Lyanlima
Jul 19, 2019
Undergraduate / Computer science, the witch. Georgia Tech Typical Day Essay [2]
Prompt:
In our application review, we want to get to know you better. One way to do that is to understand a typical day for you. Please describe your typical day.
Essay:
At lunch, I'm a matchmaker, examining the young boys and girls in LFA with a calculating smile, noting their habits and desires. Sitting amongst friends chatting about the latest gossip in LFA, I'm sparking chemistry between a for and while loop for an "LFA Tinder" app I made with friends.
At sunset beside glass windows of the science center, I'm amateur Gregor Mendel, experimenting with the genomes and hosting the dual of the dominant vs the recessive. With friends in robotics, I'm putting in eye and hair colors of our teammates into my Punnett square app, jokingly predicting the appearance of their hypothetical child.
At 12:30 am, I'm a battleship commander, hunting behind fogs in the moonless night, with every position coming out of my mouth turn into quivering ashes and collapsing ships. While the virtual I am fighting in the battleship app I created, I'm fighting another battle against bugs and time, working at max-compacity detecting every bug before 1:30, when I can no longer get helped from my best friends: stack-overflow and GitHub.
Computer science is the witch that forges these souls together into me, along with these applications. When I lay my hands on the keyboard with NetBeans, Eclipse, or RStudio in front of me, I can feel the power computer science has given me, to turn me into different characters throughout the day and in turn, give convenience to those characters through my creations.
Georgia Tech Typical Day Essay
Prompt:
In our application review, we want to get to know you better. One way to do that is to understand a typical day for you. Please describe your typical day.
Essay:
At lunch, I'm a matchmaker, examining the young boys and girls in LFA with a calculating smile, noting their habits and desires. Sitting amongst friends chatting about the latest gossip in LFA, I'm sparking chemistry between a for and while loop for an "LFA Tinder" app I made with friends.
At sunset beside glass windows of the science center, I'm amateur Gregor Mendel, experimenting with the genomes and hosting the dual of the dominant vs the recessive. With friends in robotics, I'm putting in eye and hair colors of our teammates into my Punnett square app, jokingly predicting the appearance of their hypothetical child.
At 12:30 am, I'm a battleship commander, hunting behind fogs in the moonless night, with every position coming out of my mouth turn into quivering ashes and collapsing ships. While the virtual I am fighting in the battleship app I created, I'm fighting another battle against bugs and time, working at max-compacity detecting every bug before 1:30, when I can no longer get helped from my best friends: stack-overflow and GitHub.
Computer science is the witch that forges these souls together into me, along with these applications. When I lay my hands on the keyboard with NetBeans, Eclipse, or RStudio in front of me, I can feel the power computer science has given me, to turn me into different characters throughout the day and in turn, give convenience to those characters through my creations.