates have been either to improve my junior high French, or to learn Russian, Chinese or Japanese from scratch. I was studying math with a few friends of mine this Sunday. When we got all fed up with vectors and derivates we sat down at a coffeeshop and talked about languages. In my class everybody studies some kind of language in addition to their M.Sc. studies, so this is a very common topic among us.

We talked a while about China and its language and the possibilities, and during that time I became sure that if I ever wanted to learn a new language, Mandarin would be the way to go. The currently expansive state of China and the vast amount of people speaking the language, this decision felt more and more right. Coming home, I went online and started the path towards fluency :)

Several people in my class study Mandarin as their profile language and they have been instructing me all week. The four tones, pinyin, stroke order and pronunciation rules, over and over again. I bought a small study book in English to get a good method of learning. Now I can say and write 你好 and 我喜欢 中国菜, among other things.

What seems really easy is the grammar. Being an advanced German student, it relieves me to know that you just put words on top of each other without having to care about declinations and verb forms. The “only” thing that appears difficult is the fact that you need to learn a few thousand characters. Shoudn’t be any problem at all.

To be honest I have no real idea of what I have gotten into yet, I’ll see how much I’ll manage to learn.

再见!

EDIT: Seems like if you are running Internet Explorer or Windows, you most likely only see the boxes instead of the Chinese signs I wrote in the above post.