Oct. 24th, 2005

pseydtonne: Behold the Operator, speaking into a 1930s headset with its large mouthpiece. (Default)
Everybody's doing it these days: you sign up for classes, you hand over cash, you camp out at office hours and beat up random TAs because they show neither T nor A. "Look, I've got coffee and you're getting a B- at best, you freak!" I can hear a man yell to me. Ah, sure sounds like fun with puns...

A few years ago I did some research on local schools and their programs for part-time computer science certificates and sundry. MIT had nothing: full time or fuck off. Northeastern seemed logical because it had a satellite campus a couple blocks from my old apartment in Woburn. However, they didn't have any interesting schemes. The only place that caught my eye was Tufts: they have a post-bac minor in computer science where you take five or six courses. Upon completion, you have a minor you can add to your existing bachelor of arts. You can then tell future employers "I have a thingy that's shiny and proves I can suck dick about geek things" instead of hoping your tales of years doing this or that will be enough.

I had wanted to do this back in 2003 but I got screwed by AT&T Broadband. They would pay $1500 per year but they refused to let me shuffle a couple hours from one day a week just to accommodate me. I got bitter. I felt dejected and started to understand they did not have my interests at heart. Over time, I saw they had run out of use for a geek like me.

Now I'm in a much better situation. It's look like I may date plenty but I'll be single for a while. Why not use my spare time to focus on advancing myself academically? Okay.

I'm pulling some ideas together about doing this. Anyone have stories to share?

-it's all about discrete math for indiscreet people, Dante

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